Housing First helps people find permanent homes in Detroit − but HUD plans to divert funds to short-term solutions

The Conversation
by Deyanira Nevárez Martínez, Assistant Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, Michigan State University
March 4, 2026
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4 min read
AI-Generated Summary

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) revised its Continuum of Care funding allocation in November 2025, reducing support for permanent subsidized housing in favor of short-term solutions. This shift, described by HUD as moving from "housing first" to "treatment first," threatens Detroit's efforts to combat homelessness, potentially forcing thousands back onto the streets. While a federal judge temporarily paused the changes, HUD intends to implement them in future rounds, raising concerns among advocates and researchers that this could destabilize vulnerable populations and undermine proven strategies for long-term housing stability. Detroit, which received $40 million last year, could see its permanent supportive housing funds drastically cut, jeopardizing its homelessness response system.

What's Being Done

Actions, solutions, and how to get involved

Advocates, researchers, and local housing organizations like those in Detroit are challenging HUD's proposed funding changes, with a federal judge having temporarily paused the implementation of these new policies. These groups are working to preserve funding for proven 'Housing First' models and raise awareness about the potential negative impacts of shifting to short-term solutions. Readers can contact their congressional representatives to express support for permanent supportive housing programs, donate to local homelessness prevention organizations, and stay informed about policy changes affecting housing stability.

AI-researched overview of ongoing actions and responses
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