1 / 13

Sylvie Guibert and Catherine Mass é Human Resources Development Canada

Canadian Evaluation Society Vancouver - June 2003 National Homelessness Initiative: Evaluation Findings and Policy Renewal. Sylvie Guibert and Catherine Mass é Human Resources Development Canada. Presentation Overview. The National Homelessness Initiative

binh
Download Presentation

Sylvie Guibert and Catherine Mass é Human Resources Development Canada

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Canadian Evaluation Society Vancouver - June 2003National Homelessness Initiative: Evaluation Findings and Policy Renewal • Sylvie Guibert and Catherine Massé • Human Resources Development Canada

  2. Presentation Overview • The National Homelessness Initiative • The NHI Evaluation: Methodology and Findings • Impact of Findings and Policy Renewal

  3. The National Homelessness Initiative (NHI) • With the NHI’s launch in December 1999, the Government recognized that a concerted federal response was needed to address this growing, visible social problem • A unique community-focused approach was adopted to facilitate community action and ownership • Addressing locally identified needs

  4. Homelessness Initiative - $753 M Key Federal Players Surplus Federal Real Property for Homelessness Initiative $10 M Other (Planning, Research, etc.) $9 M Shelter Enhancement Program $43 M Urban Aboriginal Strategy (UAS) $59 M Youth Homelessness Component $59 M Supporting CommunitiesPartnership Initiative (SCPI) $305 M ResidentialRehabilitationAssistanceProgram $268 M

  5. FederalDepartments & Agencies Non - Profit Groups PrivateSector Provinces & Territories Municipalities Working Together at the Local Level Communities

  6. Evaluation Approach • Timelines • Evaluation conducted between Fall 2001 and Fall 2002 • Scope • HRDC components (SCPI, Youth, Aboriginal Homelessness, Research) + overall NHI coordination • Implementation issues • Early outcomes • Main method • Case study approach (20 out of 61 SCPI communities) • Case selection • Communities reflect variation among all SCPI communities

  7. Evaluation Approach (cont’d) • Sources of evidence for case studies • Review of documents (community and project-level) • Review of project-level data • Key informant interviews

  8. Findings • Results on implementation • HRDC components were coordinated, but more inter-departmental coordination is required • SCPI provided an appropriate balance between flexibility and accountability • Community planning is a valuable exercise • Limited initial terms and conditions resulted in delays in allocating funds to Aboriginal and Youth projects • Research results are still pending

  9. Findings (cont’d) • Results on early outcomes • SCPI enhanced existing capacity in most communities • HRDC funding built upon existing funding • Funds were allocated to a wide variety of projects but work remains to address transitional needs • Success factors • Community control over funding allocation • Flexible terms and conditions • Requirement for community planning • HRDC regional and local staff

  10. Impact of Findings • The use of evaluation results • Benchmark government and community progress • Report back to stakeholders on local progress • Identify “lessons learned” on community-based program delivery • Inform policy and program renewal

  11. Renewed Program Policy • The findings of the evaluation were critical in • Guiding the development of renewed program policy • Determining roles and responsibilities of other federal departments in the NHI • Contributing to the recently announced federal Budget allocation of $405 million for a three-year extension of the National Homelessness Initiative (NHI)

  12. Extended NHI The extended NHI, responding to evaluation findings, includes • A stronger focus on transitional and supportive interventions, as well as prevention • A requirement for demonstrated Youth and Aboriginal representation in community planning and decision-making • The provision of strategic direction, clear guidelines and a streamlined template to help communities to update their community plans • An extension of the Research and the Homeless Individuals and Families Information System (HIFIS) components for an additional three years • Clearer roles and responsibilities for senior management in federal departments and in the regions, ensuring a cohesive and coherent federal approach to addressing homelessness.

  13. The evaluation report will soon be available on the Internet at: http://www11.hrdc-drhc.gc.ca/pls/edd/hrdc.main • For further information, contact: • Catherine Massé, Evaluation Manager • Evaluation & Data Development • Human Resources Development Canada • Section 3D, Phase IV, 140 Promenade du Portage • Gatineau (Hull), QC K1A 0J9 • catherine.masse@hrdc-drhc.gc.ca • Tel : 819-953-8094 Fax : 819-953-7887 • Sylvie Guibert, Manager, Business Planning and Evaluation • National Secretariat on Homelessness • Human Resources Development Canada • 165 Hotel-de-Ville Street • Gatineau (Hull), QC K1A 0J9 • sylvie.guibert@hrdc-drhc.gc.ca • Tel: 819-997-9917 Fax: 819-994-4211

More Related