NJ program offers up to $15K in home renovations for vulnerable groups

NJ program offers up to K in home renovations for vulnerable groups

For those who find themselves struggling to afford the necessary home repairs and improvements to keep their environment safe, there’s a new program that aims to help.

Greater Bergen Community Action has launched its Healthy Homes program, an initiative that aims to remediate environmental hazards in 140 residential units throughout Bergen and Passaic counties. For each, the organization is offering up to $15,000 worth of essential home improvements — to address risks like mold, lead and structural deficiencies — to vulnerable income-eligible populations like seniors age 65 years and older, disabled individuals and families with young children.

It is funded through a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and Program Director Avery Headley said GBCA was one of just 20 organizations nationwide — and one of two in New Jersey — to receive the grant.

A photo from the first renovation completed as part of the Healthy Homes program in Bergenfield.

The first renovation as part of this program was recently completed in Bergenfield, Headley said. The project involved replacing splintered flooring, installing a new front door with better insulation and locks, fixing sagging ceiling tiles that were damaged and remediating mold in the shower, among other things,

“She got flooring. We painted her second floor, and we did a really nice kitchen for her,” Headley said. “We did so many different things that she was just so elated to be able to have these things done that she thought she could never afford.”

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