Lead-Safe and Healthy Homes Financing Demonstration
HUD will fund a national fund manager to design, capitalize, and operate a financing demonstration that provides loans, grants, and related financial products for lead-safe and healthy homes work in low-income communities.
⚑ Cooperative agreement · National Fund Manager role; awardee manages subawards/financing and may use no more than $1M for administrative activities · Applications may be single-entity or consortium with a designated lead applicant · Individuals, foreign entities, and sole proprietorships are ineligible
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| IPPRA | 40 partial | portfolio topics: public_health, environment; signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is minor; funds technical assistance, not research (capped); capped at 40 (non-research funding) |
| Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) | 25 weak | technical depth: minor; funds technical assistance (capped) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 10 none | deep-tech content; no commercialization signal |
Description
This Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) announces up to $10 million to support a National Fund Manager (NFM) to design and manage a Lead-Safe and Healthy Homes Financing Demonstration (the Fund). The Fund will be a national platform to pool public and private capital to accelerate the reduction of residential lead exposure, particularly childhood lead poisoning, and improve housing-related health conditions in low-income communities ("lead-safe and healthy homes activities").While HUD and EPA programs have addressed lead and other environmental hazards in many homes, progress remains slow relative to the scale of need. For example, since 1993, HUD has remediated lead hazards in over 230,000 low-income housing units, but tens of millions of U.S. households continue to face risk from lead and additional residential environmental stressors. Expanding access to private capital alongside public funding is critical to increasing the pace and scale of remediation.Traditional home repair financing remains difficult to access due to strict underwriting, high denial rates, and lender risk concerns, leaving many older homes in disrepair. The Fund will build upon successful local models that combine public and private resources and expand this approach nationally by aggregating capital and supporting local financing programs.The NFM will be responsible for leveraging the initial $10 million in public funds to raise private capital investments, structuring financing mechanisms, and providing technical assistance to support the Fund's operations. The NFM will also be responsible for the distribution of the funds through eligible activities by using no more than $1 million of the federal award for administrative activities, while deploying the remaining capital through loans, grants, and other financial products that flow to state, regional, and local governments and nonprofit organizations selected by the NFM. The NFM will select and enter into agreements with organizations, which will in turn provide financing for conducting lead-safe and healthy homes activities in homes of low-income homeowners and homes owned by small landlords, in low-income communities. HUD will maintain oversight through review of Fund structure, performance, and compliance rather than by participating in investment selection decisions.The organizations selected for funding by the NFM will ensure that the financing conditions require use of appropriately qualified contractors, laboratories, and financial entities in accordance with applicable Federal, state, and local requirements and this NOFO. The NFM will establish and oversee compliance, reporting, and quality assurance processes to ensure that lead-safe and healthy homes activities are performed and financed in accordance with program requirements.
Eligibility
Additionally, applications may be submitted by a single eligible applicant or by multiple organizations applying as a consortium. Where an application is submitted as a consortium, an eligible entity must be designated as the lead applicant, which will serve as the primary recipient of the award and hold full responsibility for grant administration, compliance, reporting, and performance under the grant, but each member of the consortium must meet the Resolution of Civil Rights Matters threshold requirement of Section II.A.2.b. Individuals, foreign entities, and sole proprietorship organizations are not eligible to compete for, or receive, awards made under this announcement.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Department of Housing and Urban Development <olhchh.nofa@hud.gov>
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