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State housing authority says no new vouchers

Blames unexpected loss of $1 million in HUD funding

By Guy Page

The Vermont State Housing Authority (VSHA) will stop issuing new low-income housing vouchers following an unexpected reduction in federal funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). 

According to a May 21 letter addressed to ‘community partners,’ VSHA received notice of an approximate $1 million cut to its calendar year 2025 allocation for the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) and Mainstream Voucher programs.

VHSA housing

The reduction came as a surprise, as VSHA had anticipated level funding after a Continuing Resolution was approved in March 2025. About 4,000 families rely on VSHA rental assistance.

“We understand that these measures will have significant impacts on the work that you do,” Elizabeth Bacon, Managing Director of the Housing Programs Administration, said. “Though necessary, we hope that these actions are temporary as we navigate this challenging budgetary environment.”

Effective immediately, VSHA is:

The loss of federal housing funding would appear to add to the uncertainty and financial shortfall in Vermont’s government response to homelessness. Vermont has the second highest rate of homelessness (after California), according to a November, 2024 study issued by Vermont Law School. Gov. Scott this week announced he would veto H.91, which creates a permanent bureaucracy and funding for sheltering Vermont’s homeless population. 

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