HUD announces $4.4M+ in lead hazard reduction grants available to communities

True

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funding

HUD has made more than $4,400,000 in Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grants available for communities to address lead-based paint hazards in privately owned rental and owner-occupied housing.

Source summary
HUD Secretary Scott Turner announced that more than $4.4 million in Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grants are available to help communities control lead-based paint hazards in privately owned rental and owner-occupied housing. The announcement was made at a Partnership for Petersburg event with Virginia officials; HUD noted Petersburg has a high estimated prevalence of lead hazards. The application package is on grants.gov, and HUD will offer technical assistance and a webinar to support competitive applications.
Latest fact check

The HUD press release dated January 9, 2026, explicitly states that HUD Secretary Scott Turner "announced more than $4,400,000 in Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grants are available to communities" to strengthen capacity to control lead-based paint hazards in privately owned rental and owner-occupied housing. The associated federal opportunity listing for the Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building Grant Program shows total program funding of $4,445,850, which is indeed more than $4.4 million. These official government sources directly corroborate the amount, the program name, and the fact that the funds are available to communities as grants. The verdict is True because multiple primary U.S. government documents confirm the substance of the statement without contradiction.

Timeline

  1. Update · Jan 10, 2026, 02:18 AMTrue
    The HUD press release dated January 9, 2026, explicitly states that HUD Secretary Scott Turner "announced more than $4,400,000 in Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grants are available to communities" to strengthen capacity to control lead-based paint hazards in privately owned rental and owner-occupied housing. The associated federal opportunity listing for the Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building Grant Program shows total program funding of $4,445,850, which is indeed more than $4.4 million. These official government sources directly corroborate the amount, the program name, and the fact that the funds are available to communities as grants. The verdict is True because multiple primary U.S. government documents confirm the substance of the statement without contradiction.
  2. Original article · Jan 09, 2026

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