City keeps service running
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Dave Brooks
For more than a decade, Project Self-Sufficiency has had to scramble
for a small amount of federal dollars to fund the program that helps
single parents find housing, job training and education.
Now, after years of uncertainty, a recent decision to put the
nonprofit program’s funding in jeopardy could finally bring financial
stability to the group.
On July 18, the City Council voted to shift 62.5% of Project
Self-Sufficiency’s funding -- about $25,000 to partially pay the
salary of the group’s only staff member -- to the Community Health
Care Clinic. While the unexpected move created some uncertainty, city
officials said the shift has opened the door to finding more
permanent funding sources for the popular program.
“We’re going to look at putting it into the ... [2005-06] budget,”
City Administrator Penny Culbreth-Graft said. “It would have to be
picked up by the General Fund. The [City] Council could decide not to
pick that up if they wish, but most likely it will be covered in the
General Fund.”
Project Self-Sufficiency is a 20-year-old social service that
provides assistance to single parents. Participants in the program
can receive help with housing, child care and other needs if they
agree to participate in job training and education programs. The goal
is to get the participants off government assistance and into jobs
that allow them to fully support themselves.
The program was founded in 1985 by the federal government as an
experimental way to hand out housing vouchers to needy families.
Hundreds of cities across the country offered similar programs to
allocate the rental credits.
Federal funding for the program was ended in the early 1990s and
nearly all local programs closed -- except in Huntington Beach.
“I think the city realized what an asset this program was and
determined a way to keep it running,” Project Self Sufficiency
board-member Judy Lotion said.
The county took over the allocation of the housing vouchers, and
without much federal money, Project Self-Sufficiency at first had
little to offer. To help raise money, a nonprofit foundation was
formed and the program eventually secured a six-unit apartment to
house a handful of clients. To pay its director, Susan Edwards, the
group decided to apply for a chunk of the city’s Community
Development Block Grant -- an annual allotment from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development to fund programs to help
the needy.
Lotion said the group was happy at first to secure the money, but
it became a hassle each year to reapply for the grant, especially
while dozens of other nonprofits were competing for the money. During
some of the more contentious budget debates, handfuls of Project
Self-Sufficiency clients would attend City Council hearings and
testify why the program deserved to be funded.
“Many requests come in, but there are always not enough funds,”
said Luann Brunson, who helps coordinate the annual allocation
process for the city.
The decision to reduce federal funding for the program surprised
many, but the program now has a chance to lock in a more secure
funding source, Edwards said.
While about a third of the money for her salary will still come
from the block grant, a bulk of the money will now likely come from
the city’s general fund. Edwards said she sees the shift as a
validation of her efforts by the City Administrator.
“She stepped up to the plate,” Edwards said. “I feel very
confident under her leadership.”
Edwards said the move to use city money to pay for her position
also validates the support she enjoys in the community, which last
year donated $50,000 to the project.
“I think it’s a little jewel in terms of what the city has to
offer,” she said. “It comes from all over the community and shows
that they are happy with where their dollar is going.”
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