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Published byMoris Jordan Modified over 9 years ago
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Housing cures homelessness A summary of lessons learned from the National Conference on Ending Homelessness July 29-31, 2014
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Housing cures homelessness Housing is solution to homelessness – Shocking Housing first – an approach to ending homelessness that centers on providing people experiencing homelessness with housing as quickly as possible – and then providing services as needed
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Housing is #1 priority The longer youth are in crisis the more likely they experience homelessness Never turn a youth away Housing focus is key: we cannot be everything to everyone
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Housing First Best Practices Rapid Re-housing (RRH) – addresses the single most important need an individual experiencing homelessness needs: a place to call home. Shelter without judgment – Focus on housing first – Services come after housing
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RRH vs Transitional Housing type - $100,000 annual budget Transitional Housing Rapid Re- Housing # served per year850 Annual cost per person$12,500$2,000 Length of homelessness before permanent housing (this counts TH as homeless) 2 years24 days Number (%) moved to PH4 (50% each year) 43 (85%) Cost per PH exit$25,000$2,326
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A continuum ends homelessness We cannot sacrifice one service for another For homeless adults and families the best practice is having a blend of emergency and independent housing For homeless youth the best practice includes many options, including transitional and supported housing
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If we can do it for Veterans…
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Trafficking difficult to define Definition of trafficking and survival sex create confusion with the general public. By law they are defined as: – Survival sex – trading sexual acts for basic needs – Trafficking – originated with cross-border sex by coercion CSEC = Commercially Sexually Exploited Children
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Sexual Exploitation Statistics 98% of victims of trafficking are also victims of sexual abuse Within 48 hours on the streets youth are approached for sex 30% of gang participants are female and are often initiated by sexual exploitation 80% traded sex for survival. Of those 25% made money but didn’t get to keep what they had received. By definition they were pimped/trafficked
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Best Practices: Trafficking YouthCare, Seattle, WA – Integrated shelter for youth experiencing trauma – National Safe Place model extends the doors of the youth service agency or emergency shelter throughout the community Housing prevents survival sex
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Funding best practices National trend from HUD is RRH – Consider shifting TH to RRH or PSH THP+ Foster Care Master leasing or landlord relationships Affordable Care Act – housing is healthcare
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WE CAN END YOUTH HOMELESSNESS
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