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HUD planning to take over Atlantic City Housing Authority, citing failures to carry out improvement plan
HUD planning to take over Atlantic City Housing Authority, citing failures to carry out improvement plan

CBS News

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • CBS News

HUD planning to take over Atlantic City Housing Authority, citing failures to carry out improvement plan

The Atlantic City Housing Authority may soon fall under federal control, according to a letter unveiled by New Jersey Rep. Jeff Van Drew this week. Van Drew — a Republican whose district covers most of South Jersey, including Atlantic City — said the Department of Housing and Urban Development had found ACHA to be "in substantial default," or in other words, had violated one or more tenets of the Housing Act of 1937. In the letter, HUD's Acting Public Housing Director in Newark, Monica Hawkins, said ACHA failed to complete goals outlined in a "recovery agreement" to get ACHA back on track. The authority had scored 45 out of 100 on a HUD assessment in 2023, a score that gave the authority a designation as "troubled." The score lowered to 40 out of 100 in another assessment issued in March 2025. Goals were set including increasing the assessment score to at least 60 and boosting occupancy of ACHA units to 96%. That goal was not met, with HUD measuring that only 71.4% of the units were occcupied, according to the letter. HUD said ACHA failed to meet other goals in the category of "improving physical conditions of dwelling units." Several forms detailing possible work that could improve those properties were still just drafts and not finalized, according to the letter. In 2024, Atlantic City officials outlined a plan to invest over $3 million in the struggling Stanley Holmes Village, a complex mentioned multiple times in the assessment. Here's a portion of Van Drew's statement issued Monday: "Families were freezing in their homes, living with mold, no heat, no hot water, and no help. It was unacceptable. I promised the people I would not stop until something changed, and today, accountability is here. I want to thank Secretary Turner for giving this situation the attention it deserved. The failed governance is being addressed, and now it is going to be rebuilt from the ground up. We fought hard, and we got the job done." Atlantic City has 10 workdays to respond or appeal. A spokesperson for the city did not respond to an email requesting comment Tuesday. CBS News Philadelphia previously reported on issues at one apartment complex operated by ACHA, the Stanley Holmes Village Apartments — the oldest public housing complex in the state. In December 2022, results of an inspection were released detailing issues with heat, infestations of rodents, bedbugs and roaches, nd mold, broken toilets and other issues. City inspectors reported finding problems in all 320 apartments they visited over several days. The inspection found all units had basic heat, but in some, the heat did not meet standards — with some bedrooms cooler than the required minimum temperature of 68 degrees. Others had temperatures over 80 degrees. Nearly 50 units had issues with hot water. Late last year, officials held a news conference and discussed an action plan to address the issues at Stanley Holmes Village, including $3.5 million in investments for higher efficiency boilers and sensors that can detect leaks and temperature issues. At that time, residents of 72 units had voluntarily transferred out of the apartments' Village Hughes contributed to this report.

How many people will lose health care coverage in New Jersey after Trump budget bill?
How many people will lose health care coverage in New Jersey after Trump budget bill?

Yahoo

time04-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

How many people will lose health care coverage in New Jersey after Trump budget bill?

The 'Big Beautiful Bill,' as it has become known, is sitting on President Donald Trump's desk and is expected to be signed on July 4. The controversial legislation includes significant cuts to Medicaid, which is known in the state as NJ FamilyCare, funding which will have detrimental effects on the service in the state. Lawmakers in Trenton have already made it clear that the state budget does not have the funds to mitigate such losses. According to the state's Department of Health and Human Services, more than 350,000 eligible residents will likely lose health care coverage in New Jersey. There is also a $3.3 billion annual cut in funding to hospitals and public health funding and $360 million annual cut to the state budget due to reductions in federal funding and provider assessments. New Jersey's 12-member delegation in the House of Representatives voted along party lines yesterday when the bill was finally called for a vote in the chamber. Republican Reps. Tom Kean Jr., Chris Smith and Jeff Van Drew voted in favor of plan to further Trump's agenda. Their counterparts, Democratic Reps. Herb Conaway, Josh Gottheimer, LaMonica McIver, Rob Menendez, Donald Norcross, Frank Pallone, Nellie Pou, Mikie Sherrill and Bonnie Watson Coleman voted against the measure. In addition to Medicaid cuts, there will also be cuts to SNAP food assistance. More than 60% of the New Jersey's 800,000 recipients are children or seniors. Reactions Garden State lawmakers assess Trump's mega 'big, beautiful' budget bill: What they said The bill will also add $3.4 trillion to federal deficits over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. There is $121.5 billion for ICE as well as detention center and border wall construction. It also includes a four-year increase to the cap on the state and local tax deduction, from $10,000 to $40,000 before it reverts back to $10,000 in the fifth year. The bill would allow for workers to deduct up to $25,000 of tip wages and overtime from their taxes for individuals whose income exceeds $150,000 or couples whose income exceeds $300,000. Katie Sobko covers the New Jersey Statehouse. Email: sobko@ This article originally appeared on How many people will lose health care coverage in New Jersey

House GOP fumes over Senate megabill: ‘How did it get so much f—ing worse?'
House GOP fumes over Senate megabill: ‘How did it get so much f—ing worse?'

The Hill

time30-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Hill

House GOP fumes over Senate megabill: ‘How did it get so much f—ing worse?'

Moderate Republicans and hardline conservatives in the House are expressing increasing opposition to the Senate's version of the 'big, beautiful bill' just days before the lower chamber is set to consider the legislation, a daunting dynamic for GOP leaders as they race to meet their self-imposed Friday deadline. The Senate on Monday kicked off the hours-long vote-a-rama with members considering a series of amendments that could make-or-break support in the lower chamber, including changes to Medicaid cuts, tax provisions and more. The upper chamber is expected to vote on final passage early Tuesday morning. As House lawmakers anxiously watch the Senate's deliberations, they are fuming about the state of the legislation. 'On the text chains, on the phone calls, everyone is complaining,' one moderate House Republican, who requested anonymity to discuss the private conversations, told The Hill. 'There's a few little provisions people will say something positive about, but no one is happy with the Senate version.' 'It's amazing to a lot of us — how did it get so much f—ing worse?' they added. The lawmaker said GOP leadership and the White House are making calls to skeptical Republicans, and that members in more conservative districts are reaching out to moderates to raise issues with some provisions — underscoring the depth of concerns within the conference. At least six moderate House Republicans are planning to vote 'no' on the Senate bill in its current form, The Hill has learned, as they air concerns about changes to Medicaid and the rollback of green-energy tax credits, among other provisions. The Senate bill includes a proposal that would effectively cap provider taxes at 3.5 percent by 2031, down from the current 6 percent, but only for the states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. On green-energy tax credits, the rollback of the subsidies is a bit less harsh in the Senate bill, but the upper chamber's version adds a new tax on solar and wind projects if a certain percentage of their components come from China. Reps. David Valadao (R-Calif.), Jeff Van Drew (R-N.J.) and Young Kim (R-Calif.) are currently a 'no' on the legislation because of those provisions, in addition to two other moderate Republicans who requested anonymity to discuss their opinions on the bill. Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), meanwhile, said he is against the Senate's cut of the bill because of language involving the state-and-local tax (SALT) deduction cap. 'I think it's just bad public policy,' Van Drew said earlier this month, after the Senate unveiled its language. 'If you hurt these hospitals some will close, some people will have to utilize emergency rooms even more… This is political stupidity; it's political suicide.' For now, moderates are closely watching for a vote on an amendment introduced by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) that would prevent new enrollees in Medicaid expansion states from receiving the nine-to-one enhanced Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) if they are nondisabled and do not have dependent children, a change that would cut spending for the social safety net program by an additional $313 billion. The amendment is unlikely to muster enough support to pass, though Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) is backing the change, as part of a deal to help get Scott and other GOP holdouts on board for a procedural vote on Saturday. House moderates, meanwhile, are quietly hoping the tweak does squeak through, since it will make the package dead-on-arrival in the House. A number of lawmakers in the lower chamber have said the provision is a red-line for them. 'Most of us want the FMAP amendment to pass so it'll just be the final nail in the coffin,' the previously quoted lawmaker said. On the other side of the ideological spectrum are conservative Republicans enraged over the level of spending cuts in the bill and, as a result, its deficit impact. The conservative House Freedom Caucus, which includes several critics of the bill, sent a shot across the bow on Monday. 'The House budget framework was clear: no new deficit spending in the One Big Beautiful Bill. The Senate's version adds $651 billion to the deficit — and that's before interest costs, which nearly double the total,' the group wrote on X. 'That's not fiscal responsibility. It's not what we agreed to.' 'The Senate must make major changes and should at least be in the ballpark of compliance with the agreed upon House budget framework,' it added. 'Republicans must do better.' Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), one of the most vocal members of the group who had been airing concerns with the bill throughout the weekend, said he has been having conversations with the White House — which he dubbed 'intense fellowship' — discussions that do not appear to have done enough to bring him on board. 'I know the president has a great agenda that will get things moving again. I want to accelerate that. I want the border money. I want to vote yes, but I can't vote yes just because they say I have to,' Roy said on The Dana Show. 'I can't vote yes just because everybody says we got to get it done by July 4th. I have a responsibility to look at this objectively and say guys, are you doing the right math? And I will just tell you right now, I don't think the math is correct yet.' Rep. Keith Self (R-Texas), another member of the group, sounded a similar note, saying he wants the Senate to return to the House framework — and floating possibly voting against the procedural rule when the measure works its way through the House. 'I think the commitment is to get back to the House framework,' Self said. 'That's what everybody's committed to, I know that's what the Speaker has been talking to the Senate majority leader, about so we'll see what happens.' The concerns from both ends of the GOP conference are growing more pronounced as Republican leaders — under pressure from President Trump — race to complete work on the package by their self-imposed July 4 deadline, which arrives on Friday. The Senate is expected to hold a final vote on the legislation early Tuesday morning, once the arduous vote-a-rama process wraps up. If the bill passes, the House Rules Committee could convene as early as Tuesday at noon to take up the legislation, members on the panel were told, according to a source, kickstarting the process in the lower chamber. Floor votes could then be held as early as Wednesday at 9 a.m., House Majority Whip Tom Emmer's (R-Minn.) office told lawmakers on Sunday night. As leaders plow full-steam ahead, some lawmakers are pumping the breaks, recommending that the party push back its timeline to continue deliberations. 'So rather than forcing it through this week, we should have the conversations we need to with the Senate, see what they do, review the bill, find where we can find savings, find where we can adjust what we're doing on tax policy and make the map actually add up,' Roy said Monday.

Senate's ‘big, beautiful bill' faces serious headwinds in the House
Senate's ‘big, beautiful bill' faces serious headwinds in the House

Yahoo

time29-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Senate's ‘big, beautiful bill' faces serious headwinds in the House

The Senate's version of the 'big, beautiful bill' is facing serious headwinds in the House with The Hill learning that at least six House Republicans are currently a 'no' on the framework, a daunting sign for GOP leadership as the Senate races towards a vote. Those six House Republicans, some of whom requested anonymity, are enough opposition to tank the package, as GOP leaders grapple with a razor-thin majority. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who was one of two GOP lawmakers to oppose the House version of the bill last month, is also likely to oppose the Senate's edition, deepening the pocket of resistance in the lower chamber. Republicans can only afford to lose three votes and still clear the legislation, assuming full attendance and united Democratic opposition. 'I support the reasonable provisions in H.R. 1 that protect Medicaid's long-term viability and ensure the program continues to serve our most vulnerable, but I will not support a final bill that eliminates vital funding streams our hospitals rely on, including provider taxes and state directed payments, or any provisions that punish expansion states,' Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.) wrote in a statement on Saturday. 'President Trump was clear when he said to root out our waste, fraud, and abuse without cutting Medicaid and I wholeheartedly agree,' he continued. 'I urge my Senate colleagues to stick to the Medicaid provisions in H.R. 1 — otherwise I will vote no.' Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-N.J.) told The Hill that he is also opposed to the bill because of the Medicaid provider tax provision. Rep. Young Kim (R-Calif.) is currently a 'no' on the measure because of the Medicaid language, rollback of solar energy credits and public lands provisions, a source familiar with the matter told The Hill. Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), meanwhile, told The Hill that he is against the current version of the package because of the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap proposal. The legislation would increase the currently $10,000 SALT cap to $40,000 for individuals making $500,000 or less for five years, then snap back to the original number. 'While I support the President's broader agenda, how could I support the same unfair $10k SALT cap I've spent years criticizing?' LaLota said. 'A permanent $40k deduction cap with income thresholds of $225k for single filers and $450k for joint filers would earn my vote.' It is not, however, just moderates who are signaling issues with the Senate bill: Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, posted an ominous message on X that suggested he was not pleased with the package. 'I will not negotiate via X. But it's important to know that jamming us with a bill before we've had any chance to review the implications of major changes & re-writes, fluid scores, a high likelihood of violating the house framework (deficits) , & tons of swamp buy-offs is bad,' he wrote. The opposition is rising to the surface as Senate Republicans inch closer to holding an initial vote on the 'big, beautiful bill,' which would officially kick off the consideration process and eventually tee up a final vote in the House. It remains unclear, however, if Senate GOP leaders have the votes to move forward. If the motion to proceed passes by a simple majority, the chamber would hold a series of unlimited amendment votes called a vote-a-rama, which could result in changes to the measure. Senate GOP leaders are also still talking to holdouts and could make changes to the bill as written. In the meantime, House Republicans — beginning to review the revised Senate text unveiled overnight — are expressing resistance to the measure, prompting serious questions about whether top GOP lawmakers will be able to enact the legislation by their self-imposed July 4 deadline. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) convened a call with the House Republican Conference Saturday afternoon and urged lawmakers to keep their concerns with the Senate bill private, and instead speak directly with their senators and the White House, two sources told The Hill. Senate Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) told members that it is unlikely they will have to return to Washington on Monday, the sources said. Tuesday or Wednesday is more realistic, he told lawmakers. One source told The Hill that the call was brief and leadership did not take questions. The main qualm among House Republicans appears to be the Medicaid language in the bill. The Senate's legislation includes a proposal that would effectively cap provider taxes at 3.5 percent by 2031, down from the current 6 percent, but only for the states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. The decrease was initially supposed to begin in 2027, with a 0.5 percent phase down annually, but Senate Republicans overnight changed the text to delay the implementation to 2028. The upper chamber also inserted a provision to create a $25 billion rural hospital relief fund that would be distributed over five years to assuage those concerns. The changes, however, do not seem to be solving all of the GOP's problems, with House Republicans still voicing opposition to the language. Aside from Medicaid, the Senate bill's rollback of green-energy tax credits is an issue for some House Republicans. The revised legislation for the upper chamber slashes tax incentives for wind and solar energy and adds a new tax on future wind and solar projects. Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) would not say how he plans to vote on the bill, but signaled that he is not happy with the Medicaid provisions and green-energy tax credit language. 'Instead of improving the Medicaid and energy portions of [the] House bill it appears the Senate went backwards,' he told The Hill. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Republican removes post criticising Sikh congressional prayer
Republican removes post criticising Sikh congressional prayer

The National

time06-06-2025

  • Politics
  • The National

Republican removes post criticising Sikh congressional prayer

Republican Congresswoman Mary Miller is facing criticism after she said it was 'troubling' that a Muslim led the morning prayer in US Congress, and then changed her social media post once she learnt that it was actually a Sikh man who had spoken. 'America was founded as a Christian nation, and I believe our government should reflect that truth,' she wrote in her social media post on X on Friday. The representative later removed her post after being admonished by both her Democratic and Republican colleagues. 'Mary, you're a racist, bigoted, disgusting, and shameful person, you don't deserve to represent anyone in public office,' wrote Democratic Representative Maxwell Frost. The man who led the prayer, Giani Surinder Singh of the Gurdwara South Jersey Sikh Society, was invited to be the morning guest chaplain by Republican Representative Jeff Van Drew according to Politico. Republican Representative David Valadao took Ms Miller to task for her post. 'I'm troubled by my colleague's remarks about this morning's Sikh prayer, which have since been deleted,' he wrote on X. 'Religious freedom is one of our nation's founding principles, and I started the American Sikh Congressional Caucus to draw attention to this very issue and work towards religious tolerance for all.' Representative Miller's comments, which were also widely considered to be Islamophobic, came on the first day of Eid Al Adha, one of the most important holidays of Islam. Morning invocations are not unusual in the US Congress, and are often given by religious leaders and figures.

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