ending family homelessness: the basics naeh, february 2008 betsy lieberman building changes...

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Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Page 1: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics

NAEH, February 2008Betsy LiebermanBuilding Changes

BuildingChanges.org

Page 2: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Causes of Family Homelessness

o Lack of affordable housing

o Economic or domestic crisis

o Difficulty securing “living-wage” job

o Multiple disabilities

Page 3: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Simple Typology

o Approximately 80% of families need rental assistance/affordable housing and may need short term/transitional or emergency services

o 15-20% of homeless families need subsidized housing and range of services

o Complexity of issues: mental illness, substance abuse, criminal justice involvement, domestic violence and trauma

Page 4: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Historic Perspective: Community Responses to Homeless Families

o Similarities with AIDS housing field -- Responding to urgent needs

-- Visionaries who have been personally impacted

-- Focus on short-term/emergency/ transitional housing

o Not a continuum of care/supportive housing priority; lack of community approaches

Page 5: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Moving Forward

o Willingness for providers to see themselves as part of a community solution with shared goals and objectives

o Serving families effectively and appropriately

o Using resources judiciously

o Commitment to do business differently

Page 6: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Creating Resources for Homeless Families

o Creating an assessment tool used for all families

o Continuum of homeless and housing services that is data-driven

--Homelessness prevention--Rapid housing; Housing First--Housing assistance: rent subsidies that

are need-based and potentially tiered amounts

Page 7: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Creating and Linking Services that Work

o Create needs-based service models

o Use flexible and complementary benefits

o Link with employment programs

o Create a backdoor to open up units

Page 8: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Homelessness, Housing & Assistance Act

(2005) o Funded by a $10 document recording fee on real estate transactions in all Washington State

countieso Commitment from all sectors is necessary to end homelessness in Washingtono Housing and services administered at the local

level, with counties as the leado Counties and State develop and implement plans to reduce homelessness by 50% by 2015

Page 9: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Funding:o Anticipates $12 - 16 million per year for housing and homeless serviceso Counties keep 60% of revenue; 40% goes to the state housing agency for a statewide grant programo All funds go toward ending homelessnesso Essentially any activity that leads to reducing homelessness is eligible, if it complies with the state and local plan priorities, including TA and capacity building

Homelessness Housing & Assistance Act

Page 10: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Washington State InitiativesSound Families (2001)

The Sound Families Initiative: $40 million to increase transitional housing plus services

1,445 units built

2,700 children and 1,500 families served to date

67% found permanent housing

School absenteeism down by 24%

60% increased their incomes

Employment increased by 22%

Page 11: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Washington State Initiatives—Sound Families: Lessons learned

Housing + Services WORKS

Jobs + Education are critical levers

o All families’ needs are not the sameo Rapid re-housing and short-term supports vs. permanent supportive housing and ongoing, intensive services

o Not enough being done to bring employment opportunities to wage earners in families

Page 12: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Washington Families Fund (2004)

o Created as a public-private partnership

o Purpose: to expand availability of supportive housing for homeless families by providing stable, 10-year services funding awards across Washington State

o Building Changes’ roles: fundraising, grant making, administration, technical assistance,

advocacy, research and evaluation

Page 13: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Washington Families Fundo Washington State: $6 million in 2004- 2007 ($6 million in 2008)

o 18 philanthropic partners: $6 million to date

o $ 9.3 million committed to 28 partnerships statewide

o 389 units of service-enriched housing

o 5,000 families--12,000 individuals over lifetime of grants

Page 14: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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o In 2007, a two-tiered funding model was introduced differentiating between families with high- and moderate- level service needs

o Moderate-Level Service model builds on the classic WFF model and adds an employment component to help families transition into living wage and an expanded focus on children’s services

o High-Level Service model assists people chronically homeless and facing multiple barriers to housing stability

Structure of Washington Families Fund

Page 15: Ending Family Homelessness: The Basics NAEH, February 2008 Betsy Lieberman Building Changes BuildingChanges.org

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Creating Results

o Partnershipso Working with Public Housing Authoritieso Expanding resources as well as using resources more appropriatelyo Serving more familieso No family left in a car, under a bridge, on the streets