SOMERSET — The Somerset County commissioners on Tuesday accepted a grant that will boost efforts to assist those facing homelessness and endorsed an application for another to improve water service in the Village of Rockingham.
A $355,000 grant is coming to the county treasury to help prevent homelessness. The money, part of federal stimulus funding, is slated for the Somerset County Community Action Partnership.
CAP Executive Director Jeff Masterson said the money will increase by 35 percent the budget to assist those facing homelessness.
At a minimum, 100 to 120 families will be reached through the two-year life of the new grant as CAP struggles to keep a roof over their heads.
“We’re getting hit pretty hard with the economy,” Masterson said Tuesday. “Our ability to do the work we need to do is hampered for lack of funds.”
The money is geared to the Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Rehousing Program.
The commissioners also endorsed a bid by the Redevelopment Authority of Somerset County to secure $500,000 in competitive Community Development Block Grant money for water system improvements in Rockingham.
The Shade Township village is using a temporary water storage tank for which the permit has expired, said Steven Spochart, executive director of the redevelopment authority.
If approved, the grant would enable the Central City Water Authority to install water pipelines from one of its tanks along Route 160 to Rockingham. About seven homes along that stretch that now rely on individual springs would hook up to the system along with village residents.
Windber’s water authority now supplies the village but the pipelines are long and deteriorated, Spochart said.
The work is estimated to cost $600,000 to $675,000, “a funding gap we would have to cure,” he said.
The state Department of Community and Economic Development will review the application.
How long the review will take is unknown.
Local News
$355G grant boosts Somerset County’s help for homeless
- Local News
-
-
Richland manufacturer showcases expansion
Business and government leaders gathered Monday at a Richland Township manufacturing company to celebrate the expansion of its export business, made possible through some cooperative government programs.
-
New jury to hear Blair case
The 12 jury members and two alternates chosen nearly a month ago to decide the fate of Nicholas Adam Horner were excused on Monday by Blair County President Judge Jolene Kopriva.
-
Blogging with heart
Launching into the second week of American Heart Month, I'm looking at stories on the leading-edge treatment options and how local heart specialists are helping patients live longer.
-
Marijuana bust: Police seeking runaway seize dozens of pot plants
City police looking for a runaway juvenile stumbled onto a marijuana “grow operation,” seized more than 40 pot plants and arrested two apartment house neighbors.
-
Former speaker convicted
A jury on Monday convicted a senior Democrat in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on all but one of six charges in the latest corruption trial stemming from a five-year investigation into the use of taxpayers’ resources for political purposes.
-
‘Dramatic’ Pa. budget cuts expected
Top state senators say they expect Gov. Tom Corbett to propose a budget plan today that relies on cuts in spending for education and social services to balance sluggish tax collections and the rising costs of pensions and debt.
-
ACRP seeks partners for neighborhood gardens
A few years ago, the Alternative Community Resource Program and its partners planted a garden alongside Napoleon Street in a move to fill both hungry stomachs and a need for neighborhood rejuvenation.
-
‘Hope for the future’: Workshops offer confidence boost to cancer patients
Chances are when you look good you feel better about yourself.
-
Police Roundup: Martindale man accused of trying to enter cars at Portage dealership
A Portage-area man has been charged with criminal attempt at theft after state police said he was discovered trying to enter three vehicles in the parking lot of Stager’s Chevrolet.
-
In brief: Fire destroys windmill turbine
Fire destroyed a windmill turbine at the Allegheny Ridge Wind Farm on top of the mountain in Blair County between Blue Knob and Lilly on Monday morning.
- More Local News Headlines
-






