Housing & Human Services staff outlined a FY27 package that would create a municipal rental assistance program with a proposed $1,000,000 budget and a separate $500,000 allocation to continue funding for the Eviction Defense Collaborative.
Staff said the RFP will be prescriptive: the city will seek an experienced nonprofit partner that can operate multilingual, in‑person and online intake, provide housing navigation and case management, and ensure compliance with eligibility and documentation requirements. The administration proposed a cap on indirect/administrative costs similar to federal practice; staff referenced a 15–20% expected indirect cost range and said the FY27 proposal assumes roughly 20% as an administrative cap in budgeting scenarios.
"We implemented a cost cap for indirect or admin cost of 20%, which aligns with federal practice," staff said. The presenter added that the RFP will prioritize low‑income households (for example households at or below 60% AMI) and require third‑party verification such as past‑due mortgage or utility statements or eviction filings.
Councilors voiced two consistent concerns: (1) the program’s one‑time funding and whether it can be sustained in future years, and (2) fraud and misuse risk if safeguards are not robust. Several members asked whether the program could be administered internally to reduce overhead, but staff said current capacity limits and the need for experienced housing navigation staff make an external partner more efficient.
Staff also described complementary longer‑term efforts including a proposed $25 million housing trust recapitalization bond and advocacy for state voucher funding to secure project‑based rental subsidies.
What’s next: staff will circulate the draft RFP and provide committee members with expected program metrics, the administrative cost cap language, and program safeguards before the contract award process.