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HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA

HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA. Local Communities Respond to Preventing and Ending Homelessness. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA. PARTNERS. Northern Virginia Affordable Housing Alliance Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness

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HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA

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  1. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA Local Communities Respond to Preventing and Ending Homelessness

  2. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA PARTNERS • Northern Virginia Affordable Housing Alliance • Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness • Made possible by a generous grant from: • Freddie Mac Foundation • Thanks to all of the service providers, CBOs and local government staff who provided information for this report.

  3. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA METHODOLOGY • This study uses: • 2009 “Point-in-Time” Counts • Interviews with staff of local government agencies • Interviews with nonprofit service providers • 10 Year Plans (Alexandria, Arlington and Fairfax-Falls • Church)

  4. OVERVIEW • Rates of homelessness have fluctuated, but we are still higher • last year than five years ago for individuals and families

  5. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA OVERVIEW . . . CONT’D • Biggest Contributing Factor: LackofAffordableHousing • Other Factors: • Explosive job growth created a housing shortage; high demand fueled boom • Boom priced out low-income households • Subsequent foreclosure crisis/recession pushed higher-income households into the • rental market, squeezing low-income households • Recession simultaneously created more need and hampered jurisdictions’ abilities to • respond • Boom or Bust, resources for serving the lowest-income households will be a • challenge

  6. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA OVERVIEW . . . CONT’D • The report examines the responses of jurisdictions in the following areas: • Funding and Staffing • Serving Chronically Homeless Persons • Data Management • Politics and Policy • Philosophy Change • NIMBY • Population Migration

  7. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA FUNDING & STAFFING • 10 Year Plans need dedicated funds and staffing to progress • Housing and services (and their funding streams) must be coordinated • collaboratively, which requires systems changes • Even once identified, distributing funds from multiple sources for • multiple purposes but aimed at one coherent outcome is challenging • In some jurisdictions, experiences with HPRP have been instructive • HPRP is limited, though. It is not a long-term solution for episodic • homelessness, and not a solution at all for chronic homelessness.

  8. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA SERVING CHRONICALLY HOMELESS PERSONS • Chronically homeless individuals and families are homeless multiple times over a short period. • To remedy, they need: • Housing • Intensive case management • Supportive services

  9. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA DATA MANAGEMENT • HMIS is important for tracking; equally important for planning • To plan, jurisdiction-wide or region-wide, use of HMIS should be consistent

  10. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA POLITICS & POLICY • When resources for housing and homelessness scattered, commitment and leadership on this issue was tested • Some legislators think these issues don’t affect their jurisdiction at all • Others are supportive, but don’t prioritize these issues in lean times • Still, others are supportive but aren’t well positioned to lead on the • issue • Progress on 10 Year Plans requires positive political will.

  11. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA PHILOSOPHY CHANGE • Ending homelessness requires everyone to think differently because • now everyone, from the drop-in center to the housing developer, • wants the same outcome. • Internally focused community-focused

  12. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA NIMBY • Much of the housing in 10YPs thus far has been through vouchers or • other rental subsidies and repurposing existing special needs housing • NIMBY will become a more challenging issue as 10 YPs progress and • jurisdictions begin to develop new housing (esp. unpopular options) • Previous experience indicates that even minor opposition can • stall/derail projects; Projects have to engage advocates and cultivate • powerful alliances early and educate, educate, educate!

  13. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA POPULATION MIGRATION • Anecdotally, this hasn’t been a big issue. • Better data management will help better define this issue

  14. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA IN CONCLUSION . . . • We need to determine: • What are the good practices that we can take from jurisdiction to • jurisdiction? • What are the points for regional collaboration?

  15. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA IN CONCLUSION . . . • We should consider: • Funding and Staffing - Collaborative funding processes; Consolidated • RFPs; Dedicated, paid government staff • Serving Chronically Homeless Persons - Non-traditional housing • options; Redesigning literacy and job training and work supports to • better target people with multiple barriers • Data Management – Updating systems; Streamlining data collection; • Centralized training and technical support

  16. HOMELESS IN NORTHERN VIRGINIA IN CONCLUSION . . . • We should consider: • Politics and Policy – Use legislators and prominent private sector • participants on 10YP oversight bodies or Continuums of care to get • support • Philosophy Change – Move the majority of decision-making to a • coalition body that includes both government and nonprofits • NIMBY – Engage early; Cultivate powerful partners; Fight in coalitions • for policy changes that will affect your development and others; • Educate!

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