Grants offer building blocks for our communities


 

MILLERTON — Ever wonder how our small communities afford to undertake some of the municipal projects that go toward improving our roads, sidewalks, water systems, playgrounds, housing projects and the like? Some of those things are made possible, in part, due to funds made available through the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program.

The program is made available through the nation’s Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD allocates money to the state, which passes it on to the county, and then on to towns and villages looking to finance projects up to $150,000 (based on the project).

Those projects are awarded funding on a priority basis. Each year that priority list changes. According to Beth Doyle, community development administrator for the Dutchess County Department of Planning and Development, this year the maximum grant award for an affordable housing, infrastructure, transportation or economic development activity is $150,000. The maximum grant award for handicapped accessibility, parks and recreation and historic preservation is $100,000.

The entirety of the priority list is as follows: affordable housing; economic development; public facilities and infrastructure improvements; public services; homeless housing/services; anti-poverty strategy; lead-based paint; housing opportunities for persons with AIDS; special needs; and barriers to affordable housing.

"A project must meet a priority to be considered for funding," stated Doyle in a letter penned to various municipal officials. "There is a limit of one application that may be submitted by a municipality, with the exception that a second application may be submitted if it is for an eligible housing project."

The village of Millerton has already broached the subject of grant application ideas, at its workshop meeting earlier this month.

"We’re at that time of year when we need to give some thought to community development block grants," Mayor John Scutieri said to his Village Board. "I know one idea to possibly look at is sidewalks."

Scutieri said he raised the sidewalk issue, as he has every year for the past number of years, especially because a number of other municipalities won block grants for sidewalk projects last year.

"I don’t think anybody will object to sidewalks because we need them so badly," Trustee Anne Veteran said.

Trustee Debbie Middlebrook agreed.

"Our sidewalks are a mess," she said.

Meanwhile, the topic was also raised in the town of North East at its workshop meeting last Thursday, when town Supervisor Dave Sherman handed out Doyle’s letter and the listing of priorities to his board.

"I suggest you take it with you and look it over," he said. "Then we will have a public hearing, I suggest sometime in September, which gives us a fair amount of time [to consider projects]. I think the idea now is to look this over and start scratching our heads. The same goes for all of our departments."

The issue of block grants is on the Amenia Town Board’s agenda for tonight, Aug. 14, which is set for 7 p.m. at Town Hall. It will also, in all likelihood, be on the Pine Plains Town Board’s agenda when it meets on Aug. 21, at 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall.

Before an application for a Community Development Block Grant can be submitted to the county, a public hearing must be held so members of the community can make their own suggestions for project ideas. A municipal board is under no obligation, however, to adopt any suggestion from the public when it takes a vote from its sitting members.

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