

 
 INSIGHTi 
 
Community Development Block Grants and 
the CARES Act 
Updated September 28, 2020 
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD’s) Community Development Block 
Grant program (CDBG) can be employed by states and local units of government to support economic 
and community development efforts in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Coronavirus Aid, 
Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act (P.L. 116-136) includes $5 billion for the Community 
Development Fund, enabling additional HUD support for CDBG grantees. This Insight provides an 
overview of the conventional CDBG program, considers how CDBG funds may be used to support 
community and economic development efforts in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and discusses 
provisions in the CARES Act pertaining to CDBG. 
Community Development Block Grant Program Overview 
CDBG is a flexible program administered by HUD that provides formula-based block grant funding to 
states and eligible localities. CDBG authorities are regularly used to respond to unmet long-term recovery 
needs in disaster-affected areas. In some instances, Congress has enacted supplemental appropriations 
under CDBG authorities to provide additional resources for unmet needs of affected communities—
typically, but not exclusively, in areas with federal emergency or disaster declarations under the Stafford 
Act—which have come to be known as CDBG Disaster Recovery, or CDBG-DR.  
CDBG Formula Allocation 
CDBG funds generally are allocated through two separate formula processes. Approximately 70% of the 
program funds are granted to general units of local government under the CDBG Entitlement Program. 
Eligible grantees in the entitlement program are (1) principal cities of Metropolitan Statistical Areas; (2) 
other metropolitan cities with populations of at least 50,000; and (3) qualified urban counties with 
populations of at least 200,000 (not including entitlement city populations). About 30% of CDBG 
program funds are granted to states based on a separate formula allocation, for disbursement to 
communities that do not qualify for entitlement funds. States have broad discretion in disbursing funds to 
nonentitlement communities.  
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National Objectives and Eligible Activities 
As a condition for receiving funds, the program’s authorizing statute requires states and local 
governments to certify that proposed CDBG activities meet one of the program’s three national 
objectives. Eligible activities must: 
  principally benefit low- and moderate-income persons, defined as families and 
individuals whose household incomes do not exceed 80% of a jurisdiction’s median 
income; 
  aid in the prevention or elimination of slums or blight; or  
  meet an urgent need by addressing conditions that pose a serious and immediate threat to 
the health and safety of residents. 
Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 identifies the categories of eligible 
activities that may be undertaken with CDBG funds. Generally, program activities fall into six broad 
categories: planning and administrative activities; public works and public facilities; housing-related 
activities; public services; economic development; and acquisition, demolition, and disposition of real 
property. 
Community Development Block Grant Program and 
COVID-19 
The scope and objectives of the CDBG program enable activities that may support state and local 
responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. For instance, some U.S. localities have announced efforts to 
support community services and small businesses with existing CDBG funds. More states and 
communities may make use of CDBG authorities as a part of the federal response to the economic effects 
of the COVID-19 pandemic. Grantees might consider reprogramming existing CDBG funds or 
designating future funds as part of long-term social welfare and economic development recovery efforts. 
For more information on CDBG and COVID-19, see CRS Insight IN11277, Responding to the COVID-19 
Pandemic with Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Authorities, by Michael H. Cecire and 
Joseph V. Jaroscak  
Community Development Block Grant Provisions in the 
CARES Act 
The CARES Act builds on features of the conventional CDBG program as well as precedents set by 
CDBG-DR supplemental appropriations in response to disasters. It appropriates $5 billion for HUD’s 
Community Development Fund and directs HUD to allocate the funds in various ways. Of the total, $2 
billion is to supplement the conventional CDBG program. The act directs HUD to distribute these funds 
pursuant to Section 106 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5306) and 
calls for HUD to allocate the funds to CDBG grantees—including eligible local governments, states, and 
insular areas—proportional to their FY2020 CDBG allocation, as published by HUD in April 2020. 
The act directs HUD to allocate $1 billion of the total appropriation to states and insular areas outside of 
the standard formula. This funding is intended “to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus … 
including activities within entitlement and nonentitlement communities, based on public health needs, 
risk of transmission of coronavirus, number of coronavirus cases compared to the national average, and
  
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economic and housing market disruptions.” HUD announced allocation amounts for this second tranche 
of funds on May 11, 2020. 
The act directs that the remaining $2 billion be distributed to states and units of local government, at the 
discretion of the Secretary, with formula factors defined by HUD. Up to $10 million of these funds may 
be used to supplement existing awards or to provide additional technical assistance to current CDBG 
grantees. HUD published the allocation methodology and amounts on September 11, 2020. 
The CARES Act grants authority to the Secretary to waive or specify alternative requirements for the 
CDBG funds provided in the CARES Act and two other recent appropriations measures—P.L. 116-94 and 
P.L. 116-6. This waiver authority provided in the CARES Act is similar to that generally granted under 
CDBG-DR supplemental appropriations. The provision does not authorize waivers or modifications from 
requirements related to fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor standards, or environmental considerations. 
Additionally, the act sets forth expedited procedures for grantees to prepare, propose, modify, or amend 
their planned activities for appropriated CDBG funds in the act and those in the same heading in P.L. 116-
94 and P.L. 116-6. The act also waives program limits on public service activities that relate to COVID-
19. 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Joseph V. Jaroscak 
   
Analyst in Economic Development Policy 
 
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff 
to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of 
Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of 
information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role. 
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IN11315 · VERSION 3 · UPDATED