On June 20, the Illinois Housing Development Authority Board approved a resolution objecting to any decrease in funding for rental assistance in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development fiscal year 2026 budget that would also impact affordable housing development in Illinois and across the nation.
The resolution affirms the critical importance of HUD-funded programs to Illinois residents, particularly low- and extremely low-income households, and highlights the devastating impact the proposed reductions would have on housing stability, community development, and the state’s broader economy.
“Programs like rental assistance are a necessity. They are lifelines that improve health, employment, and educational outcomes for families, seniors, veterans, and people with special needs,” said IHDA Board Chair King Harris. “Illinois receives an estimated $2.6 billion annually from HUD. Dramatically cutting this funding would not only threaten the homes of our most vulnerable residents but also undermine decades of progress in affordable housing and equitable community investment. It would push countless families closer to eviction and homelessness while weakening the social and economic fabric of communities throughout Illinois.”
In Illinois, nearly 400,000 households receive rental housing assistance from HUD-funded programs such as the Housing Choice Voucher Program, Project-Based Rental Assistance, Section 202 Housing for the Elderly and Section 811 Housing for Persons with Disabilities.
In addition, dozens of Illinois municipalities receive and disburse more than $500 million in Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) each year to fund critical repairs to water, sewers, drainage, and other infrastructure to enhance safety and quality of life for their community.
HUD is a critical partner in Illinois and in 2024, its rental assistance programs:
- Assisted 1,721 people through its Section 811 Housing for Persons with Disabilities program.
- Assisted 5,415 people through its Section 202 Housing for the Elderly program.
- Assisted 221,210 people through its Housing Choice Voucher program.
- Assisted 66,110 people through its Public Housing Rental Assistance program.
- Assisted 96,723 people through its Project-Based Rental Assistance program.


