On consecutive days during the week of April 28, the House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittees on transportation and housing hosted leadership from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to review the agency’s Fiscal Year 2025 budget request. During the relatively collegial hearings, lawmakers from both congressional chambers heard testimony and asked questions of HUD’s acting Secretary Adrianne Todman, who stepped up to the role following former Secretary Marcia Fudge’s resignation in March.
Congressional Subcommittees generally hold hearings in response to each agency’s annual budget request, which kicks off the federal funding process for the following fiscal year. The May 1 hearing in the House of Representatives was the first for Congressman Steve Womak (R-AK) since taking up his new role as Chairman of the Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development (THUD) Appropriations Subcommittee. He stressed the importance of finishing the funding bills “on time,” meaning ahead of the September 31 end to the current fiscal year. Subcommittee Ranking Member and long-time affordable housing champion Mike Quigley (D-IL) agreed and committed to advancing the most constructive HUD budget possible under the current overall budget caps, which limit the Committee’s spending for the year.
In her testimony, acting Secretary Todman focused on the overall budget proposal for next year, including what she called a “bold set of values and policies.” Her testimony stated that the budget prioritizes expanding access to affordable housing and rental assistance, promotes rental affordability and fairness, builds climate-resilient and energy-efficient homes, boosts homeownership and wealth-building opportunities for all, ensures communities can equitably prepare for disaster, protects families from health hazards, and advances efforts to prevent evictions and address homelessness with the urgency it requires.
When asked which one thing would make the difference for affordable housing in America, she said to catch up on a decades-long backlog of building more units. While HUD’s budget proposes some new funding for rental assistance and Multifamily Housing development, the budget includes what Todman calls “tough decisions” and even cuts out critical funding to build new homes under HUD’s Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly Program.