Tulalips get biggest chunk of Washington tribes COVID relief

The $1.5 million will go toward rent and utilities for families financially hurt by the crisis.

Associated Press

Nearly $6 million in federal grants have been approved for five Washington tribes to pay for programs to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus and give financial help to tribal members for rent and utility bills.

The Seattle Times reports the federal COVID-19 response grants are intended to assist in the many ways tribes are combatting the virus, from building tiny houses for quarantine, to building more housing to fight overcrowding and providing financial relief for tribal members strapped by the economic dropoff.

The money is being distributed under the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to five tribes: the Tulalip Tribes, the Lummi Nation Housing Authority, the Muckleshoot Housing Authority, the Nisqually Indian Tribe and the Squaxin Island Tribe.

The Tulalip will receive the most, with $1.5 million to provide rental and utility assistance for families financially hurt by the COVID crisis.

The Lummi Nation Housing Authority is receiving almost as much, $1,494,909 to build 14 new housing units on the reservation, where many young families face a housing shortage and overcrowding adds to the risk of the spread of the highly contagious disease.

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