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Hartford Reporter

Saturday, September 21, 2024

$4 Mil Fed Grant To Protect Families From Lead And Other Safety Hazard

HARTFORD, CONN (October 13, 2022) Today, Mayor Luke Bronin and Senator Richard Blumenthal announced that the City of Hartford has been awarded a $4,055,826 grant over four  years from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)  to protect children and families from lead-based paint and other home  health hazards. The grant, funded through the Lead Hazard Reduction  Grant Program, will help identify and clean up lead sources in the homes  of vulnerable families.

With this funding, the City will be able to provide direct lead  remediation and other hazard remediation to 165 low-income homes in  Hartford. The City will be working with other medical and social service  providers who will assist with the remediation process. This grant  follows a $3.4 million HUD grant that the City previously received and  will greatly expand the scope of the City’s lead remediation efforts,  which have helped cut lead poisoning in Hartford children by 58% between  2016 and 2020. The City has completed lead remediation efforts in  approximately 1,400 homes since 2001, including in 95 units that had  been improved through the Housing Preservation Loan Fund.

"Lead poisoning caused by lead paint in older homes can have an  enormous impact on the development of children, setting back young  people for a lifetime," said Mayor Bronin. "Our Health and Human  Services team, alongside our Developmental Services team, has done  incredible work removing these toxic substances from hundreds of homes  throughout the years, and this grant will allow us to expand that  important work. I am deeply grateful to HUD, along with our entire  federal delegation, for recognizing the necessity of this grant, which  will save lives and protect our young people."

“We have seen the danger and know the risks lead poisoning poses to  communities across Connecticut, and in particular, to our state’s  children,” said Senator Blumenthal. “I am so pleased the City of  Hartford is tackling this critical health hazard head on and providing  direct remediation to 165 families in the city. This critical federal  grant will help ensure that Hartford families are growing, playing, and  learning in safe, lead-free homes.”

“Everyone should feel safe at home, but Connecticut has a lot of  older houses that put children and families at risk for lead poisoning.  This $4 million federal grant to remove lead-based paint and old pipes  from more homes in Hartford is a major investment in the health and  future of the community,” said Senator Murphy.

“Every child in Connecticut deserves a clean, safe environment to  grow up in,” said Congressman Larson. “Under Mayor Bronin’s leadership,  the City of Hartford has made strides in removing dangerous lead paint  from Hartford families’ homes. I am proud to have supported this funding  because it will further these efforts to ensure the children of our  District can live happy, healthy lives.”

HUD awarded over $125 million to 26 state and local government  agencies across the country. The grant included more than $13 million  from HUD’s Healthy Homes Supplemental funding, which helps communities  address other health and safety hazards in homes. The City of Hartford  received $350,000 in Healthy Homes Supplemental funding.          

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