Transcript Slide 1

City of Portland
Bureau of Housing & Community Development
Innovative Rent Assistance
Preventing & Ending Homelessness
Replicable Models
National Alliance to End Homelessness Conference
July 2006
Heather Lyons
City of Portland, Bureau of Housing and Community Development
421 SW 6th Ave., Suite 1100
Portland, OR 97204
503-823-2396
Evaluator: Transitions to Housing Program
Thomas L. Moore, Ph.D.
Herbert & Louis, LLC
PO Box 304
Wilsonville, OR 97070-0304
503-625-6100
Portland’s Experience
• Advocates push for rent assistance
• Transitions to Housing (T2H) Program 2001
• Outcomes bring $ and support
• Short Term Rent Assistance Redesign
(STRA)
• Adapting the Model for Chronically
Homeless: Key Not A Card - Fall 2005
Flexibility Key to Model
• Collaborative decisions on core elements
(eligibility, subsidy limits & options, follow-up,
outcome measures and data design)
• Support independence of agencies
• Outcomes = Funding
• Adapt as needed
T2H - Purpose
To provide flexible and outcome focused rent
assistance to use as a “tool” to:
1)
Prevent families and individuals from
experiencing homelessness
AND
2)
End the experience of homeless by placing
people quickly into permanent housing
T2H - Project Features
• Diverse partnering agencies
• Flexibility and timeliness of assistance &
service package
• Standardized evaluation protocol, outcome
goals and follow-up intervals
• Limited regulations and prompts to spend
more and help out for more time
• Adapts to fit agency mission & capacity
T2H - Eligibility
• Homeless, or at an immediate risk of being
homeless, or living in unsafe conditions
• Gross family income 20% (now 30%) or
less than Area Median Income
• Residing or planning to reside within a
geographic limit
• Currently not residing in subsidized housing
T2H - How it works
• Application & move-in fees
• Security deposits
• Rent/Mortgage subsidy (lump sum, tiered,
tapered, or constant)
• Payment of housing-related debt to eliminate
barriers to permanent housing
• Generous Max subsidies by unit size
T2H - Evaluation Protocol
• Common dataset across all agencies with
ongoing group evaluation meetings
• Enrollment; six, twelve, and eighteen-month
follow-up; and case closing data collected by
providers
• Follow-up waves based on date of enrollment
• Case closing based on final payment of rent
assistance
T2H - Findings
• 1749 households enrolled since inception of
program through June 30, 2005
• 73% adult households; 27% families with kids
• 25% of the primary “clients” have a past felony
conviction or they were on parole or probation
at enrollment
• $1,250 average expenditure per HH
T2H - Findings - Overall
Outcomes as of June 30, 2005
• 80% permanent housed at 6 months
• 73% permanent housed at 12 months
• 65% permanent housed at 18 months
T2H - Lessons Learned
• Data captured in evaluation provides
information on housing instability and secures
future funding
• Flexibility with Accountability is key
• Homeless Prevention and “Housing First” model
is cost effective and works for multiple
populations & agencies
• Collaboration across diverse agencies provides
learning opportunities for all
Adapting the Model
Short-term rent assistance
redesign (STRA)
&
“Key Not A Card” rent
assistance to help end chronic
homelessness
STRA - Challenge
• 28 different agencies, 6 different funding
sources, 3 jurisdictions, and 1 housing
authority
• Contradictory eligibility criteria and program
design
• Multiple administrators and processes
STRA - Process
• Part of 10 Year Plan – Systems change
activities
• 6 month long community based process
• 6 month long jurisdictional negotiations
• Final selection of administrative entity and
approval by City Council and County Board
of Commissioners
STRA - Process
• Community and Jurisdictional process led
to agreement on:
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Program Model
Outcomes, Evaluation and Data Collection
System Supports (i.e., services)
Allocations Formula
Unified System and Administrator
Key Not A Card - KNAC
• Focus on moving chronically homeless
people off the street and into housing
• Up to 18 months of rent assistance with
average aid of $8,000 per household
• Flexibility for providers – within a
“Housing First” framework
• Outcome Focused - 12 month follow-up
after end of subsidy
• Started October 1, 2005
KNAC Funding Recipients
• Shelter agency to assist 25 CH women
• Street engagement agency to assist 25 CH highprofile street dwellers identified by police
• Multi-service agency to assist 22 CH adults.
• Police select out of the 35 homeless adults with
highest arrest rate
• Collaborative of 8 agencies to assist 20 CH
families with kids.
KNAC - Demographics
• Male - 55%
• Female - 45%
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18-21 - 3%
22-35 - 16%
36-54 - 74%
55+ - 7%
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White - 61%
African-Am - 25%
Asian - 3%
Native-Am - 10%
Latino - 1%
• 16 children under age 17
• 14 were employed at entry
• 8 veterans
KNAC - Outcomes
• 144 people in 119 households have been
housed (1 project starts with transitional
housing)
• of these, 99 people in 74 households have
moved into permanent housing
• 98.5% remained in stable permanent
housing
Where else could this work?
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Eviction Courts
Restraining Order Programs
Corrections - to support families after head of household is
incarcerated
Mental Health - outreach/residential programs
Hospitals
Community Crisis Lines
Apartment Associations
Government Programs (TANF, SSI/D, Unemployment)
Housing Authorities
Employers
Substance Abuse Programs - outpatient/residential programs
Foster Care System
Head Start programs and Public Schools
And on, and on, and on
Thank You
Copies of the Transitions to Housing final evaluation
and “Home Again: A 10 Year Plan to End
Homelessness in Portland and Multnomah County
are available online at:
www.portlandonline.com/bhcd
For specific information to help replicate or adapt
T2H, STRA, or KNAC - please contact Heather Lyons
503-823-2396 or Liora Berry 503-823-2391