Letter to the Hon. Ben Carson, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development - Plans to Slash HUD Budget

Letter

Dear Secretary Carson,

During your confirmation hearing before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs two months ago, you indicated in your testimony and in response to questions from committee members that you supported the mission of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). More to the point, you were asked repeatedly what your stated support of its mission would mean for the funding of the department.

You had previously taken the position that all federal agencies should be reduced by 10 percent a year until the budget was balanced. You were asked about this position, and dismissed the question, stating that you had modified your views so that you supported only a one percent across-the-board spending cut, and that it would be "cruel and unusual punishment to withdraw these programs before you provide an alternative route."

Given your testimony, we were surprised and concerned to read in The Washington Post that you are contemplating a 14 percent cut to HUD's budget for Fiscal Year 2018.

It is unconscionable to consider cutting this amount, including nearly $2 billion from the public housing capital and operating funds. You testified to your understanding of the real impacts that substandard housing have on the health and opportunities of children and their families, in particular how it is far more costly to ignore lead hazards than to spend the money to abate them. The maintenance backlog for our public housing is enormous, and yet you would add to it.

The suggestion that some HUD funds will be addressed as part of an infrastructure package provides no assurance whatsoever. The Administration has made clear that infrastructure is not an immediate priority, and that it hopes to finance its plans through tolls and other offsets. While we hope that view does not prevail, it will clearly not work to address our community infrastructure needs.

A cut of $1.3 billion -- nearly 70 percent - in the public housing repair budget will mean more children, families, elderly, and individuals with disabilities will be exposed to mold, lead, and other health hazards. If this reported budget stands, you will most certainly be presiding over an unprecedented attack on the health of some our most vulnerable Americans.

It cannot stand and, if you are to remain true to the testimony you gave under oath, it must not.

Sincerely,


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