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Commissioning for Crisis Response: Creating a Position Statement for Homelessness Prevention in Newcastle Consultation event: Support for young people.

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Presentation on theme: "Commissioning for Crisis Response: Creating a Position Statement for Homelessness Prevention in Newcastle Consultation event: Support for young people."— Presentation transcript:

1 Commissioning for Crisis Response: Creating a Position Statement for Homelessness Prevention in Newcastle Consultation event: Support for young people aged 16-25 Pandon Room Newcastle Civic Centre 19 th August 2013

2 Agenda 13.15 - 13.30 Arrival, registration and refreshments 13.30 – 13.40Introduction from Neil Munslow, Housing and Welfare Rights Service Manager 13.40 – 14.00Presentation: Louise Lane, Commissioner for Inclusion and Prevention 14.00 – 15.15Round table discussions: young people aged 16-25 15.15 – 15.25 Feedback and questions 15.25 - 15.30 Next steps and close

3  Proposed savings in commissioned services: 2013/14 - £0 2014/15 - £1.741 million 2015/16 - £0  Proposed savings in council directly delivered services (Housing and Welfare Rights Service): 2013/14 - £0.458 million 2014/15 - £0.085 million 2015/16 - £0 Crisis response budget proposal - a quick recap!

4  Our Crisis Response proposal covers services for people who face financial and social exclusion and the risk of homelessness  This includes services directly delivered by the council (Housing and Welfare Rights Service) and services commissioned from Your Homes Newcastle (YHN) and voluntary and community sector organisations  The proposal includes reducing capacity in these resources, but also re-organising them to develop a more coordinated system which supports independence and for preventing and responding to people facing housing and financial related crisis  Contribution to prevention agenda and adopting a lifecourse approach

5 Purpose of the day  Part of an on-going conversation to collectively refine and shape our commissioning plans  To discuss emerging Position Statement following event in May  Understanding the current market mix and utilisation of services  Holding 4 distinct sessions: this session is about the proposed service system for people with complex needs who are multiply excluded  Opportunity to help shape future service specification

6  Builds on consultation to date and events held on 8 th October, 21 st November and 10 th May, including: Opportunities to deliver ‘service systems’ rather than standalone provision Understanding the geographical implications Opportunities to collaborate to deliver outcomes Position Statement

7  Following consultation to date, we have proposed four ‘service systems’ within which providers may wish to deliver services: Support for single homeless people and homeless families including those with multiple needs, including, but not limited to, those with problematic drug and alcohol use, offending behaviour, mental health problems, learning disabilities, refugees Support for young people aged 16-25 at risk, including those with chaotic lives, young people who are leaving the care system, teenage parents and young LGBT people Support for people with mental health problems who need specialist housing related support associated with their mental health needs; Support for people with complex needs who are multiply excluded. Position Statement – Market place opportunities

8 The objectives we are seeking to achieve in commissioning ‘service systems’, rather than individual projects are:  A greater emphasis on prevention by creating opportunities which respond to people’s needs in more flexible ways and offers more opportunities for service innovation;  Improved outcomes from ‘service systems’ that better represent people’s support needs beyond accommodation;  ‘Service systems’ that better reflect individuals’ pathways;  Opportunities for innovation and for services to work together to improve outcomes for individuals;  A more effective allocation of resources that recognises that some people facing homelessness have greater or on-going needs

9 We anticipate that each ‘service system’ will include a range of practical responses in order to respond flexibly to individuals’ needs. This may include, but is not limited to service systems that:  prevent - and where prevention isn’t possible - respond to street homelessness  develop services and systems which prevent homelessness - particularly those that intervene early at life changing moments  prepare people for independence  sustain people in independence  support those who cannot sustain independence including interaction with other services that build resilience

10  The purpose of today is for you to influence the development of the service specification for: People with mental health problems Use this opportunity to say what you think this client group needs to prevent homelessness, respond to crisis and build resilience Other sessions exploring the specification for the other 3 ‘service systems’

11 Information on current service provision  Current housing-related support services commissioned, along with their service type and service capacity  A map showing the spread of current accommodation-based services across the city  Information on the utilisation of existing services, drawing upon data already published in Newcastle’s Future Needs Assessment  Current spend on commissioned services.

12 Young people aged 16-25: current provision Number of servicesService descriptionNumber of units/people supported at any one time 2 Emergency access accommodation for young people aged 16-21 13 5 Non-emergency access accommodation for young people aged 16-21 104 1 Transitional tenancies for young people aged 16-25 moving on from supported housing 5 53 Floating/visiting support/outreach 187

13 2012/13 Utilisation 293 individuals supported by accommodation-based provision 204 new admissions during this period 261 young people moved on from this provision during 2012/13. Of which, 44 moved on to an independent tenancy with or without support 60 moved to another supported accommodation service 61 moved on to live with family or friends 4 were taken into custody 24 were evicted (of which 70% were asked to leave for anti-social behaviour including violence) 18 left no forwarding address 522 young people received floating support and 340 moved-on from it in the same period

14 2012/13 Utilisation – length of stay Length of stay (of clients in receipt of services on 31 st March 2013% of clients 0-3 months39.2 3-6 months27.5 6 months – 1 year24.5 1 year – 2 years8.8 2 years plus0 The table below shows the average duration of support for those young people in supported accommodation:

15 Round table discussions In groups, we would like you to discuss:  Whose needs are we are trying to meet? Is anyone missing from the client group? Do we need to specify in detail who this service is for?  Core housing related support tasks – are these still appropriate/relevant to meet the needs identified? How should we prioritise these tasks for this client group? What things make ‘the’ difference?  Service mix: balance between accommodation based services and floating support – are there opportunities to better meet young people’s needs in more flexible ways? How far should the specification specify this?  Service delivery: what good practice should be included (service users, staffing, accessibility)?  How should resources be targeted to prevent crisis and build resilience – life course approach?  Service outcomes: what are the agreed outcomes we want to achieve and how do we measure success?


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