United States — State attorneys general and governors filed a multi‑state lawsuit this week challenging recent HUD changes that would reallocate Continuum of Care funding, cap permanent supportive housing allocations, and require reapplications for awards. Plaintiffs say the administrative actions risk thousands of households losing assistance and contend the rules conflict with federal law and past Congressional funding decisions. Kentucky, Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin, Washington and other states provided estimates of households and dollars at risk and pledged legal action to block implementation while courts review the agency’s authority. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 6 original reports from WHAS 11 Louisville, KTAR News, WLEX, Urban Milwaukee, mlive and FOX 28 Spokane.
Temporary housing programs and providers receiving redirected HUD funds may gain increased short-term resources and expanded temporary-assistance capacity under the policy changes.
Low-income families, veterans, seniors, and people relying on permanent supportive housing face potential loss of assistance, increased housing instability, and elevated homelessness risk if funding shifts proceed.
Changes to HUD policies spark Mayes' 31st federal lawsuit
KTAR News WLEX Urban Milwaukee mliveWashington Attorney General Nick Brown joins lawsuit against Trump administration | FOX 28 Spokane
FOX 28 Spokane
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