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Published byRoss Gilbert Modified over 8 years ago
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New Department on Homelessness: The Development Process
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Context for New Department: Racial Disparities in Homelessness 2015 San Francisco Point-in-Time Count: Race & Ethnicity In the U.S. African-Americans are 5 times more likely to experience homelessness than white Americans
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Context for New Department: Cost of Homelessness vs. Supportive Housing Data Source: Pathways to Housing NYC. 2012
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Context for New Department: Cost by Intervention for Single Individuals in San Francisco For people who require ongoing services & affordable housing, PSH offers a cost effective alternative to long stays in shelter or on the streets
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Context for New Department: Cost by Intervention for Families For families needing time limited supports, rapid re-housing provides a cost effective alternative to long shelter stays
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Informing the New Department 5 Year Plan from LHCB Advice from National Experts Nationally Recognized System Models Local, Regional & National Data Lessons from Other Communities Local & National Best Practices
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New Department on Homelessness: Goals Through the provision of coordinated, compassionate, and high-quality services the Department will work toward the goal of making homelessness in San Francisco rare, brief, and onetime. Benchmarks toward this goal include: End homelessness for 8,000 people Reducing the number of people who become homeless Reducing the length of time people spend homeless Reducing street homelessness
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New Department Priorities Housing First—a system focused on permanent housing & a rapid re-housing model Building on the culture of customer service within the City’s system of care & housing Continuing to move toward a fully coordinated system with transparency in the housing placement process Focus on ending homelessness for people who have been homeless the longest
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Programs of the New Department Homelessness Prevention Street OutreachDrop In Centers Emergency Shelters Transitional Housing Permanent Supportive Housing & Rapid Re-Housing
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Programs will Serve a Diverse Community Single Individuals Families with Children Transitional Age Youth Veterans
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Department Timeline Department Announcement: December 2015 System Mapping and Planning: December – February 2016 Stakeholder Engagement: February – April 2016 Announcement of Involved Programs: March 2016 Identify Department Director: Spring 2016 Transition Planning: April – July 2016 New Department Begins: July 2016
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System Gaps: Focus Areas for New Department Coordinated Entry For all subpopulations For all placements To identify system gaps Consistent and transparent housing placement Expand Rapid Re-Housing Successful for many families In pilot phase for single individuals In pilot phase for transitional age youth Community-Wide Database Consistent data standards Real time access to data Using data more extensively for system & program planning Housing Ladder Pilot strategies for people to move on from PSH as appropriate Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD)
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New Department will Build on Community Success
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Rapid Re-Housing Highly Effective for Families Being piloted for individuals and youth Short- Term Rental Assistance Supportive Services Permanent Housing Placement
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Homes for Heroes
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Target Population: Encampments People who have not accessed the traditional shelter system Long term homeless Homeward Bound Clients Low Barrier: 3 P’s (Pets, Possessions, Partners) 24 hour access / no curfew Harm Reduction Focus on Housing: Housing is top priority from day 1 Connection to mainstream benefits Co-location of benefits workers The Navigation Center: A Housing First Shelter
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Outcomes: Housing Placements “Positive” Exits (79%)“Negative” Exits (21%)
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We look forward to continuing to work with all of you to plan for and implement the new department
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