Oppose Cuts to Housing and Homelessness Programs in Trump’s FY2026 Budget
The National Coalition for the Homeless strongly opposes President Donald J. Trump’s proposed Fiscal Year 2026 budget. Presidential budgets reflect an administration’s core principles and priorities. President Donald J. Trump’s proposed Fiscal Year 2026 budget signals a troubling lack of concern for vulnerable populations, including children, elderly veterans, and marginalized communities. Rather than upholding a vision of equity and care, the proposal suggests a retreat from programs that provide critical support to those most in need.
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Budgets are more than just financial documents; they are moral and political statements that reveal an administration’s priorities, values, and ambitions. When a president releases a budget proposal, it is not merely a matter of accounting—it is a roadmap that outlines the administration’s vision for the nation, underscoring the programs it seeks to fund, the initiatives it aims to curtail, and the populations it intends to support or deprioritize. Analyzing these budgets is critical in understanding the immediate fiscal realities and the long-term implications on society.
A presidential budget is rarely enacted in its original form. Rather, it serves as a starting point for negotiations among Congress, advocacy groups, and the public. The budget debate often becomes a reflection of broader ideological divisions, with each side using funding priorities to advance its vision for the country.
Donald Whitehead, the Executive Director of the National Coalition for the Homeless, asserts that the President’s budget blatantly disregards marginalized communities. “Last year, we witnessed the highest number of individuals experiencing homelessness, and the administration proposes to abandon effective, evidence-based strategies in favor of approaches that will precipitate a catastrophic surge in homelessness. If implemented in its current form, this budget has the potential to cause preventable deaths.”
President Trump’s proposal includes a $26.72 billion cut to HUD’s rental assistance programs—including Housing Choice Vouchers (HCVs), Public Housing, Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA), Section 202 Housing for the Elderly, and Section 811 Housing for Persons with Disabilities—by consolidating them into a single State Rental Assistance Block Grant. This restructuring would amount to an unprecedented 43% reduction in rental assistance and impose a two-year time limit on rental aid for “able-bodied adults.” States would be “encouraged to provide funding to share in the responsibility to ensure that similar levels of recipients can benefit from the block grant.”
The budget also proposes a $532 million cut to Homelessness Assistance Grants (HAG), and the elimination of both the Continuum of Care (CoC) program and the Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) program. These would be folded into the Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) program. In addition, the Permanent Supportive Housing and VASH programs would be discontinued.
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The proposal calls for the elimination of the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) and HOME Investment Partnerships programs. It would also eliminate the Indian Housing Block Grant (IHBG) Competitive and Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant programs, cutting $479 million and consolidating these into the formula-based IHBG program. The Family Self-Sufficiency (FSS) program would be discontinued as well, with the justification that “such programs are duplicative in purpose and would be better left to state and local governments.”
Further, the budget would reduce funding for HUD’s Healthy Homes and Lead Hazards programs by $296 million, citing existing unobligated balances. It would eliminate the Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing (PRO Housing) program, which incentivizes inclusive local zoning practices, and the Fair Housing Initiatives Program (FHIP), which supports the investigation and adjudication of housing discrimination complaints. The proposal would maintain support for the Fair Housing Assistance Program (FHAP), which funds state and local agencies tasked with enforcing the Fair Housing Act.
Take Action: Protect and Expand HUD’s Vital Affordable Housing and Homelessness Assistance Programs
- Fully fund the renewal of all existing Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) contracts and 60,000 Emergency Housing Vouchers (EHVs).
- Increase funding for public housing operations and public housing capital needs.
- Allocate $4.922 billion for HUD’s Homeless Assistance Grants (HAG) program.
- Provide $20 million for the Eviction Protection Grant Program (EPGP).
- Ensure at least $1.3 billion for HUD’s Tribal housing programs and $150 million in competitive funds targeted to tribes with the greatest needs.
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