HUD's Community Development Block Grants for Disaster Recovery and Mitigation

Post-disaster

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is an essential agency in resiliency and disaster recovery. HUD provides flexible grant dollars through the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program to over 3,300 communities across the nation annually.  Two HUD programs support resiliency and disaster recovery efforts: CDBG – Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) and CDBG – Mitigation (CDBG-MIT). When disasters strike and the President declares a disaster, Congress allocates CDBG-DR funds to States and Tribal governments to help them recover, especially in low and moderate-income areas. CDBG-MIT is funding created to support long-term mitigation.   

About CDBG-DR 

State and local governments rely on CDBG-DR to rebuild housing, infrastructure, and the economic base after major disasters. The program serves as the bridge between disaster relief and long-term recovery and a safety net for those without resources and access to other Federal funds. Typically, no less than 70 percent of CDBG-DR funds must benefit people from low and moderate-income (LMI). HUD measures this as serving census tracts in which more than 50 percent of the population has an annual income less than 80 percent of the Area Median Income. HUD’s income calculator can help you understand who would fall into this category.  

CDBG-DR comes in addition to Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assistance, insurance, disaster loans, and emergency assistance and is particularly important in the most catastrophic disasters when prior sources leave other needs unmet. It’s important to note that State and local entities cannot use CDBG-DR for anything covered by other Federal funding sources.  

CDBG-DR has become the second-largest vehicle for disaster recovery funds after FEMA Disaster Relief programs. CDBG-DR appropriations have markedly increased in size and frequency in the past decade to help states and local governments manage the growing cost of disasters. Since 2017 alone, CDBG-DR has received $39.4 billion for disaster recovery and mitigation. Here’s a fact sheet from HUD that has essential information about CDBG-DR requirements. 

CDBG-DR process

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An infographic that shows the process to get CDBG funding which includes 11 steps in blue and white boxes

HUD awards CDBG-DR funds to State governments, who can then subgrant funds to local governments. CDBG-DR grantees must write an Action Plan detailing their unmet needs and how they will use their funds and meet Federal requirements. Local subgrantees are also required to submit Action Plans to the State agency charged with administering CDBG-DR funds, which is the Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) in California.  

The Action Plans describe unmet needs and how the State and local subgrantees will spend the funding. It is a critical roadmap for the community to allocate Federal dollars. To create the Plan, community leaders develop priorities. A community’s Mitigation Plan is a handy tool to inform the Action Plan as well. State and local subgrantees can amend Action Plans with updates and new issues.  

Sample Action Plans 

About CDBG-MIT 

CDBG-MIT is funding created to support long-term mitigation. “Mitigation” activities are defined as activities that increase resilience to disasters and reduce or eliminate the long-term risk of loss of life, injury, damage to and loss of property, and suffering and hardship by lessening the impact of future disasters. The CDBG-MIT program is a unique and significant opportunity for eligible grantees to use assistance in areas impacted by recent disasters to carry out strategic and high-impact activities to mitigate disaster risks and reduce future losses. 

There are a variety of activities that can help mitigate risk, including: 

  • adaptation strategies to help adapt infrastructure and housing to the changing environment, through green infrastructure, 
  • stormwater management and site strategies, 
  • renewable energy to mitigate power loss, 
  • community planning, and 
  • community resilience hubs. 

The mitigation objectives and efforts align with other Federal programs that address hazard mitigation to create a more cohesive effort at the Federal, State, and local level. These mitigation projects aim to reduce the risk to community services that benefit human health and safety or economic security from being severely affected by natural disasters.   

Goals of the CDBG-MIT program: 

  • support data-informed investments, focusing on the repetitive loss of property and critical infrastructure, 
  • build capacity to comprehensively analyze disaster risks and update hazard mitigation plans, 
  • support the adoption of policies that reflect local and regional priorities that will have long-lasting effects on community risk reduction, including risk reduction to community lifelines and decreasing future disaster costs, and 
  • maximize the impact of funds by encouraging leverage, private/public partnerships, and coordination with other Federal dollars.  

To receive CDBG-MIT funds, States must submit an Action Plan, which should align with the State’s Hazard Mitigation Plan. Action Plans should use the FEMA Lifelines framework to ensure that all “lifelines” in a community will be safe. A lifeline enables the continuous operation of critical government and business functions and is essential to human health and safety or economic security. Lifelines are the vital services in the community that, when stabilized, enable all other aspects of society to function. They include fire service, search and rescue, food, water, shelter, agriculture, health, medical, energy, communications, transportation, and hazardous materials. 

Impact on frontline communities 

CDBG-DR is not codified in Federal law, which means that each time a disaster is declared, there is a long process to get the money to survivors. This lengthy process is particularly devastating for frontline communities who might not have any other means of recovering from a disaster. 

Despite the program lacking standing authority to provide funds to disaster-impacted states and localities, CDBG-DR's role in post-disaster recovery continues to grow among the various Federal disaster response and recovery programs. However, the ad hoc arrangement of CDBG-DR makes the certainty of funds and transparency of the process more confusing for States and local governments who need the money. 

Actions to take in the CBDG-DR process: 

For community-based organizations and affordable housing providers 

  • Participate in the processes done by the local, State, and Federal agencies to assess damages. This assessment will be critical in the allocation of CBDG-DR funds. This assessment is only as good as the data they have, and you can provide crucial information that they wouldn’t otherwise have in their documentation. You can start with your local Office of Emergency Services to learn more about this process.  
  • HCD is required to post Action Plans for public comment. Contact HCD to make sure you have the timeline and deliver comments on whether the plan adequately addresses the unmet needs of your frontline communities. 
  • Use your voice to advocate for comprehensive changes to the CDBG-DR process to make it faster and more equitable. Contact your Congress members and discuss with them the Reforming Disaster Recovery Act

For local and State government 

  • Ensure that you are aware of and have a strong understanding of CDBG-DR and other recovery resources before disaster strikes. Build relationships with administering agencies at the State and Federal levels.  
  • Work with frontline communities to understand the extent that their needs will be unmet by other disaster assistance. This process will prepare you ahead of time to present accurate needs to HUD. 
  • CDBG-DR can only be used to meet needs unmet by other sources of funding, which can be challenging to know at any given time. Create data-sharing partnerships with FEMA, the SBA, community-based organizations, and large charities so everyone, including the public, can understand whose needs are being served by all funding sources. Contact local partners of these organizations to get started. 
  • Create a Pre-Disaster Recovery plan in partnership with frontline communities, planners, housing experts, and social service providers. This pre-planning will help you be aware of recovery resources, such as CDBG-DR, before disaster strikes and help you leverage them to serve community members better. Here are some other resources of pre-disaster recovery planning from the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and Association of Bay Area Governments.  
  • Use CDBG-DR to upgrade infrastructure to be more resilient to future disasters. For example, incorporate renewable energy sources into building construction.  
  • There are many complex rules in using HUD and FEMA programs. For example, many forget that you can use CDBG-DR as the “match” funding for other federal assistance programs. State agencies like the Office of Planning and Research or the California Office of Emergency Services can offer opportunities for jurisdictions to learn about and conduct coordinated pre-disaster recovery planning together.  

For philanthropy  

  • Philanthropy can serve a sustaining and longer-term role in disaster planning, both before and after disaster strikes.  
  • Local government often doesn’t have the time, resources, or capacity to do pre disaster recovery planning, which can help them figure out what funding sources they can use, like CDBG-DR. It’s often one of the items on their long do list that gets put off. Philanthropy should provide planning grants to both public agencies and community organizations to conduct pre-disaster planning together. 
  • CDBG-DR takes a long time to arrive in frontline communities. Philanthropy is much faster and more flexible and can serve as a bridge to CDBG-DR funding. Make multi-year commitments to a community-based organization and support relief AND long-term recovery. Here’s a great example of philanthropic commitment to disaster recovery at the Latino Community Foundation
  • Ultimately, there are never enough resources given to frontline communities after a disaster. Create a strategy to remain committed to a place even after funding comes through from other sources.  
  • Use your voice to advocate for comprehensive changes to the CDBG-DR process to make it faster and more equitable. Contact your Congress members and discuss with them the Reforming Disaster Recovery Act
Date
April 9, 2024
Authors
Enterprise Community Partners