developing and financing permanent supportive housing to end homelessness · permanent supportive...
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Miami-Dade Homelessness
• Nearly 1,000 people
remain unsheltered*
• Over 3,200 are
sheltered*
• Homelessness is
costing tax payers
millions each year
*January 22, 2016 Point in Time Survey
Miami-Dade County Homelessness2010-2016
3
759
847789
898868
894839 848 840
792
10071067
982
1126
Jan. 2010 Sept. 2010 Jan. 2011 June. 2011 Jan. 2012 Aug. 2012 Jan. 2013 Aug. 2013 Jan. 2014 Aug. 2014 Jan. 2015 Aug. 2015 Jan. 2016 Aug. 2016
Total Unsheltered Count
City of Miami Homelessness2010-2016
4
512 499 487
534 535514 511
582 577
487
616
667640 654
Jan. 2010 Sept. 2010 Jan. 2011 June. 2011 Jan. 2012 Aug. 2012 Jan. 2013 Aug. 2013 Jan. 2014 Aug. 2014 Jan. 2015 Aug. 2015 Jan. 2016 Aug. 2016
City of Miami Unsheltered Count
Downtown Miami Homelessness2010-2016
286273
300
338352
312
351
391 384
282
340
399388
367
Jan. 2010 Sept. 2010 Jan. 2011 June. 2011 Jan. 2012 Aug. 2012 Jan. 2013 Aug. 2013 Jan. 2014 Aug. 2014 Jan. 2015 Aug. 2015 Jan. 2016 Aug. 2016
Downtown Miami Unsheltered Count
5
Miami Beach Homelessness2010-2016
6
149
196
177
218
173186
138
106
122
156
193 196
156
208
Jan. 2010 Sept. 2010 Jan. 2011 June. 2011 Jan. 2012 Aug. 2012 Jan. 2013 Aug. 2013 Jan. 2014 Aug. 2014 Jan. 2015 Aug. 2015 Jan. 2016 Aug. 2016
City of Miami Beach Unsheltered Count
Miami-Dade’s Homeless Population Snapshot
157 veterans (primarily sheltered)
3,136 adults without children, including 435
Chronically Homeless individuals (primarily
unsheltered)
316 homeless families
177 homeless youth younger than 25 y/o, including
parenting youth
7*January 22, 2016 Point in Time Survey
Emergency Shelter Alone
is NOT
the Answer
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Aug. 1 – Oct. 1 -- 833 Entered Shelter
August 1 – Oct. 1 -- 327 Permanently Housed
Coordinated Entry
Shift toward a Housing First Approach• Permanently House as Quickly as Possible
• Provide Voluntary Support Services as Needed
Opening Doors: Federal Strategic Plan
to Prevent and End Homelessness
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• End Veteran Homelessness by 2016 10 Street Homeless Veterans Fewer than110 Sheltered/Unsheltered Veterans
• End Chronic Homelessness by 2017 Expand Permanent Housing Options Launch Specialized Outreach Teams Adopt Orders of Priority Improve Discharge Planning (Jails, Hospitals, Crisis Units) Work from By-Name List
• End Family and Youth Homelessness by 2020 Expand Rapid Rehousing Options (ESG, HOME, SHIP, State,
CoC) Multifamily Homeless Preference Youth Homelessness Workgroup (Miami Homes for All Youth
Homelessness Initiative) Youth Homelessness Demonstration Project Competition iCount
Chronic Homeless
Homeless for >1 year
or
4+ times in 3 years = 1 year
and
Disabling Condition
Mental Illness
Substance Abuse
Physical Disability
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Progress in Ending Homeless for Populations
targeted by U.S. HUD
2015 PIT
Chronic Homeless
(N=526)
2016 PIT
Chronic Homeless
(N=472)
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Families (N=410)
Youth (N=331)
Veterans (N=236)
Families (N=316)
Youth (N=177)
Veterans (N=157)
Strike Force: Urban CoreDowntown Miami Initiative
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• 96 Units of Permanent Supportive Housing
• 163 New Emergency Beds
• Specialized Outreach Teams (Lazarus Project)
Federal funding process (NOFA) focused on creation of:
• Permanent Supportive Housing
• Rapid Rehousing (Short- to Medium-Term Rental Assistance)
Permanent Housing Partnerships
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Public Housing Agency Collaborations
• Miami-Dade, Hialeah, Homestead, Miami Beach
Sect. 8 HUD-Assisted Multifamily Homeless Preference• POAH Communities, Miami Beach CDC, Urban League, PHCD
Florida Housing Finance Corporation
• Homeless Trust as Referral Agency (Tax Credit MOU’s)
• National Housing Trust Fund (ELI Development)
• Sadwoski Housing Trust Funds
Rapid Rehousing (Short- to Medium-Term Rental Assistance)• (ESG, Challenge, SHIP, TANF, CoC, F&B)
Move-Up Vouchers
Costs of Homelessness
Some 175,000 adults in Miami-Dade County have a
serious mental illness, yet only 24,000 of them are
receiving treatment.
Data from Miami-Dade Corrections suggests 97 persons
with Severe Mental Illness accounted for 2,200 arrests,
27,000 days in jail and 13,000 days in the hospital, costing
tax payers $13 million.
Data from Miami-Dade’s Public Health Trust suggests 100
homeless patients accounted for 5,638 visits (4,868 to the
ER) costs range from $2,000-$67,000 per patient.
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Permanent Housing Yields Results
In 2015, 4,165, or 64% of persons who came in contact
with our system of care exited into permanent housing
destinations
233 unsheltered persons went into permanent housing
destinations directly from the streets
PSH costs $12,000 without support services and $16,000
with support services per household
93% of persons assisted with permanent housing do not
return to homelessness after two (2) years
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How Many
Units Do We
Need?
500
How Many Units
Are In Progress?
34 Coalition Lift
43 Karis Village
54 Liberty Village
25 Public Housing
------------------------
156
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How Many Units
Need to be
Developed?
344
Supportive Housing Need