The Recovery Act is making a long-term impact on American families  and communities by reducing energy costs, creating green jobs and  improving the quality of life for people across the country.  That’s why  on Thursday, I was proud to announce a major Recovery Act milestone for  HUD and the Administration. Through HUD’s Green Retrofit Program for Multifamily Housing,  which the Recovery Act created for the first time, we’ve been able to  award more than $100 million to 100 affordable housing developments  around the country to complete energy efficient renovations, and HUD  will continue to issue the awards from now through September 30, 2010. 
The 100 affordable housing developments receiving HUD funding include  over 8,000 homes, and HUD anticipates that the awards will allow  tenants will save over $250 each on utility bills annually.
Just a few weeks ago, I joined Congresswoman Holmes-Norton and Mayor Adrian Fenty at the groundbreaking  of one of these developments right here in the Shaw neighborhood of  Washington, DC. Over $2 million in Recovery Act Green Retrofit Program  funding will help residents of the Gibson Plaza Apartments cut their  utility costs more than 20 percent -- at the same time creating 75  good-paying green jobs that can never be sent offshore.
Overall, the Green Retrofit Program provides $250 million nationally  to reduce energy costs, cut water consumption, and improve indoor air  quality. Under the Obama Administration, HUD understands that in these  difficult economic times families look for ways to save money on  everyday costs, and the Green Retrofit Program is just one example of  the many ways in which the Recovery Act is helping Americans save money  on energy.
The Green Retrofit Program is also an example of HUD’s ongoing  commitment to creating jobs while simultaneously building sustainable  homes and communities. As our nation continues to recover from the  economic crisis, the program is designed to create thousands of quality  green jobs as workers retrofit older federally assisted multi-family  apartment developments with the next generation of energy efficient  technologies.
Initiatives like the Green Retrofit Program illustrate how the  Recovery Act continues to work to benefit the families and communities  hardest hit by the economic crisis by generating jobs for Americans,  improving housing and neighborhoods and building a path toward  sustainability, energy efficiency, and long-term economic prosperity.
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