Tools

Tribal housing agencies file lawsuits against HUD

By The Associated Press

DENVER (AP) – Three American Indian tribes’ housing agencies, including that of the Yakama Nation, have filed lawsuits against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, claiming it illegally reduced the amount of annual block grant funding they’re entitled to under federal law.

The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and its housing authority, the Yakama Nation Housing Authority in Washington state, and the Modoc Lassen Indian Housing Authority in California each filed suit Nov. 25 in U.S. District Court in Denver.

The Modoc Lassen housing authority is the tribally designated housing entity for the Grindstone Indian Rancheria of Wintun-Wailaki Indians.

The lawsuits say they were filed in Colorado because HUD’s Denver-based National Office of Native American Programs’ Grants Management Office took many of the actions being challenged.

According to the suits, federal law mandates that the tribal housing agencies receive annual block grant funding from HUD to help them provide and administer affordable housing programs for low-income families.

The agencies’ share of that funding is calculated using a statutory formula. The plaintiffs say the formula factors in the number of low-income housing units they owned or operated on Sept. 30, 1997.

The lawsuits allege that HUD unlawfully reduced the amount of block grant funding the plaintiffs were entitled to by improperly requiring that some of the plaintiffs’ housing units be eliminated from the funding formula.

The Yakima Housing Authority’s lawsuit also seeks to prevent HUD from trying to recoup alleged overpayments.

The Yakima agency says it has filed a separate lawsuit in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims that seeks to recover grant money that HUD has unlawfully withheld from it in previous fiscal years.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Saturday, Apr 11 at 7:32 PM everyone knows wrote ...

that many tribes get all kinds of grants, spend those moneys or mis appropriate...then wait for the casino monies to pay the tribal or workers pay-roll...when or if you see this practice a red flag should go up...also check the blue prints of your house very carefully..many times tribal housing has skimped and there are even time when no insulation was ever installed...trust no one, no one i say...because it's all about the green!!

19462167
Inappropriate? Alert Us!

Add a comment

Name:

Comment: 1000 Characters Left

By posting a comment, user agrees to all Terms Of Use. Comments may also appear in other website locations and in other Indian Country Today products, without notice and at the discretion of Indian Country Today.

Indian Country Today and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the above comments or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any Public Forum.

This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled. Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.

On Demand