We are unable to provide telephone numbers. Check with the local housing authority in any jurisdiction in which you are seeking an open waiting list status.
If you are on the waiting list, ACTIVE means you are actively on the waiting list, and your position is the number indicated.
Yes! Check with all of the counties in your state. Use the HUD.gov site and Section8programs.com to find a Section 8 application and open waiting lists. You can also google your local housing authority and ask them.
Most housing authorities with toll-free numbers open up the line only when there is a waiting list that is open, and only for certain period of time during which the waiting list is open, and often during only a specific day of the week and between specific hours. If you want to talk to HUD in Washington DC, or the HUD office in your area then you will need to look up that telephone number.
Call your local Housing Authority, which handles Section 8. You will find the number in your government phone book.
Generally speaking, section 8 applications are not taken online. Some housing authorities may allow you to fill out certain forms online, and generally so that you may place your name on the waiting list. When your name comes up on the waiting list additional information will be collected, generally on paper, in order to further process your application. A section 8 applications is a federally regulated application and there are certain guidelines by which it must be administered by the local Housing Authority. The general procedure is that your name is placed on a waiting list first -- generally by stopping in the office or by calling a special telephone number during certain days of the week, hours of the day, or nth day of the month. HUD regulations state that everyone must be given an equal chance to have his name on the waiting list. Filling out an application online often denies this equal chance. So there is a uniform procedure by which this is done.
If you are on the waiting list, ACTIVE means you are actively on the waiting list, and your position is the number indicated.
Call your local Housing Authority or the Housing Authority at which you would like to place your name on the waiting list.
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To check the status of the Suisun Section 8 waiting list and your position on it, you can contact the Suisun City Housing Authority directly. Provide them with your application number or other identifying information, and they should be able to give you an update on your status and position on the list.
Yes! Check with all of the counties in your state. Use the HUD.gov site and Section8programs.com to find a Section 8 application and open waiting lists. You can also google your local housing authority and ask them.
I would like to know what my number is on the section 8 waiting list?
This question is vague. If you're asking if there is Section 8 in Florida, the answer is yes: Section 8, now known as Housing Choice Voucher Program, is everywhere in the United States, per federal (HUD) regulations. If you're asking if there are any voucher programs open in Florida to apply, there may be or there may be a waiting list, which may or may not be open. The housing choice voucher program is administered by local or regional Housing authorities. These housing authorities, most of which administer the housing choice voucher programs, have their own set of rules by which people can apply for housing assistance. In most cases Housing authorities have a waiting list. When that waiting list reaches its capacity -- this is typically most of the time -- the waiting list is closed and remains closed until funding is received to assist more families. Some housing authorities have a d lottery system, by which they will open up the waiting list on a certain date and collect names of potential applicants. Out of a certain number of applicants who do place their names on the list, only a few names are accepted -- the rest are purged. Many Housing authorities prioritize the waiting lists to people who fit certain categories, such as the elderly, disabled, veterans, our families with children. As soon as the person's name comes up on the waiting list -- this typically is about five years for a Housing Authority in a popular jurisdiction -- the family is contacted by the Housing Authority to further proceed in processing their application. When a waiting list is open the Housing Authority is required by federal law to publish such an opening to their local news media, typically the local newspaper. Oftentimes you can check their website to see if they're waiting lists are open. If the waiting list is open, there will be instructions given on how to place your name on it -- usually a time, place or phone number, and a certain time range on when to contact them.
We do not provide telephone numbers. Check with the local housing authority of that jurisdiction.
Most housing authorities with toll-free numbers open up the line only when there is a waiting list that is open, and only for certain period of time during which the waiting list is open, and often during only a specific day of the week and between specific hours. If you want to talk to HUD in Washington DC, or the HUD office in your area then you will need to look up that telephone number.
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Call your local Housing Authority, which handles Section 8. You will find the number in your government phone book.
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