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Cambridge appropriates $1 million to shift vouchers to city funding for vulnerable households

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Council unanimously approved a $1 million appropriation from a recently created federal grant stabilization fund to fund municipal housing vouchers administered with the Cambridge Housing Authority, accelerating support for mixed-status households and others at risk of losing federal aid.

The Cambridge City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved an appropriation of $1,000,000 from a federal grant stabilization fund to support a municipal housing voucher program administered with the Cambridge Housing Authority (CHA).

Staff said the funding is intended to allow the city to issue vouchers while CHA and state/federal funding streams are uncertain for some households. City staff told the council the city-funded vouchers could begin to fund households "sometime in the next couple months," while the city develops an ongoing budget approach to continue the program.

Why it matters: The appropriation is a short-term, city-funded bridge to keep households housed when federal or state subsidies become unavailable; the council approved the move unanimously (9—).

Key points

- The appropriation came from a $5 million federal grant stabilization fund the council previously placed into reserve earlier this month. The council approved moving $1,000,000 of that fund into the housing grant account to pay for municipal vouchers in FY26.

- The council vote on the appropriation was 9— in the affirmative.

- City staff said the vouchers will be administered in partnership with CHA and that the city expects to convert specific households to city-funded vouchers as soon as possible; ongoing funding would be considered in next year—s budget planning.

Staff comments

A city staff member participating in the discussion said: "Once the funding is approved, we'll then look at next steps with CHA. We expect that rollout to be quicker than establishing a wholly new program because this will change the funding source for existing vouchers; we anticipate city funding…

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