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Running the New HUD APR

0. Running the New HUD APR. July 2011. New Webinar software. We are testing out a new option for holding better webinars Will try out a few new things today You should have seen a few new options when registering We will have a couple of short quizzes

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Running the New HUD APR

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  1. 0 Running the New HUD APR July 2011

  2. New Webinar software • We are testing out a new option for holding better webinars • Will try out a few new things today • You should have seen a few new options when registering • We will have a couple of short quizzes • Use the Chat section in the bar on the right to ask questions • Can ask to the whole group or just presenters wilderresearch.org

  3. Key question for the APR • Does the data represent the clients I have served? • Work now to make sure the data is entered completely AND correctly to tell the story of your clients wilderresearch.org

  4. Who needs to be included in the process • As we move forward, make sure all needed people are included in the process • Data entry: check for missing data and missing clients • Program staff: Identify who has an understanding of the clients served and have them review the completed APR • Make sure they see the summary reports to confirm the data wilderresearch.org

  5. APR reflects data standards: June 1st 2010 • New APR is quite different and closely follows the data standards • Make sure you have been collecting according to the new rules • A few major changes are reflected in the APR • Disability and income/benefits for all clients (used to be just for adults) • Housing status (new question) at entry and exit for all clients (must change separately in ach client’s exit assessment) wilderresearch.org

  6. APR reflects data standards: June 1st 2010 • Make sure you have been making updates at exit and before this APR is due for clients: • Income and benefits (general question and sub-assessments) • Disability (general question and sub-assessment) • Now more focused on collecting data on all clients • Services no longer required or included on the APR wilderresearch.org

  7. How to run the APR • Located in ServicePoint in the Reports section • Click on Reports section in the green bar at the top of the screen or within the ServicePoint Module section of the home page wilderresearch.org

  8. Running the APR • Click on the name of the report to open: HUD CoC APR Beta • Since new still in the initial testing phase as actual data is used and HUD firms up programming rules • When running report, prompts work differently than in ART • Skip the Provider Group drop down and Unduplicated check box (for Wilder use on area or system wide reports) wilderresearch.org

  9. Selecting the provider • Provider: Use drop down in combination with toggle options below it • Most program are just one provider; select correct option in drop down and leave toggle at “This provider ONLY” wilderresearch.org

  10. Selecting the provider • Multiple provider programs: You will need to understand how your programs are set-up in ServicePoint to run more than one provider together (same as original APR) • Based on “tree” structure Regional HUD HUD County A HUD County B wilderresearch.org

  11. Selecting the provider • Data should be entered in HUD County A and HUD County B only (Regional HUD does not have data) • Select “Regional HUD” and check “This provider AND its children” to run a report with data from both HUD County A and HUD County B wilderresearch.org

  12. Entering report date • Operating year date range • Start and end dates are specific to your agency • In ServicePoint reports, use the actual report end date. Unlike ART, using a day later will include too much data in your report. wilderresearch.org

  13. Legal Adult Age • Always leave Legal Adult Age as 18 • Important cutoff in report for adult and child • Chaning it will create problems in how your data is presented, even if you are a youth-focused program wilderresearch.org

  14. Data Checking using ServicePoint APR • Click on numbers underlined and in blue to see the clients included in that count • If you click on a name within that box, it brings you to the client’s entry/exit list • To print the list, click the Ctrl and letter P keys together wilderresearch.org

  15. Report details • Only options with (HUD ) after it are included in the counts • If non (HUD) options are selected, they are either excluded or counted as missing depending on the question wilderresearch.org

  16. Report details-current know issues • Current problems with counts in reports (need to clarify with Bowman and HUD how reports should account for them) • Clients who turn 18 while in the program have data missing for Veteran Status and Domestic Violence • Clients who entered the program before June 1st 2010: Information not requiring and update are showing up as missing such as Housing Status at entry • Contact Wilder if you notice any other problems wilderresearch.org

  17. Key APR requirements • Focuses on Last Program Entry • If clients have more than one program entry in the report period, only the last one is included • Example: • Your APR dates are 7/1/2010 to 6/30/2011 • A client was in your program from 2/15/2010 to 7/21/2010, returned on 3/30/2011 • Only the information from the 3/30/2011 program entry will appear on the APR wilderresearch.org

  18. Key APR requirements • The majority of questions are required of all clients now; focus of the APR has shifted • Make sure to read text throughout the APR to understand who is included in which question • Report from HMIS doesn’t include all questions on the APR • Starts and #7 and skips a few numbers after that • HUD is source for any questions on other items wilderresearch.org

  19. Implications: Last Program Entry • Each client has only one age, regardless of how many program stays he/she might have. It is either: • The clients age at the most recent program entry in the report period, OR • The first day of the reporting period (whichever is later • Not based simply on age at entry wilderresearch.org

  20. Age example • Your APR reporting cycle is from 7/1/ to 6/30 each year • A client was in your program from 2/15/2010 to 7/21/2010, returning 3/30/2011 • This year’s APR: Age = clients age on 3/30/11 • Next year’s APR: Age= the client’s age on 7/1/2011 wilderresearch.org

  21. Key APR Requirements • Clients are either leavers or stayers • Leavers have exited and aren’t currently being served as of the last day of the report period • Stayers are in the program on the last day of the report period • Example: • Your APR dates are 7/1/2010 to 6/30/2011 • A client was in your program from 2/15/2010 to 7/21/2010 and returned on 3/30/2011 • The client would be a stayer since only information from the most recent program entry is included in the report and they were still in the program on the last day of the report period wilderresearch.org

  22. Key APR requirements • Clients are counted by household type throughout the report • Without Children: singles, couples with no children, pregnant females alone • With Children and Adults: one- or two-parent households with parent over 18 • With Only Children: clients under 18 served on their own. Can be parents, siblings, etc. • Unknown Household Type: If birth date is missing, clients can end up in this category wilderresearch.org

  23. Overall program counts • Report start at #7 and includes 4 categories • “Unaccompanied children” are those under 18 not served with any other clients • Make sure these counts are correct • Different than household category “With children only” which may include groups of people served together • Also counts “Leavers”: good first step to make sure these are correct wilderresearch.org

  24. Data Quality Emphasis • Data quality counts (#7) • Don’t know/refused and missing data highlighted for required data elements for all clients • Don’t know/refused ok: if client answers this way and lower counts are best • Veteran Status: required for clients 18+ only • Zip code of last permanent residence and Housing status included here, but not on rest of report • Housing status at exit-be sure to record separately for each HH member at exit and save wilderresearch.org

  25. Data Quality • Disabling condition (disability of long duration) • Make sure to update client data before running APR • Back date to program entry date if disability present at program entry but only newly identified • If disability type identified (and have documentation-depending on disability type) record start date at program entry wilderresearch.org

  26. Data Quality • Disability type and data quality • Current problem/question with disability types • If nothing is recorded in the sub-assessment, it is counted as missing. It doesn’t currently look at “disability of long duration” question. It may also be that client has undocumented disability and doesn’t allow for this. • Waiting to hear more from Bowman and HUD wilderresearch.org

  27. Data Quality • For other questions, make sure data is accurately recorded • Use Household Data Sharing in ServicePoint to transfer housing related information to all household member’s records at entry at one time • If you find other problems contact the helpdesk wilderresearch.org

  28. Persons served during the operating year (#8) • New section counting individuals by their household type, average number served each night, and Point-in-Time • Households uses new definitions and counts all clients • Each person is included in a household based on their last program entry wilderresearch.org

  29. Persons served during the operating year (#8) • Point-in-Time by months. Starts with January, but need to think about how months fall in your program year • Based on last Wednesday of each month • May not total all clients served • Months Example: Report from 7/1/10 to 6/30/11: January (2011), April (2011), July (2010), October (2010) wilderresearch.org

  30. APR detail-households served (#9) • Report will count each household group once, called a “master household” • For clients with only one entry: master household-household type • If clients enter more than once during a reporting period and have different household situations each time, only one household type will be assigned • This is one of the complicated sections for reporting wilderresearch.org

  31. Household Counting Example • Program stay 1) Linda (missing DOB) and Tom (adult) enter a program together. Tom leaves. Annie (a child) joins Linda • Program stay 2) later in the operating year Tom and Linda return to the program • Program Stay 3) Later in the operating year, Tom returns to the program alone • Total household =1, Household with Children and Adults • If Tom and Linda were assigned to Household ID 100 at the time they entered the program, Annie is also assigned to Household ID 100 when she joins Linda • As we move through a list of program stays in chronological order and arrive at Tom and Linda’s second program stay, we consider them to be part of Household 100 because Tom is an adult who was served previously in the operating year. The same rule applies to Tom’s third stay. In effect, all three program stays have a MasterHousehold of 100 wilderresearch.org

  32. Question 10 and 11: not from HMIS • Question 10 and 11 cover your bed and unit inventory information and aren’t pulled in the APR • You will need to track this separately and report it in e-snaps • You may be able to pull this in the future from HMIS wilderresearch.org

  33. 12a. & b. Outreach Programs Only • If you are an outreach program (Few HUD funded in MN) use 12 a. and b. to report on outreach specific questions • If you are not an outreach program you will still see these questions; please ignore them. You will not have a space to report them in e-snaps wilderresearch.org

  34. APR Details: Demographics • Gender broken down by adults and children (#15) • Age: Based on most recent program stay during the report period or report period start date (#16) • Race presented in basic categories (#17b) • If your client has a race of “other,” this is not a HUD category and won’t be counted correctly in the report. Please update to the appropriate category • Ethnicity also included (#17a) • Disability information at program entry (#18) • Domestic Violence information (#19) • Veteran status for 18+ (#21) wilderresearch.org

  35. APR Details: Residence prior to entry • Only reported for adults and youth (under 18) on their own (#20) • Divided into three sections: homeless situations, institutional settings, and other responses • Refers to residence prior to most recent entry wilderresearch.org

  36. APR Details: Disabilities (#22) • Reported for all clients, including children • At entry, everyone • At exit, everyone but divided into leavers and stayers • Part A: Specific disabilities • Based on information recorded in the sub-assessment • “Disability determination” must be set to yes for a disability to appear (in sub-assessment) • Part B: Number of disabilities • Based on “disability of long duration” and information in sub-assessment wilderresearch.org

  37. Disability updates • Remember to update all disabilities at exit and before APR due date for all clients • Disability of Long Duration • Make sure all clients (no matter program entry date) have an answer to this question • If said “no” to disability of long duration question, confirm this is still correct • If “yes” now, figure out if the disability was current as of program entry date • If so, back date to program entry date. Delete “no” using H and select “yes.” wilderresearch.org

  38. Disability updates • Disability sub-assessment • Make sure to update if any documentation has ben obtained (enter type if needed and change disability determination to “yes”) • Record any newly identified disabilities for all clients • If disability present at entry use program entry date as start date • Use updated HMIS forms to help you through the process wilderresearch.org

  39. APR details: Income & Benefits • Income is reported by client not by adults only • Income at entry and exit for adult leavers (#23) • Income at entry and current income for adult stayers (#24) • Sources of income/benefits for adults and children (#25-26) • Divided up into a number of questions based on cash sources and levers/stayers and non-cash benefits and leavers/stayers wilderresearch.org

  40. Income & Benefits • All income-related questions are important for reporting • Income amounts are based on “total income” question • If nothing is recorded for “total income” report will sum all cash income sources without end dates (in report period) in the sub-assessment • If you answered “yes” to “Income received in last 30 days” but did not include information in the sub-assessment, the client will report as “missing.” wilderresearch.org

  41. Income & Benefits: Data Checking • Make sure counts within each income category are correct: • Clients in highest income categories: are you missing an income end date? • Clients with no income: is this accurate? • Clients in lowest income categories (especially at exit): did you accidentally end all income? wilderresearch.org

  42. Income & Benefits: making updates • Remember to check for income and non-cash benefit changes for all clients at exit and before the APR is due • Make sure general income/non-cash benefit questions and total income are answered for all clients no matter when they started the program • Back date to program entry date as needed when making updates • Use new HMIS forms to help you through the process wilderresearch.org

  43. Length of Participation • Length of stay is counted for all clients • Broken out for leavers/stayers • Use question #27 to make sure people are showing up in the right category • Destination will break down length of stay in more detail wilderresearch.org

  44. Next steps • Wilder will follow-up with Bowman and HUD to clarify questions • Please contact the helpdesk if you find additional potential problems • Instruction document to come • Will provide further training sessions for those unable to attend wilderresearch.org

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