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Healthy Housing in Rural Communities

We have partnered with the National Center for Healthy Housing to improve healthy housing and address environmental health hazards that impact the home, including issues that impact the indoor environment, the surrounding outdoor spaces, and services like drinking water and sanitation. Our desire is to identify and create resources and connect with stakeholders who are directly engaged in healthy housing work.

The intent is to gather information about the current healthy housing needs and challenges in rural and tribal communities and amplify existing strengths and unique strategies in place. This ongoing work is intended to identify where environmental health and healthy housing professionals can assist and bridge gaps through creating resources, facilitating connections, or amplifying and disseminating information.

The resources developed and shared here are intended for any community that identifies itself as rural regardless of any formal definition.

Rural Healthy Housing Needs

Environmental health hazards and healthy housing issues like lead, mold, poor indoor air quality, carbon monoxide, and structural issues like leaking roofs are common issues among all communities, but present a particular set of challenges to rural communities and their residents.

These resources demonstrate some of the most prominent healthy housing issues in rural communities and can also be used to inform future opportunities for cross-sector collaboration and inform the role and work of healthy housing and environmental health professionals in the future.

  • Opportunities to Address Healthy Housing Needs in Rural and Frontier Communities: This is a guide for environmental public health professionals. View the guide.
  • Leveraging Technology to Increase the Efficiency and Accessibility of Healthy Housing Services: This guide provides strategies for rural communities with dispersed populations. View the guide.
  • Improving Housing Conditions in Rural Communities: Sharing Local Best Practices: This panel discussion consists of perspectives from both local and national professionals with healthy housing and environmental health backgrounds working in rural communities. .
  • Rural Healthy Housing and ÀÖ²¥´«Ã½ Factsheet: This introductory factsheet from NCHH and NEHA provides a snapshot of key healthy housing and environmental health issues in rural communities. View the factsheet.
  • Rural Communities and Healthy Housing Primer: This primer provides background information on how healthy housing issues manifest in rural communities, why these issues matter, and how they intersect with issues of health equity. View the primer.
  • Identifying Needs of Rural Healthy Housing Organizations Questionnaire: This report summarizes the results of a questionnaire disseminated in 2022-2023. Responses and can inform future environmental health and healthy housing work. View the summary report.
  • State Healthy Housing Fact Sheets: NCHH has created fact sheets for each of the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, the territories of American Samoa, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. .
  • Establishing and Running a Local Home Repair Program: A Technical Assistance Tool: This brief provides a glimpse at how other localities have structured programs, and includes discussion points, which can guide your first steps as you determine the approach most suitable for your community. .
  • Improving Outcomes in Rural & Frontier Communities: Perspectives from Healthy Homes and Environmental Public Health Experts: In this webinar, subject matter experts came together to deliver their unique perspectives on rural and frontier communities. .

Funding Opportunities

Eligibility requirements, restricted funding, and eligible activities are just some of the barriers communities face when considering applying for funding to provide services or strengthen healthy housing programs in rural areas. We have developed and gathered some resources below to guide organizations looking for future funding opportunities that would apply to their communities.

  • Federal Funding for Rural Healthy Housing: This factsheet provides an overview of federal programs from USDA, EPA, and HUD that provide funding to rural communities, organizations, and individuals. The factsheet includes information on each program’s purpose, funding amount, and impact. View the factsheet.
  • Federal Funding for Rural Healthy Housing: Applicant Guide: This guide expands on the above factsheet by providing detailed information on how to apply, when funding is typically available, and eligibility requirements and activities for each program. View the applicant guide.
  • Financial Help for Home Repairs: NCHH’s website provides resources to help connect homeowners to people, resources, and programs near them that provide financial help to investigate and fix health and safety problems in their homes. .

Effects of a Changing Climate on Rural Communities

As our climate changes, extreme weather events are increasing in both frequency and intensity and pose a threat to public health and infrastructure, including homes. Climate change also disproportionately affects low-income communities and communities of color due to historic policies like redlining that forced these populations to live in worse-quality housing and neighborhoods that experience extreme weather events more severely.

The effects of climate change particularly exacerbate housing quality and safety issues in rural areas where there may be fewer available resources to mitigate damage, perform risk assessments and support climate resilience and adaptation efforts and where geographic isolation may create challenges in responding to disasters.

  • Emergency Preparedness and Response Resource Libraries: We have developed a suite of resource libraries related to healthy housing considerations in the events of extreme cold, extreme heat, floods, hurricanes and high wind events, pandemics, and wildfires. .
  • How Climate Change Offers Opportunities to Revitalize and Reconnect with Rural Communities: A guest post published on the Colorado State University’s School of Global Environmental Sustainability’s website describes rural vulnerability to climate change and how climate change offers opportunities to revitalize and reconnect with rural communities. .
  • Rural Emergency Preparedness and Response Toolkit: Rural Health Information Hub’s toolkit provides several models and resources to support organizations implementing emergency planning, response, and recovery efforts in rural communities including a module on natural disasters, funding and support, and case studies. .