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Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models National Alliance to End Homelessness Conference July 2006 City of Portland Bureau of Housing & Community Development
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Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Jan 17, 2016

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City of Portland Bureau of Housing & Community Development. Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models. National Alliance to End Homelessness Conference July 2006. Heather Lyons - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness

Replicable ModelsNational Alliance to End Homelessness Conference

July 2006

City of Portland

Bureau of Housing & Community Development

Page 2: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Heather LyonsCity of Portland, Bureau of Housing and Community Development421 SW 6th Ave., Suite 1100Portland, OR 97204503-823-2396

Evaluator: Transitions to Housing ProgramThomas L. Moore, Ph.D.Herbert & Louis, LLCPO Box 304Wilsonville, OR 97070-0304503-625-6100

Page 3: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Portland’s Experience

• Advocates push for rent assistance• Transitions to Housing (T2H)

Program - 2001• Outcomes bring $ and support• Short Term Rent Assistance

Redesign (STRA)• Adapting the Model for Chronically

Homeless: Key Not A Card - Fall 2005

Page 4: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Flexibility Key to Model

• Collaborative decisions on core elements (eligibility, subsidy limits & options, follow-up, outcome measures and data design)

• Support independence of agencies• Outcomes = Funding • Adapt as needed

Page 5: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

To provide flexible and outcome focused rent assistance to use as a “tool” to:

1) Prevent families and individuals from experiencing homelessnessAND2) End the experience of homeless by placing

people quickly into permanent housing

T2H - Purpose

Page 6: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• Diverse partnering agencies

• Flexibility and timeliness of assistance & service package

• Standardized evaluation protocol, outcome goals and follow-up intervals

• Limited regulations and prompts to spend more and help out for more time

• Adapts to fit agency mission & capacity

T2H - Project Features

Page 7: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• Homeless, or at an immediate risk of being homeless, or living in unsafe conditions

• Gross family income 20% (now 30%) or less than Area Median Income

• Residing or planning to reside within a geographic limit

• Currently not residing in subsidized housing

T2H - Eligibility

Page 8: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

T2H - How it works

• Application & move-in fees• Security deposits• Rent/Mortgage subsidy (lump sum,

tiered, tapered, or constant)• Payment of housing-related debt to

eliminate barriers to permanent housing

• Generous Max subsidies by unit size

Page 9: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• Common dataset across all agencies with ongoing group evaluation meetings

• Enrollment; six, twelve, and eighteen-month follow-up; and case closing data collected by providers

• Follow-up waves based on date of enrollment

• Case closing based on final payment of rent assistance

T2H - Evaluation Protocol

Page 10: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• 1749 households enrolled since inception of program through June 30, 2005

• 73% adult households; 27% families with kids

• 25% of the primary “clients” have a past felony conviction or they were on parole or probation at enrollment

• $1,250 average expenditure per HH

T2H - Findings

Page 11: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• 80% permanent housed at 6 months

• 73% permanent housed at 12 months

• 65% permanent housed at 18 months

T2H - Findings - Overall Outcomes as of June 30, 2005

Page 12: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• Data captured in evaluation provides information on housing instability and secures future funding

• Flexibility with Accountability is key

• Homeless Prevention and “Housing First” model is cost effective and works for multiple populations & agencies

• Collaboration across diverse agencies provides learning opportunities for all

T2H - Lessons Learned

Page 13: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Adapting the Model

Short-term rent assistance redesign (STRA)

&“Key Not A Card” rent assistance to help end chronic homelessness

Page 14: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

STRA - Challenge

• 28 different agencies, 6 different funding sources, 3 jurisdictions, and 1 housing authority

• Contradictory eligibility criteria and program design

• Multiple administrators and processes

Page 15: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

STRA - Process

• Part of 10 Year Plan – Systems change activities

• 6 month long community based process• 6 month long jurisdictional negotiations• Final selection of administrative entity

and approval by City Council and County Board of Commissioners

Page 16: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

STRA - Process

• Community and Jurisdictional process led to agreement on:• Program Model• Outcomes, Evaluation and Data

Collection• System Supports (i.e., services)• Allocations Formula• Unified System and Administrator

Page 17: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Key Not A Card - KNAC

• Focus on moving chronically homeless people off the street and into housing

• Up to 18 months of rent assistance with average aid of $8,000 per household

• Flexibility for providers – within a “Housing First” framework

• Outcome Focused - 12 month follow-up after end of subsidy

• Started October 1, 2005

Page 18: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

KNAC Funding Recipients

• Shelter agency to assist 25 CH women• Street engagement agency to assist 25 CH

high-profile street dwellers identified by police

• Multi-service agency to assist 22 CH adults. • Police select out of the 35 homeless adults with

highest arrest rate

• Collaborative of 8 agencies to assist 20 CH families with kids.

Page 19: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

KNAC - Demographics

• Male -  55%• Female - 45%    

• 18-21 - 3%• 22-35 - 16%• 36-54 - 74%• 55+ - 7% 

• White - 61%• African-Am - 25%• Asian - 3%• Native-Am - 10%• Latino - 1%

• 16 children under age 17• 14 were employed at entry• 8 veterans     

Page 20: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

KNAC - Outcomes

• 144 people in 119 households have been housed (1 project starts with transitional housing)•  of these, 99 people in 74 households

have moved into permanent housing

• 98.5% remained in stable permanent housing

Page 21: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

• Eviction Courts• Restraining Order Programs• Corrections - to support families after head of household is

incarcerated• Mental Health - outreach/residential programs• Hospitals • Community Crisis Lines• Apartment Associations• Government Programs (TANF, SSI/D, Unemployment)• Housing Authorities• Employers• Substance Abuse Programs - outpatient/residential programs• Foster Care System• Head Start programs and Public Schools• And on, and on, and on

Where else could this work?

Page 22: Innovative Rent Assistance Preventing & Ending Homelessness Replicable Models

Thank You

Copies of the Transitions to Housing final evaluation and “Home Again: A 10 Year Plan

to End Homelessness in Portland and Multnomah County are available online at:

www.portlandonline.com/bhcd

For specific information to help replicate or adapt T2H, STRA, or KNAC - please contact Heather Lyons 503-823-2396 or Liora Berry

503-823-2391