News12 New York
N12 Originals
Numbers & Links
Local
Crime
Weather
Politics

Formerly homeless people, including vets, face loss of HUD grant to help them to stay in homes

HUD is facing massive layoffs, up to 84% of their staff, according to an NPR report, and significant program cuts under the Trump administration.

Blaise Gomez

Mar 6, 2025, 5:14 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

News 12 has learned that dozens of formerly homeless Hudson Valley residents, including veterans, are now facing homelessness again - this time because of possible cuts to federal funding helping them pay their rent for the past year.

Liz Albus, who is disabled and suffers from severe mental illness, is one of those people. Her tiny two-bedroom apartment in Poughkeepsie, which she shares with her autistic 2-year-old son, is the first home she’s had in 12 years.

“I was couch-surfing for a long time. I’ve been all over New York staying places, and then I found out I could get help to find a place to live,” says the 39-year-old.

Their $1,800 monthly rent is mostly paid through a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grant administered by the nonprofit Hudson River Housing. Albus says she also receives $346 a month in temporary assistance through the Dutchess County Department of Social Services.

She received a letter on Monday from Hudson River Housing stating that the federal funding helping her with housing is in jeopardy.

“Due to unforeseen circumstances surrounding federal funding, your rental payment assistance is expected to end as of April 1,” the letter read.

“I’m not in a good place mentally. Ever since I got that letter, I’ve been sick to my stomach,” Albus says.

The woman says her disability prevents her from working and that since she received notice that her funding is in jeopardy, she’s not been able to leave the house and is struggling with extreme anxiety.

Javier Gomez, the vice president of operations for Hudson River Housing, says 33 people they are assisting under a $360,000 HUD grant stand to lose their homes since it appears the grant may not be renewed. News 12 has learned three of those people include formerly homeless veterans.

“Hudson River Housing is deeply concerned about the uncertainty surrounding potential staffing and funding cuts at HUD. These disruptions threaten our ability to serve vulnerable residents, and also the stability of our broader community,” says Gomez.

“We are urgently seeking clarity to ensure that our residents, community partners, and organization can navigate this moment without devastating consequences.”

HUD is facing massive layoffs, up to 84% of their staff, according to an NPR report, and significant program cuts under the Trump administration.

News 12 reached out to Rep. Pat Ryan for information, who issued the following statement:

“Enough is enough. I don’t care who you voted for, or where in the Hudson Valley you’re from – this is simply un-American. I’ve spent the day on the phone with our local housing partners and I want to be clear: this fight is only beginning.”

For Albus, the uncertainty seems almost too much to bear.

“When i think about losing this, I’m like – OK. My life is over,” she says.

Hudson River Housing says it is working to find other financial help if the grant is not renewed.

More Stories

Top Stories

00:39
0529wpmiddleschoolfire_2026-05-29-12-28-33

White Plains middle school closed for the day after overnight fire

02:09
FB Rain Day

A gusty cooldown leads to Sunday perfection

02:06
Screenshot 2026-05-28 081855

‘Devastating’ loss leaves Cortlandt Manor community in shock and grief after deadly fire

01:50
WC 9pm FRI_County Mall Expansion_ajc_2026-05-29-21-08-27

Work underway on 'transformative expansion' at Cross County Center

01:59
WC 430PM FRI_Disaster Relief_ajc_2026-05-29-16-38-51_16-35-32,14

Emergency aid sought for Hudson Valley farms devastated by spring freeze

01:50
0529algaeblooms_2026-05-29-16-59-43_16-39-09,25

Harmful algal blooms reported in Rockland County lakes

01:40
WC 430PM FRI_Save The Sound_ajc_2026-05-29-16-44-45

Nonprofit shares how state budget could impact environment

02:16
blaise doll lady

Disabled Spring Valley woman says lifelike reborn dolls bring comfort and purpose

02:04
WCvasquez529_2026-05-29-06-39-35

Circus Vasquez kicks off today at the Palisades Center

00:35
0529bronxmurderarrest_2026-05-29-12-40-15

Yonkers man, two other gang members charged with execution-style murder

01:55
0528yonkersbudget_2026-05-28-21-10-33

Yonkers receives $55M in state aid; city council set to vote on proposed city budget

00:32
0529ellenvilleextortion_2026-05-29-12-52-05

Federal jury convicts man in connection with Ellenville murder case

APnewstn

Judge temporarily blocks payouts from Trump’s $1.8B ‘anti-weaponization’ settlement fund

01:49
WC 430PM THU_Trademark Dispute_ajc_2026-05-28-16-49-21

Battle of the Beavers Round 2: Westchester group back in trademark fight with Buc-ee's gas station

00:44
0528lawsuitsettlement_2026-05-28-17-30-53

Sexual harassment lawsuit filed by Greenburgh police officer has been settled

01:46
blaise cold case

DNA breakthrough helps solve 'brutal' 24-year-old homicide case in New Windsor

01:24
0528funeralhomegraffiti_2026-05-28-17-06-52

Victims of vandalism receive violations from Newburgh officials; councilman urges administrators to rethink graffiti crackdown

01:49
WC 430PM THUR_Apt Evictions_ajc_2026-05-28-16-41-59

Years of flood damage causes Spring Valley apartment residents to relocate

00:23
Putnam Murder Sentencing

Life sentence for Putnam County drug dealer who strangled woman in Carmel home

00:24
5272026YONKERSCHILDPORN_2026-05-28-06-10-25

Retired Yonkers fire captain faces child sexual abuse material charges.

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices