Transcript Document

Rural Homelessness Roundtable
2010 Homelessness Program Managers
Training Conference
The DuPont Hotel, Washington, DC
March 16, 2010
Introductions
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John Bassett, Director
Housing Trust Fund for the Homeless &
Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Shonterria Charleston, Housing Specialist
Housing Assistance Council
Atlanta, Georgia
Aisha D. Williams, Capacity Building Associate
National Alliance to End Homelessness
Washington, D.C.
About Georgia
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Largest state in the Southeast
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Population of over 9.5 million
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Over 1.3 million people living in poverty
159 Counties – 2nd only to Texas
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57,906 square miles
Over 100 Counties are Rural
Almost 1.8 million people live in rural
Georgia
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Poverty rate of 20% in rural areas
* Source: USDA – ERS, Georgia Rural Health Association
GA Department of Community Affairs
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Includes the GA Housing and Finance Authority
Administers Bond Finance (single family), HUD CPD, Tax Credit,
Section 8, Homeless, and other related programs
Administers the $3 Million State Housing Trust Fund for the
Homeless
Co-leads the Georgia State Interagency Homeless Coordination
Council
Staffs the Governor’s Georgia Rural Development Council which, in
part, facilitates public and private initiatives to strengthen rural
communities
Leads a 6-CoC HMIS Coalition (includes 158 of 159 counties)
Operates 67 S+C programs state-wide with 1300 units under
contract
151 balance of state HPRP program ($19 MD)
Over 200 grants each year, state-wide, for homeless housing and
service programs
Sponsors www.GeorgiaHousingSearch.org; a free database for
renters, landlords and CBOs
GA CoC Homeless Planning
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6 local Continuums of Care
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Atlanta/Fulton/DeKalb
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Cobb
Athens
Augusta
Savannah
Columbus
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Georgia’s DCA leads a 152 county Balance of
State Continuum of Care (CoC) Plan
The Balance of State CoC contains both
urban (Macon, some Atlanta MSA counties,
others) and rural (Plains, GA) communities
“Homeless in Georgia 2009”
www.dca.state.ga.us/housing/specialneeds/programs/homeless_count.asp
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DCA compiled count and inventory data with additional
sources of information about homelessness to produce the
“2009 Report on Homelessness.” Also includes data from …
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Department of Human Resources
Department of Education
Homeless Management Information System
Research Studies
First report was for 2008. Next report will be for 2011.
For Counts, Partnering with Kennesaw State University
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Using cluster analysis to create county groupings
In 152 county Balance of State CoC, using service count
methodology for counts within counties sampled within each
cluster
To populate clusters, also using count data in each of the 7
remaining counties counted by local Continuums of Care
Actual and Estimated Counts of
Unsheltered Homeless by County
In 2009, over 21,000 people
estimated to be homeless in
Georgia at a point-in-time
www.dca.state.ga.us/housing/specialneeds/progr
ams/homeless_count.asp
Sheltered - Census
8,994
Unsheltered -Predictive Model
12,101
From DCA’s
“2009 Report on
Homelessness”
This analysis
clearly demonstrates
that the percent of
need within rural
areas of Georgia is
significantly higher
than the percent of
need within urban
areas of the state.
Rural Homelessness in GA –
Strength of Existing Efforts
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Comprehensive lead agency knowledge of local planning and
government, rural needs
History of CoC planning. Regional DCA-led meetings.
Familiarity with homeless, grass roots, and mainstream service
providers. Participation in local planning
Strength of ongoing ESG, SHP and homeless-related (re-entry,
Olmstead, etc.) initiatives to serve persons with disabilities
For tenants, landlords and CBOs - www.GeorgiaHousingSearch.org
Shelter Plus Care in all CoCs and many rural areas
DCA’s HPRP implementation has reached 99 counties at last count.
With the addition of the 8 locally entitled HPRP counties, 107+ of
GA’s 159 counties have now been served by HPRP.
Near-statewide shared HMIS. Southeastern collaborative.
Leverage and resources as a state agency – CDBG, HOME, Section
8, local government partners, state agency partners
‘Shelter diversion’ strategies in place!
Rural Homelessness in GA –
Ongoing Challenges (half empty)
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Poverty / (Really and Truly) Affordable Housing
Jobs … this recession!
General limitations of mainstream services, exacerbated by …
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Distances to DFCS, DOL, Job Training, Employment, etc.
No or Limited Transportation – Personal and Public
Child Care – Limited Public, Private is Cost Prohibitive
Access to housing / barriers
Many counties lack dedicated homeless housing and service
programs – mission conflict
Lack of, and capacity of existing, service providers
Awareness of rural homelessness
Current HUD programs better designed for urban areas
Limited or poor housing stock in many communities
Limited resources vs. magnitude of the job
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Funding, staff, size of state, and large number of local governments
(159 counties, and 529 cities)
Rural Homelessness in GA –
Promising Next Steps … (half full)
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Continue to implement ‘strengths’
Learn and, through HEARTH, implement HPRP best practices going
forward …
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Prevention / shelter diversion / rapid re-housing
Piloting state-wide, toll free screening / intake / referral
Regional programs that support efficiency
Forget the arguments about ‘who’s homeless’ … expansion of HUD’s
definition is serving to enhance participation by mainstream providers
in outreach, assessment, referral and case management
Near-Statewide HMIS facilitates movement across the state to match
the needs of participants
Improved measurement (outputs/outcomes) through HMIS
Improved planning and research to support new strategies
Strengthening interagency councils (state and federal)
National Housing Trust Fund
Other strategies include capacity building for CBOs, improved
access to state funding, technology advances, other
Call or email us any time …
Name
Area
Email
Telephone
John Bassett
HTF Director
[email protected]
404.679.3170
Jonathan Cox
HPRP
[email protected]
404.679.0571
Brian DiNapoli
HPRP
[email protected]
404.327.6811
Chantell Glenn
SPC Renew, Contract, Reimb
[email protected]
404.327.6815
Elayne Miller
ESG Contracts, Payments
[email protected]
404.679.4942
Tina Moore
HOPWA, ESG, CoC
[email protected]
404.327.6870
Lindsey Stillman
HMIS, HSS and CoC
[email protected]
404.327.6813
Phillis Thomas
ESG, HOPWA, Connect
[email protected]
404.679.0651
Dave Totten
HMIS Data Analyst
[email protected]
404.679.4945
Bonnie Woods
S+C New, S+C Train, ESG
[email protected]
404.679.3150
Patricia Wright
NPO Review, Audits, FM
[email protected]
404.327.6856
Questions? Please contact DCA Housing Trust Fund Staff. State-wide toll free number for all DCA staff is (800) 359-4663. Fax for all HTF staff is
(404) 679-0669.