Serving Young Children Experiencing Homelessness Preconference Institute National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth 24rd Annual Conference | Albuquerque, New Mexico October.

Download Report

Transcript Serving Young Children Experiencing Homelessness Preconference Institute National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth 24rd Annual Conference | Albuquerque, New Mexico October.

Serving Young Children
Experiencing Homelessness
Preconference Institute
National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth
24rd Annual Conference | Albuquerque, New Mexico
October 27, 2012
Young Homeless Children:
National Numbers and Trends
• In 2008-2009, 52% of all children in HUD
homeless shelters were under the age of 6
• Nearly 30,000 homeless children ages 3-5 (not
kindergarten) were enrolled in public preschool
programs in 2008-2009; this is only 4% of all
students identified as homeless by public schools
• The number of homeless children served by Head
Start nationally increased by 44% between 2007
and 2009
Homeless Children as Percent of Cumulative Enrollment in
Head Start and Early Head Start Programs
Source: Head Start Program Information Reports 2008-2012
The Reality of Family Homelessness
•
•
•
•
•
•
Lack of structure, routine, stability
Trauma
Loss
Lack of access to food
Lack of health care
Inappropriate living conditions (no play space,
overcrowded, unhealthy, over-stimulation or
under-stimulation)
• Stressed attachments to caregivers
• Invisibility
Impacts on Young Children
• Higher rates of developmental delays:
– Infants who are homeless start life needing special
care four times more often than other babies
– Homeless toddlers show significantly slower
development than other children
• Higher rates of chronic and acute health
problems
• Higher exposure to domestic and other types
of violence
Reflection 1
Take a moment to reflect on the impact of
homelessness on young children and
their families and the relevance of this
information to your work. Jot down a
phrase or two to record your thoughts.
• Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to
Housing (HEARTH)
• Authorizes and amends the McKinney-Vento homeless
assistance programs administered by HUD
• Signed into law May 2009
• Regulations have been issued
“Project applicants must demonstrate that
programs that provide housing or services to
families are designating a staff person to
ensure that children are enrolled in school and
connected to the appropriate services within
the community, including early childhood
programs such as Head Start, Part C of the
Individuals with Disabilities Act, and McKinneyVento education services”
Getting started……
• Finding out about what’s out there for
young children to support their learning
• Connecting with colleagues to better
address the needs of young homeless
children
• Work to enroll them in the most high quality
early childhood programs you can find!
Early Childhood Landscape:
Early Development, Care and Education
•
•
•
•
•
•
Child Care
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
State Pre-Kindergarten Programs
McKinney-Vento and Preschool
Head Start & Early Head Start
MIECHV Home Visiting
Early Childhood Landscape:
Child Care
• Federal CCDF block grant that states can supplement
– State and local child care funding supplements
– States can use federal TANF block grant funds
• Designated “state child care administrator”
• State administrative rules, e.g., eligibility, priorities
• State and some local regulations
• CCDF requires coordination of ALL child care through
Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies (CCR&R)
• CCDF designates set asides for quality initiatives
and services for infants and toddlers
Early Childhood Landscape:
Child Care
• Subsidized Child Care
– Publically funded child care centers, networks of
family child care homes through contracts and
grants to local agencies
• Child Care Subsidies, or Vouchers
– Used by families to purchase care from licensed
and unregulated care providers, including
relatives and friends, for the care that best meets
their needs
• Serve children from infants through school-age
• Quality Rating & Improvement Systems (QRIS)
Early Childhood Landscape:
IDEA Parts B & C
• Federal funds to states under Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
– Part B/619 – Preschool Special Education ages 3-5
– Part C – Infants and Toddlers
• Uses McKinney-Vento definition of homeless
• Provides for identification, location, evaluation and
education of children with disabilities who are
experiencing homelessness
– Individualized Plan (ISP, IFSP)
– Home-based, classroom & consultation models
– Goal of mainstreaming
Early Childhood Landscape:
State Pre-K Programs
• State funding of preschool services for 4-year-olds or for
3- and 4-year-olds
– Most states now have some type of state pre-k system
• State agencies provide leadership and funding to local
school districts
– Both school based and community providers
– Both targeted and universal designs
– State Advisory Councils (under the Head Start Act),
Early Childhood Cabinets and integrated state agencies
and departments
– Local councils and community partnerships
Early Childhood Landscape:
McKinney-Vento and Preschool
• School district McKinney-Vento liaisons must ensure
that families and children have access to Head Start,
any public preschool programs administered by the
LEA and Even Start if still available
• State McKinney-Vento plans must describe
procedures that ensure that homeless children have
access to public preschool programs
• School districts are required to remove barriers to the
enrollment of homeless children, including preschool
children
Early Childhood Landscape:
Head Start
Created under LBJ’s “War on Poverty” ~ 1965
 included other programs & initiatives like Job
Corps and Community Action Agencies
Intended to achieve 2 primary goals
~ break the cycle of poverty
~ empower low-income families
Specific child goals:
~ social competence
~ school readiness
Early Childhood Landscape:
Head Start
• 1,600 grantees in the U.S (and U.S. territories) that
serve over 900,000 children (age 0 to 5) annually
• Direct federal to local funding – does not pass
through any state agency
– Head Start – preschool aged children ages 3-5
• Vary as to number of three’s and four’s
– Early Head Start – pregnant women and children
ages birth to 3 years
• Reaches about 5% of those eligible
Early Childhood Landscape:
Head Start
Head Start mandates COMPREHENSIVE SERVICES to
children and families - a unique feature of the program
– Health Services = health, mental health, dental,
nutrition and physical activity; prenatal care
– Education and special education/disabilities services
• Approximately 20% of children with IEPs served
by Head Start
– Family services thru Family Partnership Agreement,
parent involvement and governance, fatherhood
initiatives, etc.
• 20-25% of Head Start staff are current or former
Head Start parents
– Community partnerships
Early Childhood Landscape:
Head Start
Head Start Program Services:
– Full-day/full-year; part day/part year; school day/
school year
– Program designs include Center-based, Homebased, and Family Child Care (Home Start)
– Combination and Locally Designed Options
Head Start Act of 2007 allows programs to explore
changing program designs to meet changing needs
based on their local community assessment
Early Childhood Landscape:
Head Start
Enrollment primarily based on federal poverty
At least 10% of children must have active IEP/IFSP
Additional categorical eligibility:
– Families on public assistance (TANF)
– Children in foster care
– Children who are homeless according to the
McKinney-Vento education definition
Head Start: A Perfect Match
for Homeless Families
• Head Start provides comprehensive services that
homeless children may not otherwise receive
• The Head Start focus on entire family means parents
receive assistance in reaching their goals
• Philosophy of community partnerships put Head Start
in an excellent position to work with all agencies
serving homeless families
• Head Start programs are required to identify and
prioritize homeless children for enrollment; allow
homeless children to enroll while required paperwork is
obtained; and coordinate with LEA liaisons and other
community agencies
Early Childhood Landscape:
MIECHV Home Visiting
• New national resource through the federal
Affordable Care Act
• States must select and implement from among a list
of designated evidence-based models
• Focused on high risk populations
• State advisory bodies and coordinated professional
development
Early Care and Education
Landscape
• Head Start & Early
Head Start
• Child Care
• IDEA
• State Pre-Kindergarten
Programs
• Other Early Care and
Education Partners
ACTIVITY:
Early Childhood Development, Care and
Education Landscape in Your World
Work with someone sitting near you to complete the
Early Childhood Development, Care and Education
Infrastructure in My State/ Community for either the
state or local level
If you cannot complete a cell, use the Early Childhood
Development, Care and Education Resource List to
find a resource for obtaining the name, contact
information you need to complete our grid.
You will have 5 minutes for this activity.
HEARTH Act: Who is
Covered?
• The Continuum of Care agencies
• Shelter + Care providers
• Emergency Solutions Grants
• Supportive Housing Project
• To find your Continuum of Care, go to
www.hudhre.gov
HEARTH: Definition of
Homelessness
• Families must meet criteria before M-V
definition applies:
–
–
–
–
Do not otherwise qualify
Homeless for 60 days or more
Moved at least 2 Xs in 60 days
Expected to remain homeless
• Definition of chronic homelessness
includes families where a head of
household has a disability.
HEARTH Act: Education
42 U.S.C. 11386 et seq.
• Providers must
– Demonstrate that their policies are consistent with McKinneyVento and do not restrict the exercise of McKinney-Vento rights.
– Designate a staff person to assist homeless children and youth
connect with school, early education, special education, etc.
• Gov’t agencies which oversee/place families in shelters must
– Demonstrate that they are coordinating with local school systems
to identify homeless children/youth and inform them about
McKinney-Vento.
– Consider the educational needs of homeless children, including
placing them in shelters close to school of origin to reduce travel.
How can providers meet the
HEARTH education
requirements?
•
•
•
•
•
•
Assess education needs at intake
Inform families of education rights and options
Assist discussion regarding school selection
Connect families with schools/education programs
Advocate for enrollment and access to services
Collaborate with school districts around provision of
supportive services
• Monitor attendance and achievement
• Ensure shelter policies do not create barriers to education
• Discuss education as part of exit planning
Head Start
• No new policy updates
• Coordinate with Head Start programs to
better identify homeless families and
provide services
IDEA- Part B- Child Find
• Evaluations must be completed within 60 days
from parent’s request
• If family changes LEAs during evaluation period
the same 60 day time frame applies to new LEA
• Assessments must be coordinated between
former LEA and receiving LEA
• When homeless child has IEP and enters new
LEA, the IEP must be implemented
• If it is a new state, the IEP must be implemented
while the school conducts its evaluation.
IDEA Part C: Final
Regulations
• New federal regulations published, in
September 2011
• Homeless children are explicitly included
throughout the regulations
• Homeless family shelters added as a primary
referral source
• 2 day referral time frame extended to 7 days
• States can opt for screening process to
determine if there is suspected disability
• At screening level must give parents notice that
they have right to request an evaluation
IDEA Part C: Final
Regulations
• Evaluation determines a child’s initial and
continuing eligibility
• Assessment determines the child’s unique
strengths and needs and the intervention
services appropriate
• Enhanced due process option: lead agency
may establish procedure allowing aggrieved
party at due process hearing to request
reconsideration
• Copies of evaluations, assessments and IFSPs
must be provided to parents at no cost
Child Care Subsidy
• New federal legislation introduced on Aug. 1!
“Improving Access to Child Care for Homeless
Families Act of 2012”
• Prioritize homeless children for access to care
• Immediate enrollment w/o all documents
• Ensures co-payments are not barrier
• Lead agency must coordinate w/ M-V school
liaison and other community providers
• Go to www.naehcy.org to the legislative update
section for sample letter to U.S. Senator
Reflection 2
Take a moment to reflect on existing and
potential resources in your community.
What do you need to learn about them
so that you can work together to support
young children and families? Jot down
a phrase or two to record your thoughts.
Barriers to Early Childhood Programs
for Families Experiencing Homelessness
• Lack of awareness: Head Start programs may not know
the definition of homelessness, MV liaisons may not be
“fluent” in early childhood systems, HUD providers may
not know “lay of the land” of ECE
• Lack available slots for all eligible children, especially
infants and toddlers, including those who are homeless
• Lack of capacity for McKinney-Vento liaisons and Head
Start programs to do outreach and targeted assistance
• High mobility
•
•
Lack of transportation
Lack of documentation for enrollment
Removing Barriers:
Strategies for Awareness and Identification
•Head Start programs/school districts can
incorporate questions on housing status on
applications
•McKinney-Vento liaisons can inquire about
young siblings of school-age children
•Homeless service providers can document
ages of all children at intake, and make
referrals to Head Start, ECEAP, and other ECE
programs
Removing Barriers:
Strategies for Awareness and Identification
• Early childhood programs can include
information on how to recognize
homelessness in staff
development/trainings/in-services
• Shelters can make sure that young children
are assessed for developmental delays
• New HUD contacts can be trained in
assessment programs (Ages and Stages,
Early Intervention programs, and Special
Education Child Find) that provide indicators
of potential developmental delays
Removing Barriers:
Strategies for Identification and
Responding to Mobility
• Obtain parental consent for release of
information from providers or liaison in order
to share information between agencies, and
obtain new addresses and continue to
provide services when families move
• In anticipation of mobility, develop joint
procedures to expedite services and provide
continuous services for highly mobile
children.
Removing Barriers:
Strategies to Expedite Access
• Liaisons and homeless service staff can
provide Head Start applications to
identified families and help them fill them
out
• Expedite records by working together; e.g.
liaisons can get immunization records, etc.
for young siblings of school-age children
• Develop joint or streamlined procedures
and forms (e.g. housing intake forms)
Putting it All Together:
Strategies for Collaboration
Head Start & ECEAP Programs could adopt a
number of strategies to reach homeless
families:
• Develop relationship with K-12 Homeless Liaison for referrals
• Assign staff member to be the liaison with local homeless
shelters/service providers
• Training for family advocates to continue identifying homeless
families throughout the year as circumstances change
• Presentations and visits to (and from) homeless shelters and
advocacy groups about services available
• Create connections with food banks, churches, health department,
and housing groups in the community
Putting it All Together:
Strategies for Funding Comprehensive
Services
Reaching Children Where They Are:
Using Federal Funding to Support
Comprehensive Services in Child Care
Christine Johnson-Staub
Senior Policy Analyst
Hannah Matthews
Director
Child Care and Early Education
May 1, 2012
www.clasp.org
• Programs showing lasting benefits of high
quality early education focused on whole child
and included comprehensive services.
• Increased attention to school readiness, child
outcomes, return on investment.
• Increased poverty has increased need for
comprehensive services.
www.clasp.org
43
• Connection and access to preventive health care services, such
as assistance in connecting to medical homes, preventive dental
screenings, and tracking of vaccination and medical screening
records;
• Support for emotional, social and cognitive development,
including screening to identify developmental delays, mental health
concerns, and other conditions that may warrant early intervention,
mental health services, or educational interventions;
• Family leadership and support, including parent leadership
development, parenting support, abuse prevention strategies, and
connecting families to needed social services.
www.clasp.org
44
• Child Care and Early Education Funding is
Insufficient
 Head Start serves 40% of eligible preschoolers and fewer
than 3% of eligible infants and toddlers.
 CCDBG serves 17% of eligible children and states do not
pay rates higher enough to support comprehensive
services.
• Emphasis on effective and efficient use of funds.
 States, localities exploring ways to coordinate service
delivery sectors and funding streams
www.clasp.org
45
Early
Childhood
Education &
Child Safe
Environments
Supports for
Expectant
Families
Development
Thriving
Children
and
Families
Family
Partnerships
& Economic
Supports
www.clasp.org
Child
Health
Child
Mental
Health
Child
Nutrition
• CLASP studies federal funding streams and how
they can best support quality early childhood
programs and services.
• Forthcoming guide to using federal funding
streams to finance comprehensive services in
child care and early education settings.
 Guide to funding streams, related policies, allowable
uses.
 State and local examples.
 Step by step advice for exploring financing strategies.
www.clasp.org
47
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Maternal and Child Health – Title V
Early Childhood Comprehensive Systems
Home Visiting – Evidence Based and MIECHV
Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act
Medicaid
Elementary and Secondary Education -Title I
SAMHSA (Project LAUNCH)
CDBG
www.clasp.org
48
• Funding direct services in a child care
setting
• Funding coordination of services that take
place either inside or outside of the setting
• Training child care staff to provide services
• Funding materials and supplies to provide
services
www.clasp.org
49
Christine Johnson-Staub
[email protected]
202-906-8005
Hannah Matthews
[email protected]
202-906-8006
Charting Progress for
Babies in Child Care
www.clasp.org/childcare
www.clasp.org
50
Services Programs Provide:
• Many programs have changed their enrollment criteria
to put homeless families at the top of the list
• Family advocates are trained to provide information on
housing resources, emergency shelters, DSHS services,
domestic violence and substance abuse support,
counseling, & medical.
• Transportation – some programs don’t have programwide transportation, but do provide it for homeless
families
Services Programs Provide
• Programs provide donations of food, clothing, baby
items, and other necessary items to families on a weekly
basis and have started new partnerships with grocery
stores who host food drives and schools hosting coat
drives
• One program has set up a gated “safe park” area with
shower facilities for families living in cars, along with an
indoor “camp” where families can set up tents out of the
weather
Early Learning Coalitions
• Early Learning Coalitions in every county/community
• Wide variety of participation and funding
• Homeless/housing service providers and liaisons should
consider attending to create connections and learn local
resources
• Sources of support, e.g., in Washington State the
Foundation for Early Learning guides the coalitionbuilding process, provides funding
www.earlylearning.org/grantmaking/coalitions
Reflection 3
Take a moment to reflect on the various
strategies that can be used to
overcome barriers and new approaches
you might try in your program and
community. Jot down a phrase or two
to record your thoughts.
Scenarios and Discussion
In your small group, read through the
scenarios on your table and answer the
question: What would you do?
Reflections to Actions
1. Using your three reflections on the work
we’ve done today, take a moment to
record an action or two that you will take
when you return to your program
2. Share your Action Plan with another
person, or two, or three.....
Resources - ECLKC
Office of Head Start – Early Childhood Learning and Knowledge
Center – Search ECLKC - enter “homelessness”
Go to: Training and Technical Assistance System:
http://eclkc.ohs.acf.hhs.gov/hslc/tta-system
From there, go to Parent, Family, and Community Engagement
From there, go to Crisis Support
From there, go to Homelessness Online Lessons
Resources
• National Association for the Education of Homeless Children
and Youth
– http://www.naehcy.org
• National Center on Homeless Education
– http://www.serve.org/nche
• National Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center
– http://www.nectac.org
• Horizons for Homeless Children
– http://www.horizonsforhomelesschildren.org
• Washington State Association of Head Start & ECEAP
-- http://wsaheadstarteceap.com
• Parent Training and Information Centers
– http://www.taalliance.org/centers/index.htm
– (888) 248-0822
Policy Resources
• NAEHCY: www.naehcy.org, Barbara Duffield,
[email protected], 202.364.7392
• National Center on Homeless Education: www.serve.org/nche
• National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty:
www.nlchp.org
• Zero to Three, http://www.zerotothree.org
• National Head Start Assoc., http://www.nhsa.org/
• National Center for Children in Poverty, http://nccp.org/
• Institute for Children, Poverty & Homelessness,
http://www.icphusa.org/
• Center for Law and Social Policy, http://www.clasp.org/
• Center on Budget Policy and Priorities, http://www.cbpp.org/
Contact Information
Francine K. Hahn, Staff Attorney
Homeless Persons Representation
Project
201 N. Charles Street, Suite 1104
Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: 410-685-6589, x-12
[email protected]
Bettye J. Poole, BLS, MPSA
McKinney-Vento Homeless Liaison,
EVSC
123 Main Street, Downtown
Evansville IN 47708
Phone: 812-435-8275
[email protected]
Grace C. Whitney, PhD, MPA, IMH-E(IV)
CT Head Start State Collaboration Office
CT State Department of Education
165 Capitol Avenue
Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: 860-713-6767
Email: [email protected]