1 / 15

Lancaster-Fairfield Community Action Agency Emergency Homeless Shelter for Families

Lancaster-Fairfield Community Action Agency Emergency Homeless Shelter for Families. History of LFCAA Shelter. First opened in 1983 Allows families to stay together On-site case management and emergency services Remains the only 24-hour family shelter in Fairfield County.

Download Presentation

Lancaster-Fairfield Community Action Agency Emergency Homeless Shelter for Families

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. Lancaster-Fairfield Community Action Agency Emergency Homeless Shelter for Families

  2. History of LFCAA Shelter • First opened in 1983 • Allows families to stay together • On-site case management and emergency services • Remains the only 24-hour family shelter in Fairfield County

  3. Fairfield County Needs • 2011 Point In Time Count • 91 homeless persons sheltered in temporary & emergency housing • 70 persons living in scattered site housing with assistance vouchers • 2008-2009 CoC Plan • indentified need for • increased emergency • shelter units for families

  4. LFCAA Shelter Outcomes • 2009 through 2012 LFCAA maintained a continuous waiting list • 2009: 40% obtained permanent housing; 30% moved back into previous situation; 30% remained in shelter into the next year • 2010: 64% obtained permanent housing; 36% moved back into previous situation; • 2011: 60% obtained permanent housing; 40% remained in shelter into the next year • 2012: to date, of those who have received services, 82% have obtained permanent housing

  5. Rehab Floor Plans - Before

  6. BEFORE • 3 single-room units

  7. BEFORE • Shared common areas • kitchen • bath • laundry

  8. Landscape BEFORE

  9. Rehab Floor Plans - After

  10. AFTER • 4 self contained units • ADA compliant

  11. AFTER • Private kitchen, bath and laundry facilities

  12. Landscape AFTER

  13. Shelter Rehab Advantages • Additional capacity and energy efficiency • Provide more effective case management with added privacy and dignity • Residents gaining life skills by being held responsible for their own unit on a daily basis • Each shelter unit is energy efficient • Since the rehabilitation, LFCAA family shelter has exhibited a 38% shorter length of stay

  14. Funding Sources • Donors: • Ohio Department of Development – OHCP $60,000 • Ohio Department of Development – OCA ARRA CSBG $17,104 • Lancaster-Fairfield CAA Board of Directors $96,642 • Fairfield County Foundation $50,000 • Lancaster Rotary Club $ 3,200 • JC Penney, Meijer and Kmart $ 746 • Pickerington Grace Fellowship Church $10,000 • Partners: • City of Lancaster CDBG • Fairfield Homes – Gorsuch Realty

  15. Presented by: Kellie Ailes, Executive Director kailes@faircaa.org

More Related