Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ): Positive Rent Reporting and HUD-Assisted Housing
January 10, 2025Federal Tools for Production and Preservation of Affordable Rental Housing
January 10, 2025This post was originally published by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The Eviction Protection Grant Program is a relatively new program administered by the Office of Policy Development
and Research (PD&R) that funds experienced legal service organizations to provide legal assistance at no cost to
low-income tenants at risk of, or subject to, eviction. Since the program’s inception in 2021, PD&R has awarded $40
million in funding to 21 grantees in 19 states, with plans to award an additional $20 million in FY23 funds and $20
million in FY24 funds to subsequent cohorts of grantees. HUD’s evaluation of the program focuses on the initial 21
grantees and comprises an implementation evaluation to understand successes and challenges to program implementation
and an outcome evaluation to document outcomes and analyze potential associations between outcomes, household
characteristics, and services provided. The Interim Report presents
early findings from the implementation
evaluation.
The preview of the Final Report summarizes key findings from both the implementation evaluation and outcome
evaluation. The Final Report presents comprehensive findings from the two-year evaluation, which aimed to
(1)
describe the characteristics of grantees, subrecipients, and other community partners, (2) understand how grantees
worked with other social service providers to deliver assistance, (3) document the services offered, service
take-up, the types of households served, and program outcomes, and (4) understand the successes and challenges that
grantees faced in program implementation and how they addressed these challenges.
The evaluation draws on two key data sources: (1) documents submitted by grant recipients as part of their
applications and grant reporting activities, and (2) data collected through two rounds of interviews with HUD
program staff, staff from all 21 grantees and a subset of their subrecipients, and a nonrandom sample of tenant
households that received services funded through the grant.