Robyn Thibado West cAP amp Carrie Poser Institute for Community Alliances Balance of State Continuum of Care September 2014 Overview of the Presentation Introduction Continuum of Care ID: 499559
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Slide1
Working Together to End Homelessness
Robyn Thibado (West
cAP
) & Carrie Poser (Institute for Community Alliances) – Balance of State Continuum of Care
September 2014Slide2
Overview of the Presentation
Introduction
Continuum of Care
Background
Purpose
Definitions
Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness – Opening Doors
What can a Public Housing Authorities (PHA) do to help?
Where do we go from here?Slide3
“Because far too many Americans go homeless on any given night, this bill provides comprehensive new resources for homeless Americans.”
-President Obama, May 20, 2009Slide4
HEARTH ACT
Helping Families Save Their Homes Act
President Obama signed into law on May 20, 2009
Became Public Law 111-22
Division B of this law is the HEARTH Act
Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing
Reauthorizing and amending already existing legislation, McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance
Act
HUD developed 6 sets of regulations to implement this legislation. Two relevant components to today’s discussion include the Definition of Homeless and the COC Program Interim RuleSlide5
Continuum of Care
The Continuum of Care program is designed to assist sheltered and unsheltered homeless people by providing the housing and/or services needed to help individuals move into transitional and permanent housing, with the goal of long-term stability.
According to 24 CFR Part 578.1(B), the primary purpose of the COC Program is to:
Promote community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness.
Provide funding for efforts by nonprofit providers, States, and local governments to
re-house homeless
individuals and families rapidly while minimizing the trauma and dislocation caused to homeless individuals, families, and communities as a consequence
of homelessness
.
Promote access to and effective use of mainstream programs by homeless individuals and families.
Optimize self-sufficiency among individuals and families experiencing homelessness.Slide6
History of Continuum of Care System
HUD began implementing the
COC
process in 1995 through the
Notice of Funding Available (NOFA).
Each
year, the NOFA guided the development of COCs and
encouraged communities
to work together to address homelessness in a coordinated manner. In addition, HUD published user guides and FAQs and other technical assistance materials to assist communities develop effective
COCs.
This method resulted in scattered information not easily located.
The COC Program Interim Rule changes this. Slide7
Continuum of Care Interim Rule
The Continuum of Care Interim Rule formalizes the following
COC
responsibilities:
Coordinating
, or be involved in the coordination of, all housing and services for homeless persons within its geographic area.
Coordinating
McKinney-Vento funds awarded within its geographic area.
Establishing
& operating the HMIS within its geographic area.
Establishing
and operating, or designating, the centralized or coordinated assessment to be used within its geographic
area.Slide8
What is the Continuum of Care?
nonprofit
homeless providers,
victim
services providers,
faith-based
organizations,
governments
,
businesses
,
advocates
,
public
housing agencies
, school districts, social service providers,
mental health agencies, hospitals, universities, affordable housing developers, law enforcement, and organizations that serve homeless and formerly homeless veterans, and homeless and formerly homeless individuals.
In order to carry out the primary purpose of the COC Program, HUD requires representatives of relevant organizations to form a Continuum of Care to serve a specific geographic area.
These representatives include:Slide9
What does the Continuum of Care have to do?
Operate the Continuum of Care
Conduct meetings,
Monitor,
Evaluate performance,
Establish a coordinated assessment system with written standards and prioritization
Designate & operate an HMIS
Planning
System Coordination
Point-in-Time Count
Annual Gaps Analysis
Participate in the Consolidated PlanSlide10
Components of a Homeless System
Prevention
Assist individuals and households at risk of homelessness to maintain their housing by providing housing relocation and stabilization services and/or short-term emergency financial assistance
Examples:
limited emergency rental assistance to prevent eviction, landlord-tenant mediation, financial counseling
Outreach & Intake Assessment
Services target the most vulnerable of the homeless population who are often unable or unwilling to accept emergency shelter services
Examples:
street outreach to people residing in parks, campgrounds, or places not meant for human habitation
Emergency Services
First stop – point of entry into the homeless system
Examples:
congregate buildings for households with children, hotel/motel vouchers, short-stay apartmentsSlide11
Continue Components
Supportive Services
Those services needed for a person to move towards self-sufficiency and permanent housing.
Examples:
job readiness and job skill training, benefits counseling, housing search & placement
Transitional Housing
Interim placement for persons or households, opportunity for clients to gain stability needed to transition and maintain permanent housing
Example:
24 month housing program with supportive services
Permanent Housing
Permanent affordable housing is long-term, safe, decent housing for individuals and households.
Examples:
housing vouchers, mainstream housing, project-based subsidiesSlide12
Continue Components
Rapid Rehousing
Rental assistance combined with supportive services aimed to help individuals and families attain and retain permanent housing with limited stays in homelessness.
Examples:
financial assistance in the form of short/medium rental assistance, security deposit, first/last month rent, services tailored to the needs of the tenant
Permanent Supportive Housing
Combines housing assistance and supportive services, onsite or through partnering agencies.
Examples:
rental assistance and case management in scattered site for the homeless who have co-occurring substance use and mental illness.Slide13
Wisconsin HUD-recognized Continuum of Care Layout
The State of Wisconsin is divided into 4 separate HUD-recognized Continua.
Milwaukee
(
www.milwaukeecoc.org
)
Racine
(
www.racinecoc.org
)
Dane (
www.unitedwaydanecounty.org
)
Balance of State – remaining 69 counties (
www.westcap.org/wi-boscoc)Each continua has its own leadership, governance structure, committees/workgroup, coordinated assessment system, policies, and funding.Slide14
Balance of State Continuum of Care
The Balance of State Continuum of Care is a 501c3 organization.
Membership of the organization is comprised of 21 local continua. Each must:
R
epresent a defined non-overlapping geographic area;
Include representation from private and non-profit sectors of the community, including individuals experiencing homelessness or were formerly homeless;
Meet at least quarterly;
S
end a representative from a local COC agency to two quarterly meetings of the Balance of State COC.
The leadership of the Balance of State COC resides in a volunteer Board of Directors, at minimum 11 and at maximum 15 individuals.
Robyn Thibado (West CAP) – President of the Board
Carrie Poser (ICA) – Vice President of the BoardSlide15
21 Local Continua
Brown
CAP
Central
Coulee
Dairyland
Fox Cities
Indianhead
Jefferson
Kenosha
Lakeshore
North Central
Northeast
Northwest
NWISH
OzaukeeRock-WalworthSouthwestWashingtonWaukeshaWest CentralWinnebagolandSlide16
Why is the COC important?
Develop proactive solutions rather than reactive stop-gaps
Coordinate
targeted homeless resources and mainstream resources for a more efficient and effective system
Identify
common goals for which to advocate
Increase
community “buy-in” and access to mainstream resourcesSlide17
Homeless Definition
Category 1
Literally homeless individuals and families
Category 2
Individuals and families who will imminently (within 14 days) lose their primary nighttime residence with no subsequent residence, resources, or support networks
Category 3
Unaccompanied youth or families with children and youth who meet the homeless definition under another federal statute and 3 additional criteria
Category 4
Individuals and families fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence with no subsequent residence, resources, or support networksSlide18
United States Interagency Council to End Homelessness (USICH)
Developed
Opening Doors
, the first-ever Federal strategic plan to prevent and end homelessness.
Result of a partnership between 19 Federal agencies and partners such as the
Council of Large Public Housing Authorities
(CLPHA).
Opening Doors
is a roadmap for joint action, providing a reference framework for the allocation of resources and alignment of programs.
Includes 10 objectives and 58 strategies
Requires the Federal government to work in partnership with State and local governments, as well as the private sector, to employ cost-effective, comprehensive solutions to end homelessness. Slide19
Federal Strategic Plan: Opening Doors
HUD is focused on the 4 major goals of
Opening Doors
. Funding and policy decisions are guided by these goals.
End Chronic Homeless by 2015**
End Veteran Homeless by 2015
End Family and Youth Homeless by 2020
Set a path to ending all homelessness
Update on Chronic Homeless goal**: USICH is in the process of adjusting to extend to 2016 because Congress did not fund at the level needed to reach the goal by 2015.
Progress on each goal is tracked through
HUD’s
annual point-in-time
(PIT)
data.Slide20
Homelessness by the Numbers in WI
In 2013, there were
27,556 people
that experienced homelessness (reported by providers who use HMIS).
18% increase since 2010
64% meet the definition of “newly homeless”
During the January 2014 PIT, there were
6,058 people
experiencing homelessness on 1 night.
Provider Type*
# of People
Household
Composition
# of People
Sub-population
# of People
Emergency Shelter
3,111
Household
with children
3,129
Chronic Homelessness
448
Transitional Housing
2,544
Household without
children
2,910
Veterans
542
Unsheltered
343
Household with only children
19
Victims of DV
1,380
*There were also 60 people in Safe Havens.Slide21Slide22
National Success vs. WI Success
Using the January PIT count, the number of people experiencing homelessness in
Wisconsin has increased
since 2010.
However, using the same measurement, the number of people
nationally has been decreasing
!
Nationally
Balance
of State
Dane
Milwaukee
Racine
Total # Persons
Decrease
Increase
Increase
No Change
Decrease
# Sheltered
Decrease
Increase
Increase
No Change
Decrease
# Unsheltered
Decrease
Decrease
Increase
Decrease
No Change
# Persons in families
Decrease
Increase
Increase
Increase
Decrease
# Chronic
Homeless
Decrease
No Change
Increase
No Change
Increase
# Veterans
Decrease
Decrease
No Change
No Change
IncreaseSlide23
PIT
data indicates that between 2012 – 2013
chronic homelessness
increased
19.10%
in Wisconsin.Slide24
What can Public Housing Authorities (PHA) do to help?
The real work of ending homelessness happens at the community level, through partnerships between homeless service providers, COC leaders, municipal and State governments, philanthropy, community & business leaders, and
public housing authorities.
According to HUD, there are 6 specific ways PHAs can partner to end homelessness:
Establish Homeless Preference
Move-Up Strategy Implementation
Screen “In”
Streamline Application Processes
Create Eviction Prevention Program
Project-based vouchers to create supportive housing with on-site servicesSlide25
HUD Notice PIH 2013-15
In June 2013, HUD provided guidance on housing individuals and families experiencing
homelessness
through the Public Housing and Housing Choice Voucher programs (Notice PIH
2013-15
).
This
guidance
encourages PHAs to:
Review
discretionary admissions and termination/eviction policies to determine if any changes can be made to remove barriers for serving the homeless population.
Manage
the waiting list to provide homeless populations increased access to the PHA’s programs.
Partner
with homeless service providers, Continuums of Care, and other organizations to serve the homeless population.Slide26
Homeless Preference
According to HUD, “Homelessness and waitlists don’t mix well.
A PHA’s
greatest tool for increasing program access for individuals and families experiencing homelessness is establishing a preference in their admissions policies
.”
PHAs
can take a variety of actions to allow homeless populations better access to their
programs
, including:
Establishing
a strong outreach strategy
in partnership with the local continua,
Strengthening the process
for contacting applicants on their waiting list (e.g., contacting
applicants
via email or phone), Establishing flexible intake and briefing schedules (e.g., provide a window of time for appointments),
& Establishing nondiscriminatory preferences in their admissions policies for persons experiencing homelessness.The preference could also be a subset, such as: chronically homeless, homeless veterans, homeless identified as most vulnerable through community-based assessment strategies.Slide27
To determine local need, PHAs
should:
Work
collaboratively with the local continua.
Use COC
HMIS data and PIT counts in order to determine whether and to what extent there is need for a homeless preference.
By
coming to the table, PHAs are able to use the resources available to the local continua
and
the local continua can better understand the pressures and competing demands facing PHAs – including limited supply of vouchers and units.
COCs and homeless service providers can benefit the PHA by:
Identifying
and “pre-qualifying” eligible people who are experiencing homelessness
,
Making referrals
to PHAs,
Making supportive services available to households that qualify for PHA waiting list preferences,Providing assistance with the PHA’s application process, and Helping with housing search, move-in costs, providing furniture, food and other essentials (when available). Slide28
Real Life Examples of this Working
The
Housing Authority of the City of Asheville, NC
(HACA) actively participates in the community’s 10-year plan to end homelessness and ongoing collaboration meetings with community partners.
When initially implemented, the homeless preference was limited to chronic homelessness. Now, it has expanded to include those that have been homeless for more than 90 days.
The
Loudoun County Virginia PHA
amended its administrative plan to establish a waiting list preference for persons experiencing homelessness.
As
housing vouchers become available through
turnover
, every tenth (10th) voucher is made available to a person who is homeless. Slide29
MaineHousing
has given people experiencing homelessness a preference
(extra points toward accessing the wait list) for
Housing Choice
Vouchers.
There are also cumulative preferences
in order of priority for victims of domestic violence, veterans and homeless families 2+, disabled, elderly and individuals.
In
response to data
identifying approximately 1,000
to 1,200 individuals experiencing homelessness who are frequent users of emergency departments, the
Ann Arbor Housing
Commission
jointly
applied for a grant from the Corporation for Supportive
Housing (CSH) with local COC partners. With this grant, these partners are linking supportive and health services with housing resources provided by the Ann Arbor Housing Commission.
These resources were made possible by the Commission’s adoption of a limited preference that makes available public housing and Housing Choice Vouchers available for up to 40 individuals identified as high utilizers of crisis health services.Slide30
Additional Resources – Homeless Preference
USICH
Solutions Database contains profiles of model programs and practices that have
demonstrated
results, including profiles of programs that are implemented in partnership
with
PHAs that have established waiting list preferences for persons experiencing
homelessness
.
http://usich.gov/usich_resources/solutions
/
Corporation for Supportive Housing’s (CSH) PHA
Toolkit includes profiles of several PHAs that have established waiting list
preferences
for persons experiencing homelessness. These PHAs have established
partnerships with community organizations to identify, refer, and provide ongoing support services, as needed, to people who qualify for housing assistance based on these preferences. http://www.csh.org/phatoolkitSlide31
Move-Up Strategy
One of the strategies in
Opening Doors
is to create greater incentives
for people to move
on from
Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) as
they are ready, but the lack of affordable housing stock in many communities
creates
barriers to making this a reality.
PSH is
long-term, community-based housing combined with supportive services, for people with disabilities who are homeless. There
is no
time
limit. Because it is a scarce resource, it should be
targeted to serve those who need it most.EXAMPLE: a single male enters a PSH 5 years ago with no income. He needed counseling, case management, and help applying for SSI. However, he remains in the program because his limited income makes it impossible for him to remain housing stable with a rent subsidy.
To free up the spot for someone in crisis who needs to intensive services available in PSH, a PHA could establish a preference that would allow for a “move up” or “move on” strategy for these clients. It would help a formerly homeless person stay stably housed & open a PSH slot to someone with higher service needs, been homeless the longest, and/or has the greatest vulnerabilities. In partnership with the COC, the COC could identify persons or families in PSH that meet criteria- no longer need supportive services to remain stably housed but need affordable housing & wish to move on. Slide32
Real Life Examples of this Working
The
Chicago Housing Authority
launched “Moving On,” a pilot program for persons living in PSH who no longer need intensive services and want to move to other affordable housing in the community. Applicants with stable housing histories can move on to other housing using a Housing Choice Voucher.
The
Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA)
has created a “Moving On” preference by including an admission preference in the Housing Choice Voucher program for formerly homeless Shelter Plus Care (S+C) residents who have stabilized their lives in that program and no longer
require
the supportive housing environment in order to maintain their housing.
Transfer
to the voucher program enables people who previously experienced homelessness to exercise tenant mobility and move on with their lives, and this frees up their supportive housing unit for a new person experiencing chronic homelessness who needs it.Slide33
Screen In
Many PHAs
can modify their
tenant screening criteria, policies, and procedures in an effort to reduce barriers to housing access for people experiencing
homelessness.
This is particularly important for those people who
have had contact with the criminal justice system as a result of problems with mental illness or substance use.
Federal
law gives
substantial flexibility
to PHAs and housing providers to adopt local policies regarding criminal backgrounds and other screening criteria.
Required prohibitions include:
Lifetime sex offender registrant
Methamphetamine production in federally assisted housing
Within 3 years of federally assisted housing eviction for drug-related crime
Currently engaged in illegal drug use or threatening activity
HUD has provided encouragement to PHAs, including a letter from the Secretary of HUD sent to all PHA Executive Directors. The letter specifically asks PHAs to:Review their policies related to criminal history Consider more flexible, reasonable admissions policies
Balance
safety concerns with the importance of providing individuals a second chance at improving their lives and becoming productive citizens.Slide34
Real Life Examples of this Working
The
Housing Authority of the City of Dallas, Texas
revised
tenant
screening standards to conform to the federal
requirements. This eliminated
some standards that had created barriers to using PHA programs to assist people experiencing homelessness.
The
Housing Authority’s Executive
Director
participates as a member of the board that governs the
Metro Dallas COC and the
decision was informed and motivated by her involvement in the region’s collaborative efforts to end homelessness.
The
Seattle Housing Authority (SHA) changed its tenant screening criteria in an effort to reduce barriers to housing for people experiencing homelessness.
Before making the change, SHA had required a waiting period ranging from 2 – 20 years (depending on offense) after an applicant has been released from incarceration. Instead, SHA adopted a uniform time of 12 months following release from incarceration. A profile is included in the CSH PHA toolkit, including the resolution adopted by SHA’s Board of Commissioners, the background memo for the Board of Commissioners explaining the rationale for the proposed policy change, and the changes SHA made to its Administrative Plan.Slide35
The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA)
modified its tenant screening policies in collaboration with advocacy organizations working to end homelessness.
When
HUD PIH-Notice 2013-15 made clear that homeless admission criteria may not differ from the standards for other applicants, HACLA amended its Administrative Plan to reduce the admission barriers for
all applicants.
Through
the Section 8 Administrative Plan process,
HACLA:
Sharply
reduced the number of years for denial of admission due to criminal convictions,
Permitted
treatment options for drug and alcohol related convictions, and
Eliminated
some kinds of criminal activity from the list of denial reasons Slide36
Coordinated Assessment
HUD is requiring all communities funded through its Emergency Solutions Grant
(ESG) or COC program to implement
a
centralized/coordinated
intake
and assessment system
.
The purpose of this system is to ensure that access
to homeless services in a community are streamlined and
quickly accessible.
To determine need, the system relies on a common set of measures or tools for assessment.
Type of system:
Centralized - a single point
of entry
for accessing all types of homelessness assistance.
Coordinated system – multiple points of entry. Referrals are based on consistent criteria and a comprehensive understanding of each program’s requirements, target populations, and available openings and services. Slide37
Housing & Service Intervention
Pre-coordinated Assessment
Is this person eligible for my program? than is this person eligible for any program in my community?
Each organization’s documents and intake policies & procedures are different and unique.
Coordinated Assessment
Is this person eligible for any program in the community?
Standard forms and assessment are used by everyone, for every client.
HEARTH
Act
forced
communities
to creates a client-centered
, system driven,
and accessible process.Slide38
PHA Involvement with Coordinated Assessment System
As one of the larger providers of affordable housing in the community, PHAs can be a critical
contributor
of this process.
Such as:
I
dentifying applicants
for rental assistance who are experiencing or at-risk of homelessness and encouraging
them
to also seek assistance through the
community’s
coordinated entry
system
Provide housing
opportunities for individuals and families based on referrals from
the community’s coordinated entry and centralized assessment process. Slide39
Real Life Examples of this Working
Chicago has implemented a Central Referral
System (CRS) for PSH and PH with short-term
support services. The Central Referral System prioritizes people for these housing resources based on responses to the Vulnerability Index and length of homelessness.
The
Chicago Housing Authority (CHA)
cross references applicants to the CRS against its waiting
lists, which
allows them to make more targeted referrals to
PSH that
use project-based vouchers provided by CHA. The supportive housing providers work with community partners to reach out to these individuals.
The
executive director of the
Housing Authority of the City of Dallas, Texas
is on the board of the metro Dallas
COC, and she participates in regional planning efforts related to ending homelessness.
Participation in collaborative planning with other community organizations has informed the housing authority’s decisions to:Expand programs and partnerships to facilitate access to permanent housing for homeless people, Modify tenant screening policies to reduce barriers to housing assistance for persons experiencing homelessness. Dedicate project-based housing vouchers to help develop PSHSlide40
The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA)
collaborated with Home For Good, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, County departments, the VA of Greater Los Angeles, and other partners to develop a pilot coordinated entry system for chronically homeless persons in the Skid Row area.
During the pilot:
They adopted a
standardized assessment tool that prioritizes persons based on length of homelessness and
vulnerability.
They adopted a streamlined
, universal application
form for PSH.
They used this
process to prioritize clients for some of HACLA’s targeted housing choice vouchers, Shelter Plus Care subsidies, project-based voucher-funded
PSH,
and HUD-VASH vouchers.
Now they are expanding
the pilot beyond Skid Row and into other communities in the city and county of Los Angeles, with a goal of the coordinated entry system becoming the standardized system through which persons are prioritized for and access all
PSH.Slide41
Collaboration with Local Continua – Real Life Examples
The
Loudoun County Virginia PHA
is part of the county’s continuum of care. The PHA provides the local continua with space and facilitation for monthly meetings, a coordinator, and administrative support.
The PHA
has strengthened working relationships with nonprofit organizations that serve people experiencing homelessness.
The
PHA has also established a waiting list preference for homeless applicants as a direct result of its collaboration with community organizations
.
MaineHousing
provides funding for staff to convene and support the Continuum of Care.
PHA staff
provide leadership and support to engage community partners in using HMIS and participating in
the PIT count.
The PHA administers
other sources of funding for housing programs. The PHA has invested in the goals and priorities established by the COC and Maine’s Plan to End & Prevent Homelessness.Slide42
So what are we asking for?
Get involved with your local continuum of care.
Handout – contact name & information
Come to the table – share your expertise.
Attend the next local continua meeting
Discuss what you do and what you have to offer
Hear what barriers to ending homelessness exist in your community
Consider making some changes to the way you do business.
Based on the needs and barriers in the community, what changes would you consider to the way you do business?
Think about how the homeless service providers can be of assistance in return.
What assistance could you use from the homeless service providers and other local continua members?
What issues are you struggling with?Slide43
Final Thoughts
Homelessness is a complex problem.
The response to homelessness is complicated.
But the solution or cure is simple.
HOUSING
If we don’t do it, then who?
If not now, then when?Slide44
Additional Resources: HUD Guidance
HUD COC 101 for PHAs Webinar, August 2013
.
https
://www.hudexchange.info/training-events/courses/coc-101-for-phas-webinar/
HUD Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing: Defining “Homeless.” CFR 91, 582, and 583. December 2011.
https
://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/HEARTH_HomelessDefinition_FinalRule.pdf
HUD Implementing a Move-Up Strategy Webinar, November 2013.
https://www.hudexchange.info/training-events/courses/implementing-a-move-up-strategy-webinar/
HUD PHA 101 for COCs Webinar, August 2013
.
https
://www.hudexchange.info/training-events/courses/pha-101-for-cocs-webinar/
HUD Study of PHA’s Efforts to Service the Homeless, December 2013.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FFJdOwq_So&feature=youtu.beSlide45
Letter from HUD Secretary, Shaun Donovan to PHA.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=secretarymessagehomeless.pdf
Overview of PIH Notice 2013-15: Guidance on Housing Individuals and Families Experiencing Homeless Through the Public Housing and Housing Choice Voucher Program Webinar. Joint webinar between CPD and PIH, August 2013.
https://www.hudexchange.info/training-events/courses/overview-of-pih-notice-2013-15-guidance-on-housing-individuals-and-families-experiencing-homelessne/
Trenessa
Sidney, HUD PIH. Partnering with PHAs to End Homelessness, May 2014.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=THNMay2014PresPartwPHAs.pdf
US Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Public and Indian Housing. NOTICE PIH 2013-15 (HA), June 2013.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=pih2013-15.pdfSlide46
Additional Resources: USICH
Kristy
Greenwalt
, former USICH Director of Housing Policy. Why PHAs? June 2012.
http://usich.gov/blog/why_phas
Marking the Case: Partnering with Public Housing Authorities. NAEH Conference Presentations, February 2014.
http://www.endhomelessness.org/library/entry/5.5-making-the-case-partnering-with-public-housing-authorities
PHA Guidebook to Ending Homelessness. United States Interagency Council to End Homeless (USICH).
http://usich.gov/resources/uploads/asset_library/PHA_Guidebook_Final.pdf
USICH:
Opening Doors.
http://usich.gov/opening_doors/Slide47
Additional Resources: Best Practices
Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH). Public Housing Agencies Toolkit.
http://usich.gov/blog/New_PHA_Toolkit
CSH: Working with Public Housing Authorities to Catalyze Homeless System Transformation. May 2014
.
http
://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=CorpforSupportiveHousing.pdf
Dallas Housing Authority. A Housing Authority and Homeless Coalition Partnership: Permanent Supportive Housing, May 2014
.
http
://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=MetroDallasHomeAlliance.pdf
Deborah De
Santis, President & CEO of CSH. Public Housing Authorities are a Critical Partner to Supportive Housing, November 2013.
http://usich.gov/blog/csh_phas Housing Authorities: Essential Partners in Ending Homeless. A publication of the Council of Large Public Housing Authorities (CLPHA), 2013. http://www.clpha.org/uploads/Publications/CLPHA2013Publication-HousingAuthorities-EssentialPartnersinEndingHomelessness.pdf Housing Authority of the City of Austin (HACA). Brining Opportunity Home, May 2014. http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=AustinHousingAuthority.pdfHouston Housing Authority, May 2014. http
://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=HoustonHousingAuthority.pdfSlide48
Judson Brown, Dallas Housing Authority. Ending Homelessness in the Dallas-Fort Worth
Metroplex
by Targeting our Resources, May 2014.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=DallasHousingAuthority.pdf
Preston Prince, CEO & Executive Director of Fresno Housing Authority. Fresno Housing Authority: Working to End Homelessness in their Community, November 2013.
http://usich.gov/blog/fresno_pha
SAHA: San Antonio Housing Authority, May 2014.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=SanAntonioHousingAuthority.pdf
Texas Homeless Network: May 21-22nd, 2014.
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=FortWorthHousingAuthority.pdf
Tory
Gunsolley
, President & CEO of Houston Housing Authority. Project-Based Vouchers Can Help End Homelessness: Our Work in Houston, May 2013.
http://usich.gov/blog/HHA