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New Breed Leader
New Breed Leader's Journal
New Breed Leader's Journal
October 1, 2025
LIVE: Hal Sparks: The Beef Goes on
September 25, 2025
WH tells agencies to draft mass firing plans ahead of shutdown
This is happening.
It's what Trump wanted to happen.
The government will probably never open again until Dems retake the House.
https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-congress-government-shutdown-99d4cafe53209f6dc6ae5562c2ac79d2?utm_source=copy&utm_medium=share
September 25, 2025
The Trump administrations skinny budget, which lays out high-level funding proposals for congressional consideration, proposes to fundamentally change the federal housing assistance system. The budget recommends combining five major federal housing assistance programshousing choice vouchers, public housing, project-based rental assistance, Section 202 (supportive housing for the elderly), and Section 811 (supportive housing for people with disabilities)into a single, state-administered block grant.
The administration estimates this change would cut existing funding roughly in half (PDF), from $58.4 billion to $31.7 billion. This reduction would necessarily lead to fewer households receiving housing assistance. In 2024, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development reported that the five housing assistance programs in question funded units that housed 4.5 million households. Based on Urban Institute analysis, we find the proposed changes would reduce that number to 2.4 million households.
Although the skinny budget is unlikely to pass in its current form, any change that turns housing assistance programs into a single block grant would scale back already limited assistance at a time when housing is increasingly unaffordable for many.
How would the skinny budget proposals affect housing assistance?
The current housing affordability crisis has several causes, a key one being that not enough housing has been built to meet demand, leading to increasing pressure on households with low incomes. Housing assistance, which is meant to alleviate some of this pressure for households with low incomes, is not an entitlement, currently reaching only about 1 in 4 eligible households.
In 2024, the five major housing assistance programs funded 5.1 million housing units thatwhen accounting for occupancy rateshoused 4.5 million households. The Housing Choice Voucher Program is by far the largest of the five programs (2.8 million units), followed by project-based assistance (1.3 million units), public housing (870,000 units), and Sections 202 (120,000 units) and 811 (34,000 units).
The programs function in different ways and have different costs, with some programs funding buildings and others supporting people to rent in the private market. Overall, reducing the budget to $31.7 billion would immediately reduce the number of funded units by about 2.3 million, leaving support for just 2.8 million units. Assuming occupancy rates stay consistent, only 2.4 million households would receive assistance.
Block granting also could lead to increased costs for states. States likely would need to increase their capacity to administer the block grant and provide additional funds for housing agencies to increase staffing and build systems to replace current federal processes.
Seniors, people with disabilities, and other families would lose needed housing assistance
The budget also institutes a cap on rental assistance for able bodied adults, with the stipulation that a majority of rental assistance funding through the States would go to the elderly and disabled.(PDF) While we do not know how Congress would implement a requirement to limit assistance to households with adult members who are able to work, its difficult to see how cuts would leave units for any of these households.
The magnitude of the cuts also would assuredly cut assistance for senior and disabled households as well. Currently, 42 percent of households receiving assistance are headed by seniors, and 33 percent of nonsenior households have a head, spouse, or cohead with a disability. Across the five programs, 1.88 million household heads were 62 or older, and 860,000 younger household heads had a disability. The resulting 2.7 million households outnumber the proposed cuts once occupancy rates are taken into account, meaning some elderly people and people with a disability currently receiving assistance would likely lose it.
Urban Institute: Trump has proposed $27B in cuts to Housing Assistance for elderly and disabled
https://www.urban.org/urban-wire/trump-administration-has-proposed-27-billion-cuts-block-granting-housing-assistanceThe Trump administrations skinny budget, which lays out high-level funding proposals for congressional consideration, proposes to fundamentally change the federal housing assistance system. The budget recommends combining five major federal housing assistance programshousing choice vouchers, public housing, project-based rental assistance, Section 202 (supportive housing for the elderly), and Section 811 (supportive housing for people with disabilities)into a single, state-administered block grant.
The administration estimates this change would cut existing funding roughly in half (PDF), from $58.4 billion to $31.7 billion. This reduction would necessarily lead to fewer households receiving housing assistance. In 2024, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development reported that the five housing assistance programs in question funded units that housed 4.5 million households. Based on Urban Institute analysis, we find the proposed changes would reduce that number to 2.4 million households.
Although the skinny budget is unlikely to pass in its current form, any change that turns housing assistance programs into a single block grant would scale back already limited assistance at a time when housing is increasingly unaffordable for many.
How would the skinny budget proposals affect housing assistance?
The current housing affordability crisis has several causes, a key one being that not enough housing has been built to meet demand, leading to increasing pressure on households with low incomes. Housing assistance, which is meant to alleviate some of this pressure for households with low incomes, is not an entitlement, currently reaching only about 1 in 4 eligible households.
In 2024, the five major housing assistance programs funded 5.1 million housing units thatwhen accounting for occupancy rateshoused 4.5 million households. The Housing Choice Voucher Program is by far the largest of the five programs (2.8 million units), followed by project-based assistance (1.3 million units), public housing (870,000 units), and Sections 202 (120,000 units) and 811 (34,000 units).
The programs function in different ways and have different costs, with some programs funding buildings and others supporting people to rent in the private market. Overall, reducing the budget to $31.7 billion would immediately reduce the number of funded units by about 2.3 million, leaving support for just 2.8 million units. Assuming occupancy rates stay consistent, only 2.4 million households would receive assistance.
Block granting also could lead to increased costs for states. States likely would need to increase their capacity to administer the block grant and provide additional funds for housing agencies to increase staffing and build systems to replace current federal processes.
Seniors, people with disabilities, and other families would lose needed housing assistance
The budget also institutes a cap on rental assistance for able bodied adults, with the stipulation that a majority of rental assistance funding through the States would go to the elderly and disabled.(PDF) While we do not know how Congress would implement a requirement to limit assistance to households with adult members who are able to work, its difficult to see how cuts would leave units for any of these households.
The magnitude of the cuts also would assuredly cut assistance for senior and disabled households as well. Currently, 42 percent of households receiving assistance are headed by seniors, and 33 percent of nonsenior households have a head, spouse, or cohead with a disability. Across the five programs, 1.88 million household heads were 62 or older, and 860,000 younger household heads had a disability. The resulting 2.7 million households outnumber the proposed cuts once occupancy rates are taken into account, meaning some elderly people and people with a disability currently receiving assistance would likely lose it.
September 13, 2025
A video history of MAGA
this young man nailed it.
https://x.com/blkmothsuperfan/status/1966915665169895836
September 12, 2025
LIVE: Hal Sparks Megaworldwide: REICHWING vs RIGHTWING
September 12, 2025
Reporter to Trump: How are you doing after the death of your friend? Trump: Charlie WHO?
ANYWAY, back to my ballroom
https://x.com/blazedbum_/status/1966528873094410589
September 12, 2025
Hal Sparks: Kash Patel steals credit for C. Kirk's killer's Pastor and dad turning him in
Patel is a POS
August 19, 2025
LIVE: Hal Sparks Megaworldwide: Epstein Files SHOCK! WH covers for Trump's struggles
August 18, 2025
LIVE: Hal Sparks Megaworldwide - Trump-Putin Summit FLOP!
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