Closed for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

County Housing will be closed on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, in observance of the holiday. We will reopen at 8:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.

Community Service and Self-Sufficiency

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requires all non-exempt adults over 18 years old to complete eight hours of community service and/or self-sufficiency activities per month.

County Housing will give every family a copy of the Community Service Policy when they first sign their lease, as well as send them a letter indicating which family members must complete community service. 

If a family member needs to complete community service, the letter will have a list of places the service can be completed. Upon completion, the family member will fill out a form to be signed by the volunteer organization.

Admissions and Continued Occupancy Plan (ACOP), Chapter 11

Who is exempt from this requirement?
  • Individuals aged 62 years or older
  • Blind or disabled individuals who certify they are unable to comply with the service requirements due to their disability
  • Primary caregivers to someone 62 or older, blind, or disabled
  • Individuals engaged in work activities, including training programs (minimum of 20 hours per week)
  • Individuals who meet the requirements of being exempted under a state program funded under Part A of Title IV of the Social Security Act, or under any other welfare program of the state of Missouri, including a state-administered welfare-to-work program
  • Exemption applies to anyone whose characteristics or family situation meets the welfare agency exemption criteria and can be verified
  • Individuals who are a member of a family receiving assistance, benefits, or services under a state program funded under Part A of Title IV of the Social Security Act, or under any other welfare program of Missouri, including a state-administered welfare-to-work program and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and has not be found by the state or other administering entity to be in non-compliance with such a program
What counts as community service?

Community service is voluntary work:

  • That has a public benefit
  • Improves quality of life
  • Enhances resident self-sufficiency
What is not considered community service?
  • Employment
  • Political activities
  • Any community services at profit-motivated entities
  • Volunteer work performed at homes or offices of general private citizens
  • Court-ordered or probation-based work
What eligible activities are included?

Activities for local public or not-for-profit institutions such as:

  • Schools
  • Head Start programs
  • Before or after-school programs
  • Childcare centers
  • Adult daycare programs
  • Homeless shelters
  • Feeding programs
  • Food banks
  • Clothes closets

Not-for-profit organizations serving County Housing residents or their children:

  • Boy or Girl Scouts
  • 4-H Clubs
  • Police Assistance League (PAL)
  • Organized children’s recreation
  • Mentoring or education programs
  • Big Brothers or Big Sisters
  • Garden centers
  • Community clean-up programs
  • Neighborhood beautification programs

Programs funded under the Older Americans Act:

  • Green Thumb
  • Service Corps of Retired Executives
  • Senior meals programs
  • Senior centers
  • Meals on Wheels

Activities:

  • Public or not-for-profit organizations dedicated to seniors, youth, children, residents, citizens, special-needs populations or with missions to enhance the environment, historic resources, cultural identities, neighborhoods, or performing arts
  • Improving grounds or providing gardens at Authority properties (so long as such work does not alter County Housing’s insurance coverage); work through resident organizations to help other residents with problems, including serving on the Resident Advisory Board (RAB)
  • Care for the children of other residents so parents may volunteer

Community Service Certification

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