Gov. Shumlin Announces $2.8 million in Community Development Grants

Press Release

Date: July 6, 2016
Location: Brattleboro, VT

Gov. Peter Shumlin joined local, state and federal partners in front of the historic Bradley House on Wednesday to announce more than $2.8 million in community development grants to eight communities.

A $450,000 community development grant was awarded to the Bradley House, a licensed Level III senior residential care home serving lower income seniors. The critical funding will help with a $5.3 million project made possible through public sources and private fundraising efforts, that will modernize and add seven new housing units. Originally built in 1868 the Bradley House has been serving Seniors in the Brattleboro region since 1964.

Suffering from deferred maintenance and poor management, the Bradley house has now joined forces with the Holton Home in Brattleboro and development consultants from Cathedral Square, a statewide non-profit organization based in South Burlington that operates and assists senior care facilities. With these strong partners now behind it, the Bradley House will continue to provide a safe, comfortable facility for seniors to live in close to their families.

"From Arlington to Lunenburg, communities across Vermont will use these grants to build affordable housing, provide services to seniors and create jobs", said Gov. Shumlin.

Other grants announced today include:

- A grant of $455,000 to assist in making life safety improvements at the Rochester Community Care Home, a licensed Level III senior residential care home serving lower income seniors in Rochester.

- An award of $250,000 to start a pilot program which will assist small scale-rental property owners increase the availability, and quality, of affordable housing in Bennington's downtown neighborhoods.

- A $550,00 loan for the re-development and transformation of a former paper mill into a wood pellet manufacturing facility, which will create 21 new jobs in Lunenburg.

"We are excited to support these community projects and support new jobs in the forestry and green energy sector," said Gov. Shumlin. "Amazing people are working hard every day to improve the lives of Vermonters and the communities we call home, and I can't thank them enough."

The state awards approximately $7 million annually in competitive grants through the state's Department of Housing and Community Development. The grants are funded through the federal Community Development Block Grant Program of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Vermont's congressional delegation has been steadfast in supporting the funding that makes the program possible.

Senator Patrick Leahy, who leads the effort to fund the CDBG program in the annual appropriations bills said, "Each community in Vermont has qualities that make it distinct, and as a result each has different needs. The beauty of the CDBG program is that its flexible nature allows the State to use these federal funds to advance projects that are important to growing the economies of local communities. All of these projects will have a positive impact on the lives of Vermonters."

"While targeted to the needs of lower income Vermonters, community development block grants address the needs of communities and represent a true partnership between the federal, state and local government," said Department of Housing and Community Development Deputy Commissioner Josh Hanford.

For more information about the Vermont Community Development Program, please visit the Agency of Commerce and Community Development website at: http://accd.vermont.gov/strong_communities/opportunities/funding/vcdp.


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