Homelessness and Early Childhood: Challenges, Opportunities, and Resources Eric I. Grumdahl, Director of Special Projects | Minnesota Department of Education and Minnesota Office to Prevent and End Homelessness 2019 Parent Education Symposium | January 10, 2019
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Homelessness and Early Childhood: Challenges, Opportunities, and Resources
Eric I. Grumdahl, Director of Special Projects | Minnesota Department of Education and Minnesota Office to Prevent and End Homelessness
2019 Parent Education Symposium | January 10, 2019
Who is in the room today?1/9/2019 Housing Stability for All Minnesotans | www.headinghomeminnesota.org 2
Over the next 45 minutes…
• Share what we know about homelessness in Minnesota, especially among young children
• Describe efforts underway to prevent and end homelessness
• Offer some resources and suggestions in your roles as parent educators and early learning experts
• Discussion
Mass Homelessness and Housing
Instability
Deinstitutionalization
Jeopardy for low-income people due to
significant macroeconomic shifts
Divestment in Federal housing programs
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• Monetary policy of late 1970s created inflation and soaring interest rates
• Farm Crisis of 1980s, esp. Midwest impact• Transition to service / knowledge economy• Professionalization of social services
Reagan-era decimation of Federal programs, including housing: • From 1981 to 1989, HUD
budget authorizations were cut by 78 percent.
• Public Housing units authorized dropped from 30k – 50k per year in late 1970s to ZERO in 1984.
• Implementation of Community Mental Health Act of 1963: deinstitutionalization of people with mental health challenges, without creating needed community-based capacity.
• Failures in transition planning from foster care, corrections, substance abuse treatment, and other systems
Responding to homelessness: Key policy milestones
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act
• July 1987
Wilder Research’s Statewide Homeless Study
• October 1991
Ending Long-term Homelessness in Minnesota: Report and Business Plan
• March 2004
Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act (HEARTH) Act
• May 2009
Opening Doors: Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
• June 2010
Heading Home: Minnesota’s Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
• December 2013
Definition of homelessness
• Children or youth who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence, including:
• Sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason
• Living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or campgrounds due to the lack of alternative adequate accommodations
• Living in emergency or transitional shelters
• Living in places not meant for habitation (e.g., vehicles)
• Fixed, Regular, and Adequate
• Fixed: Stationary, permanent, not subject to change
• Regular: Used on a predictable, routine, consistent basis; Consider the relative permanence of the living arrangement
• Adequate: Lawful and reasonably sufficient for meeting physical and psychological needs typically met in a home environment
Can the student go to the SAME PLACE (fixed) EVERY NIGHT (regular) to sleep in a SAFE and SUFFICIENT SPACE (adequate)?
The magnitude of the problem is surprising
• Multiple data sources:
• Triennial Wilder Homeless Study
• HUD Point-in-Time count
• School and early learning program records
• HHS Early Childhood estimates
• Wilder study finds:
• Of all age groups, children and youth age 24 and under are the most likely to be homeless in Minnesota.
• Nearly half (47%) of these children are age 5 or under.
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Source: Wilder Research, Homelessness in Minnesota: Findings from the 2015 Minnesota Homeless Study
Homelessness reflects racial and ethnic disparities
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Over-represented by 6.1x
Over-represented by 4.5x
State government’s
role and response
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U. S. Interagency Council on
Homelessness
AgricultureCommerce
Corporation for National
and Community
Service
Defense
Education
Energy
General Services
Administration
Health and Human Services
Homeland Security
Housing and Urban
DevelopmentInterior
Justice
Labor
Office of Management and Budget
Social Security Administration
Transportation
United States Postal Service
Veterans Affairs
White House Office of Faith-
based and Community Initiatives
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Minnesota Interagency Council on
Homelessness
Corrections
Education
Employment and Economic Development
Governor’s Office
Health
Human Rights
Human Services
Metropolitan Council
Minnesota Housing
Office of Higher
Education
Public Safety
Transportation
Veterans Affairs
Heading Home, 2013 - 2020
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Timeline
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Heading Home
Update
Heading Home
Walz First TermDayton First Term Dayton Second Term
Interagency Councilconvenes
Heading Home Together
Prevent homelessness whenever possible, andotherwise making it rare, brief, and non-recurring
Episodes ofhomelessness
BRIEF
Newincidents
PREVENT
Housing outcomes
RARE
Recidivism
NON-RECURRING
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Seven Principles
1. Identify all people experiencing homelessness.
2. Provide some form of shelter immediately to anyone who needs it, with appropriate services.
3. Link people experiencing homelessness with housing and services tailored to their needs through coordinated entry and prioritize people experiencing chronic homelessness for permanent supportive housing.
4. Assist people with moving swiftly into permanent housing with any needed supports.
5. Use a person-centered, Housing First orientation in our response to homelessness.
6. Help people experiencing or at risk of homelessness increase employment and income.
7. Organize resources, plans, partnerships, and system capacity that are sufficient to prevent and end homelessness on an ongoing basis.
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To prevent and end homelessness in Minnesota, we will work collaboratively to:
Federal agencies
National partners
Philan-thropy
Local and Tribal gov’t
Private-sector
partners
Advocacy groups
Faith-based groups
Comm-unities of
color
People with dis-abilities
LGBTQ comm-unities
Intersecting, overlapping stakeholder groups
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CoCs
Providers
Committed Partners
• Alliance Housing
• Association of Minnesota Counties
• Child Care Aware of Minnesota
• Corporation for Supportive Housing
• Emma Norton Services
• Governor’s Early Learning Council
• Heading Home Minnesota Funders Collaborative
• Hennepin County Office to End Homelessness
• Hennepin County Youth Collaborative
• Minneapolis Downtown Business Council
• Minnesota Assistance Council for Veterans
• Minnesota Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth
• Minnesota Association of Area Agencies on Aging:
• Arrowhead Area Agency on Aging
• Central Minnesota Council on Aging
• Land of the Dancing Sky Area Agency on Aging
• Metropolitan Area Agency on Aging
• Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Area Agency on Aging
• Minnesota River Area Agency on Aging
• Southeastern Minnesota Area Agency on Aging
• Minnesota Association of County Social Service Administrators
• Minnesota Board on Aging
• Minnesota Coalition for the Homeless
• Minnesota Coalition for Battered Women
• Minnesota Head Start Association
• Minnesota HIV Housing Coalition20
• Minnesota Housing Partnership
• Minnesota Tribal Collaborative to Prevent and End Homelessness
• Minnesota’s 10 Continuums of Care: Central, Hennepin, Northeast, Northwest, Ramsey, SMAC, Southeast, Southwest, St. Louis, and West Central
• National Alliance on Mental Illness
• National Coalition for Homeless Veterans
• Oasis Central Minnesota
• The Family Place
• U. S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs medical centers:
• Fargo VA Health Care System
• Minneapolis VA Health Care System Homeless Programs
• Saint Cloud Health Care System
• Sioux Falls Veterans Administration
• Youth Services Network
Heading Home Together Leadership Circle
• Unprecedented, collaborative approach to collective impact
• Leverages and reinforces existing collaborative efforts, including:
• The Minnesota Interagency Council on Homelessness
• Heading Home Alliance
• Heading Home Minnesota Funders Collaborative
• Emphasizes equity and the voices of people with lived experience
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What are we doing now to end homelessness among young children?
Families with children are one of four key populations for the Heading Home Together plan. Activities focused on early learners include:
• Prioritized and expedited access to Early Learning Scholarships, outreach to homeless service providers, and support for innovative program models
• Reinforcing Federal guidance regarding access to Early Head Start and Head Start programs
• Implementation of Foundational Service Practices for Early Childhood Family Education and Family Home Visiting programs
• Supporting local implementation of McKinney-Vento Act requirements for early childhood programs
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Early Learning Scholarship program
• Early Learning Scholarship help pay for high-quality child care and early education programs.
• Children experiencing homelessness are prioritized for access to scholarships, and have seen the biggest growth in awards.
• Opportunities for coordination are encouraged and supported (e.g., People Serving People partnership).
• FFI: Contact [email protected], 651-582-8301 or https://education.mn.gov/MDE/fam/elsprog/elschol/
1. Know the housing status of the people you are serving
2. Actively reach out to people experiencing homelessness
3. Limit requirements for in-person appointments at a particular location or office
4. Assist with the process of gathering required verifications or documentation
5. Allow for multiple methods to communicate about benefits and services
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What’s hard for people who are
housed can seem
impossible for people who are
homeless.
MDE McKinney-Vento resources for homeless education
MDE McKinney-Vento / Education for Homeless Children and Youth program: https://education.mn.gov/MDE/dse/ESEA/home/
• Blueprint for Homeless ServicesUse this flowchart to help evaluate the multiple considerations and legal requirements for McKinney Vento eligible learners. Districts and charters may consider adapting this document to specify which person at their location(s) will be responsible for attending to a McKinney Vento Eligible learner’s needs.
• Basic Needs Tracking FormSchool and district staff may use this tracking form as tool to better identify a student’s basic needs and document how those needs are monitored.
• Health Needs Tracking FormHomeless liaisons or school nurses may use this tracking form as tool to better identify a student’s health related needs and document how those needs are monitored.
• School Item Request FormUse to identify what students need in the way of school supplies. For McKinney Vento eligible secondary learners or unaccompanied minors.