Homeless Assistance in Ohio Changes in the 2012 Consolidated Plan.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Implementing Coordinated Assessment Under the New CoC Regulations National Alliance to End Homelessness Monday, September 10, 2012.
Advertisements

Opening Doors: Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
Life After HPRP Barbara Poppe, Executive Director, USICH March 26, 2012.
SSVF Program Launch: Establishing Services in Compliance with Goals and Regulations Practice Area 1: Outreach, Engagement and Admission.
Housing First: Where it Works
US DOL-VETS 2007 Competitive Grantees Training Conference` August 7-9, 2007 Cynthia W. High, MSW US Department of Housing and Urban Development Office.
Impact of the HEARTH Act on Metro Denver Homeless Planning John Parvensky President Colorado Coalition for the Homeless.
Update on Continuum of Care and HMIS Presented by: Ann Oliva Director, Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs U.S. Department of Housing and Urban.
Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-housing Program (HPRP) March 24, 2009 Audio Conference Sponsored by the Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness.
HEARTH Act: Planning for Impact Julie Dixon The Planning Council.
The HEARTH Act Changes to HUD’s Homeless Assistance Programs Norm Suchar October 2009.
1 Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP) Overview April 2009.
Austin/Travis County CoC PSH Bonus SEPTEMBER 22,2014.
Jack Peters, Director Office of Community Planning and Development Seattle Regional Office U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development WSCH Annual.
Department of Community Affairs. EMERGENCY SOLUTIONS GRANT PROGRAM  “…maintains support for a crisis response system through emergency shelters, but.
HOMELESSNESS TASK FORCE PRESENTATION August 15, 2013.
1 Help! I Don’t Speak Housing! Mattie Lord, UMOM New Day Centers Jeremy Rosen, National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty.
Coordinated Assessment ROANOKE COC Meeting Council Of Community Services August 20, 2013.
Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) Webinar Series Priority 1/Surge National Kick-Off October 16, 2014.
VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE WORKGROUP Reallocate $ for more community based housing Need rapid rehousing dollars Adjust current grant to allow for more.
Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) Data Bigger Picture Updated 5/22/14.
Continuum of Care (CoC)  Promotes community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness.  Provides funding for efforts by nonprofit providers.
Shelters in the HEARTH era The Lyceum, Hartford, CT April 7, 2014 Katharine Gale
MaineHousing ~ Homeless Initiatives Department NCSHA Conference ~ October 2014.
OCTOBER 24, 2012 PRESENTED BY RENEE LAMBERJACK, RESEARCH & EVALUATION ASSISTANT Annual Homeless Assessment Report Presentation to Safe Harbors Partners.
Project Administration Agreement with the Heart of Florida United Way, Inc. September 22, 2009 Homelessness Prevention & Rapid Re-housing Program (HPRP)
Presentation Outline Background Program Requirements Orange County HPRP Plan HPRP Timeline Action Requested.
Establishing and Operating a Centralized /Coordinated Assessment System April 3, 2014 Michelle Sandoz-Dennis Continuum of Care Unit Director.
Creating a Unified Person-Centered Housing and Homelessness System February 2015.
Setting a Path to Ending Family Homelessness Presentation to the Early Childhood Cabinet July 30, 2015 Lisa Tepper Bates, CCEH Executive Director Think.
Coordinated Entry.  Helping people move through the system faster  Sends households to intervention best fit from the start  Reduce new entries into.
Opening Doors Federal Strategic Plan to End Homelessness GOAL Retool the homeless response system by transforming homeless services to crisis response.
Strategic Action Plan to End Homelessness Presentation to Interagency Council on Homelessness March 2010.
Retooling the Crisis Response System Michelle Heritage Executive Director Community Shelter Board National Conference on Ending Homelessness.
Orientation to the Continuum of Care (CoC) July 29, 2014.
HUD’s role in Ending Family and Youth Homelessness by 2020
Establishing and Operating a Centralized /Coordinated Assessment System April 3, 2014 Michelle Sandoz-Dennis Continuum of Care Unit Director.
+ The New Emergency Solutions Grants Program Jenny Helbraun Abramson, Coordinator Sonoma County Continuum of Care Planning Group January 19, 2012.
1 Rapid Re-Housing: An Overview Welcome Home: Addressing Today's Challenges in Homeless Services June 2,
Changes to the Federal Approach to Homelessness Kentucky Balance of State Frankfort, KY June 21, 2011 ( Slides adapted from presentations at the September.
REGIONAL CONFERENCE NORFOLK, VA MARCH 16, 2009 CONDUCTED BY THE CENTER FOR URBAN COMMUNITY SERVICES 1 South Hampton Roads Regional Housing Needs Assessment.
The National Alliance to End Homelessness presents The HEARTH Academy Training and tools to help your community achieve the goals of the HEARTH Act.
System Performance Measures WIBOSCOC Data Committee: CoC Workgroup August 2015.
Coordinated Entry.  A system-wide process that evaluates households for the best housing fit - rather than ‘are you eligible for services here’ it asks.
March 12,  May 2010 Governor Bob McDonnell signed Executive Order 10 calling for a Housing Policy Framework  The Homeless Outcomes Policy Report.
HPRP Lessons Cindy Cavanaugh, SHRA Megan Kurteff-Schatz, MKS July 27, 2011.
Consolidated Homeless Fund Application Workshop Consolidated Homeless Fund Partnership January 2012.
2016 Emergency Shelter & Housing Assistance Program Information Meeting October 20, 2015.
2015 NOFA Committee Orientation. A Continuum of Care (CoC) is a regional or local planning body that coordinates housing and services funding for homeless.
CAHS Process Flow operator completes pre-screen for shelter eligibility 3a operator transmits screening document over secure network to.
ORGANIZING THE FRONT DOOR: COORDINATED ASSESSMENT Emily Carmody & Corey Root NCCEH Rebecca Pfeiffer City of Charlotte.
 Award of $923,339  Substantial Amendment › $300,000Homelessness Prevention › $480,000 Rapid Re-housing › $80,000 Housing Relocation and Stabilization.
2015 NOFA Committee Orientation. A Continuum of Care (CoC) is a regional or local planning body that coordinates housing and services funding for homeless.
MI Department of Human Services: HUD Grant Reallocation Transition Plan for DHS CoC Program Grants December 16, 2014 Presented by Michelle Cavanagh, Homeless.
CS/SB 1534 – Housing Assistance Affecting Florida Housing’s State Rental Program Funding Allocation: Mandates Florida Housing reserve a minimum of 5 percent.
Minneapolis/Hennepin County Continuum of Care for the Homeless 2016 Request for Proposals Pre-applications for potential new projects are being solicited.
2014 HMIS Data Standards Overview HMIS Data Standards Background – Key resources – Implementation Timeline – Revision Process Overview of Key.
Section 811 Webinar During the webinar, we will be holding a Q and A session through the GoToWebinar phone system. If you would like to ask questions.
Homeless Crisis Response System
Eligible Costs – Rental Assistance & Rapid Re-housing (RRH) 24 CFR CFR
All Home Stakeholder Meeting July 20, Agenda Welcome General Updates Measuring System Performance in King County Role of System Performance and.
Norm Suchar Director, Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs
Building an Effective Homeless Response System
Restructure & Repurpose 2017
Continuum of care for the homeless
Maine CoC Coordinated Entry
Why we are doing this – RRH – reduce shelter length of stay
Evaluating and Improving Coordinated Entry Systems NAEH Conference on Family & Youth Homelessness February 2017.
Supportive Housing Update 2019
Keys to Housing Security
Presentation transcript:

Homeless Assistance in Ohio Changes in the 2012 Consolidated Plan

Activity Breakdown Previous Funding Cycles Homeless Assistance Grant Program (HAGP) Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP) Emergency Shelter Supportive Housing Tenant-based scattered site Project-based Permanent Supportive Housing Homelessness Prevention Rapid Re-housing

Activity Breakdown Program Year 2012 Homeless Crisis Response Program (HCRP) Supportive Housing Program Emergency Shelter Permanent Supportive Housing Rapid Re-housing (Tenant-based Scattered Site Supportive Housing ) Supportive Housing (Project-based Transitional Housing) Homelessness Prevention

Rapid Re-Housing vs. Supportive Housing Rapid Re-housing (Tenant-based Scattered Site Supportive Housing) Supportive Housing (Project-based Transitional Housing) the unit the tenant “Transition in place” or “Direct housing” Traditional transitional housing Subsidy is attached to … When a tenant completes or “times out” of assistance … the subsidy is removed, but the tenant can remain in the unit. the tenant must leave the unit.

Supportive Housing Program Permanent Supportive Housing Supportive Housing (Project-based transitional housing) Almost no changes from 2011 Income requirement remains at or below 35% AMI Each provider applies directly to ODOD, as in the past. Applications due July 11, 2012 by 5 p.m.

Homeless Crisis Response Program Homeless Crisis Response Program (HCRP) Emergency Shelter Rapid Re-housing (Tenant-based Scattered Site Supportive Housing ) Homelessness Prevention Regional Structure Application process Regional Homeless Service Coordination Plan Programmatic changes

Regional Structure Balance of State Only: Coordinate Point in Time Counts and Housing Inventory Charts Designate one representative to the BOSCOC Advisory Committee Statewide: Convene a regional homeless planning group Create a Regional Homeless Services Coordination Plan Submit one regional application for homelessness prevention and re-housing funds Regions DO NOT replace local Continua of Care.

Regional Planning Groups Must meet at least twice annually Convened by the state-designated lead grantee All shelters applying directly to ODOD for HCRP funding must participate and adopt the regional plan. Must have representation for each county and local CoC in the region Should also include representation from : shelter, supportive/transitional housing and permanent supportive housing providers; mainstream service providers (i.e. ADAMH boards, local JFS office, veterans agencies, schools)

Application Process Changes Homeless Crisis Response Program (HCRP) Supportive Housing Program Emergency Shelter Permanent Supportive Housing Rapid Re-housing (Tenant-based Scattered Site Supportive Housing ) Supportive Housing (Project-based Transitional Housing) Homelessness Prevention One regional application Individual agency application

Administrative Funding HUD ESG Award (7.5%) and Ohio Housing Trust Fund (TBD) ODOD (.5%) State-appointed lead grantee Partner agencies

Regional Homeless Service Coordination Plans Threshold requirement for accessing homelessness prevention and re-housing funds through HCRP Written standards for implementation required by HUD through ESG regulation Essential Elements: 1. Inventory of Community Resources 2. Coordinated Intake and Assessment System Common screening tool Common assessment tool Referral process Diversion plan Prevention & re-housing policies Other considerations

Centralized vs. Coordinated Intake Centralized Intake Single location or phone line All clients are assessed by the same team of staff and referred to appropriate services High levels of consistency in referrals and data management Can serve large numbers of clients quickly Coordinated Intake Coordinated network of locations “No wrong door” approach Clients can be assessed at any “front door” service provider and referred to appropriate services Less consistency in referrals and data More points of entry in larger geographic areas

Common Screening Tool What it is: A set of very basic questions i.e. Do you have children with you? In which county are you living? Who uses it: All homeless services agencies, at a minimum Purpose: Questions help providers to determine where to make the most appropriate referral for assessment

Common Assessment Tool What it is: Single set of intake and assessment questions and processes agreed upon by each provider within a region Who uses it: Each front-door provider in the region Purpose: Clients complete assessment only once, even when receiving services from several agencies. Agencies can make better referrals, further reducing the burden on clients in crisis

Referral Process What it is: Process by which clients can be referred to any agencies within a community, regardless of point of entry Who is involved: All homeless services providers, as well as mainstream service agencies Purpose: To connect clients with the most optimal combination of appropriate resources available within a community

Diversion Plan What it is: A set of policies and processes that assess for alternatives to emergency shelter stay, when safe and realistic, while other stable housing is secured What it is not: Diversion is not equal to denying access to shelter, when needed. Who uses it: Purpose: Diversion planning assures that clients have exhausted other options, decreasing overall length of stay in the shelter Everyone!

Prevention and Re-housing Policies What is it: A standard set of policies across the region determining when and how prevention and re-housing dollars can be used Percentage of rent clients contribute Maximum length or amount of assistance How amounts are adjusted over time Maximum amount of relocation assistance Prioritization and targeting standards

Other Considerations Will your region set policies on: Maximum length of stay in emergency shelter? Discharge protocol? Safety measures for special needs populations? Targeting and methodology for street outreach? If not, each region should distribute a summary of each agency’s policies to better inform the referral process

For Entitlements Only: CoC can serve as your regional planning group No additional meetings are necessary If you are already using centralized or coordinated intake, – You do not need to meet specifically to write a plan – All shelters applying for HCRP funds must still agree to the plan – You must still submit a summary of your system to ODOD to satisfy HUD requirements

Programmatic Changes Homelessness Prevention and Re-Housing activities do not require income for eligibility. Re-Housing activity initial income verification must take place 90 days after the first date of re-housing assistance and be reevaluated every three months following. Homelessness Prevention and Re-Housing income eligibility has changed from at or below 50% AMI to below 30% AMI. Sustainability is a program goal, but not a threshold requirement.

Important Dates State-appointed Regional Leads Announced By the end of next week Supportive Housing Applications Due July 11, 2012 HCRP Applications Due September 5, 2012 Implementation Date January 1, 2013

Accessing Technical Assistance What assistance is available? Sample policies, forms, etc. Introductions within regions Planning meeting facilitation To request assistance: Contact Jacqui Buschor