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Section 811 and Other HUD Housing Programs for Persons with Disabilities (RL34728) / Coherent Digital (firm).

HeinOnline Civil Rights and Social Justice Available online

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HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

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HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

View online

HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

View online

HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

View online

HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

View online

HeinOnline U.S. Congressional Documents Library Available online

View online
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Perl, Libby, author.
Coherent Digital (firm), author, issuing body.
Contributor:
Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service, issuing body.
Series:
Report / Congressional Research Service ; RL34728
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United States. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
United States.
Housing.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (123 pages)
Updated irregularly
Edition:
[Library of Congress public edition].
Place of Publication:
[Place of publication not identified] : Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, 2008.
Summary:
Over the years, the individuals with disabilities who were eligible for Section 202 housing expanded from persons with physical 20 See Reasonable Accommodations Under the Fair Housing Act, Joint Statement of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Justice, May 17, 2004, available at [ ]. [...] The Housing Act of 1964 also changed the name of the Section 202 program to "Housing for the Elderly or Handicapped.". [...] HUD suggested that one of the reasons for the low number of units designed for persons with disabilities through the Section 202 program was 28 See discussion in U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Standards and Criteria for Housing for the Chronically Mentally Ill in the Section 202/8 Direct Loan Program, April 1983, pp. [...] HUD estimates that by the end of the 1980s, approximately 10% of units funded through the Section 202 program were in facilities designed for persons with disabilities.38 Nearly ten years after enactment of the Housing and Community Development Amendments, another law made changes to the way in which persons with disabilities were served under the Section 202 program. [...] This separate rental assistance was the means of subsidizing Section 202 units for persons with disabilities until the creation of the Section 811 program.42 Creation of the Section 811 Program.
Notes:
The CRS report home page provides access to all versions published since 2018 in accordance with P.L. 115-141; earliest version dated 2016.
Report includes bibliographical references.
Description based on: online resource; title from PDF information screen (Worldcat, viewed July 4, 2023).
OCLC:
1099576475

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