Application period for new round of rental assistance delayed one month
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[November 09, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The application period for a
new round of financial assistance to renters through the Illinois
Housing Development Authority will be delayed one month as the
application portal undergoes additional testing, although funding
remains available through other state programs.
The latest round of funding, provided by the American Rescue Plan Act
signed into law by President Joe Biden earlier this year, includes more
than $250 million that IHDA said it expects will help 27,000 Illinois
renters. The application window, which was scheduled to open Monday,
will now be open from Dec. 6 to Jan. 9.
Amy Lee, a spokesperson for IHDA, said the delay was due to the
department’s efforts to switch to a new application portal for this
round of funding.
The new portal was built to accommodate the rental assistance program as
well as a yet-to-launch mortgage assistance program, Lee said, but
testing conducted Friday night showed it would not likely be able to
withstand heavy traffic.
Lee said the department made the decision to push off implementation for
a month, rather than roll out the platform that could be subject to
crashes or other technical issues.
She said IHDA was working with the vendor, New York-based web
development company Unqork, to ensure the dual rental and mortgage
platform would be up and running by Dec. 6. A representative for Unqork
reached by Capitol News Illinois deferred questions to IHDA.
Despite the delay, rental assistance funding is still available through
other state programs run by the Illinois Department of Human Services.
Renters may still be able to access assistance through an IDHS provider
agency. A list of provider agencies, as well as organizations helping
with utility bills, free legal aid and additional services can be found
at www.illinoisrentalassistance.org/.
The court-based program is available to Illinois residents outside of
Cook County and applies to those with active eviction cases. Tenants
hoping to access the funding can apply for up to 12 months of past-due
rent and up to three months of future rent payments using their eviction
court case number at ilrpp.ihda.org.
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Illinois Housing Development Authority Executive
Director Kristin Faust is pictured at an event with Gov. JB Pritzker
earlier this year. IHDA said in a news release Monday a new round of
rental assistance funding won't be open for applications until Dec.
6, one month later than initially planned. (Capitol News Illinois
file photo by Jerry Nowicki)
Lee said IHDA did not expect to begin distributing
funding from the latest round of assistance until Dec. 13, and that
date is unchanged with the latest delay in launching the platform.
“While this delays the date we’ll begin accepting applications, IHDA
is committed to meeting the original timeline of disbursing rental
assistance money to tenants and landlords in December,” IHDA
Executive Director Kristin Faust said in a news release. “We
recognize this postponement may cause concern for tenants facing
eviction, but there is help for renters available now.”
Lee also said she did not have a date as to when the mortgage
assistance program would be available, noting the state submitted
its plan to the U.S. Treasury but has thus far not received final
approval.
In the first round of the Illinois Rental Payment Program that
launched in May, IHDA approved more than 57,000 applications and
paid out nearly $540 million, bringing the total money disbursed to
more than $776 million since the pandemic began.
To be eligible for rental assistance, a renter must live in Illinois
and the rental property must be a primary residence, the household
must have experienced a financial hardship due to the pandemic and
have an unpaid rent balance, and a household’s income must be below
80 percent of the Area Median Income.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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