390 likes | 407 Views
Cynthia Latcham, Director of Programs & Services at Anawim Housing, discusses the evidence-based practices implemented in their programs for permanent supportive housing.
E N D
Programspermanent supportive housing: Evidence Based Practices Cynthia Latcham B.A. Director of Programs & Services Anawim Housing
Shelter Plus Care 1 Serving individuals and families who had been homeless
Shelter Plus Care 2 Serving individuals who were chronically homeless
Homeless To Housing • Homeless to Housing started in 2015 and housed 22 chronically homeless individuals in 2017. • Anawim program manager provides case management services targeted to stabilize long-term homeless individuals. 33% 81% HOUSING STABILITY INCOME INCREASE
Housing Opportunities Program 1 & 2 • Anawim began Housing Opportunities Program (HOP) 1 in 2016 and HOP2 in 2017. • Together, these programs housed 76 chronically homeless individuals in Permanent Supportive Housing in 2017. • These programs are funded through HUD. • Program managers provide case management services in order to address housing stability.
PSH: Developing a Project • Funding- Anawim Funds through HUD CoC Competition • Agency Capacity • Accounting • Staff Hiring and training • Property Management training • Leasing • Iowa Landlord & Tenant Laws • Fair Housing • Documentation • Performance Measure Tracking • Landlord engagement and Leasing
Barriers to Implementation • Agency wide commitment to serve vulnerable populations. • Lack of internal accounting supports and software to support required federal audits • Property Management experience including leasing and Iowa Tenant/Landlord laws and property management software • Staff Capacity • Lack of variety in housing configurations and landlords. • Poor quality Housing Stock (HQS/ Rental Certificates) • Lack of commitment to Housing First as an EBP. • Inferior Centralized Intake process.
Program Entrance Criteria • All referrals are made through Centralized Intake (CI) referral process • CoC grant recipients have signed MOU with CI • Documentation of chronicity • Verified disability: Mental Health, SUD, HIV/Aids, Medically fragile or fleeing domestic violence* • Disability form signed by LISW, MD, PA, DO, AANP • Current SSI benefit award letter • Medical records including above diagnosis. • Not currently on sex offender registry • CI denial form based upon extreme situations
Evidence Based Practices: • Housing First • Motivational Interviewing • Trauma Informed Care • Critical Time Intervention • Assertive Community Treatment- Through Community Partners
Staffing and Training • 20:1 Caseload. • Program Managers with experience in Social Work, Employment Services, Mental Health, Substance Treatment or Human Services • On the job training in Property Management and Iowa Landlord & Tenant laws. • Staff attends community trainings on job development, Trauma Informed Care, Aces, Motivational Interviewing, etc. • Program Department operates as a case management team with all members offering experience in the form of formal and informal staffings.
Performance Measures • HUD Continuum of Care (CoC) Performance Measures- Collected through HMIS and reported through SAGE APR • Community • Length of time homeless • Length of shelter stays • Variety of programs (PSH,RRH,TBRA) • Point In Time Count (PIT) • Projects • Length of time housed • Increased income (earned and disability) • Connection to mainstream medical services • Exits to other permanent housing • Return to homelessness at 6 months and 2 years
Increasing Income • Through benefit cases: SSI/SSDI SOAR Training • Through Earned employment • Utilizing staff trained in job development • Utilizing community partners (EKD, Goodwill, PREP, DMACC) etc. • Challenges • With income comes the responsibility of paying rent (roughly 30%). • Documentation and rent calculations • Cliff effects
HUD PSH Budget • Rental Assistance including security deposits and damage • Cannot exceed Fair Market Rent (FMR) • Must be “Rent Reasonable” • Supportive Services • Includes Case Manager salaries. • Assessments: • Service Needs • Employment • Life Skills • Very minimal $ for Moving and Transportation Costs • 7% Administrative Costs- Admin costs associated with accounting for the use of grant funds • 25% Program Match • HUD will not increase budget due to market forces of rent pricing. Programs are expected to serve the original number of tenants/units regardless of grant funding.
What Is Match? • Cash or In-kind contributions by Anawim Housing and Community Partners including completed MOU • Anawim Housing must match $539,000 for current 5 HUD grants • Cash and In-Kind contributions eligible and outlined in 24 CFR Part 578 “the value of any real property, equipment, goods or services, provided the sub-recipient had to pay for them with grant funds. • Examples of In-Kind Donations: IHH, Path, SCL Services, SUD Treatment, Cleaning Supplies, donated housing goods • Must be documented and verified.
What is Housing First? • Homelessness is a housing crisis solved with housing • All people experiencing homelessness can achieve housing stability • Everyone is “housing ready” Providers need to be “Consumer ready” • Housing is therapy • People experiencing homelessness have a right to self-determination and be treated with dignity and respect. • Housing configuration and services are matched to the individual needs.
Core Components: • No prerequisites to enter permanent housing • Low barrier admissions: Criminal Hx., SUD, Mental Health • Rapid and streamlined entry • Voluntary supportive service-offered diligently by program managers • Flexible and responsive to service needs tailored to individual • Tenants have full rights, responsibilities and legal protection • Prevention strategies for lease violations and evictions • Participants have a choice of housing configurations and locations • Applicable to both RRH and PSH projects
How does Housing First Work? • Case Management • Landlord Relationships • Housing Navigator • Prioritization • Harm Reduction • Community Collaboration • Creativity and dedication • Hard work
Evolution of Housing First in Polk Co. • Then: The most persistent received services • Now: Prioritization ensures the most vulnerable served first through • Then: First come-First Served • Now: Prioritization ensures those most in need are served first • Then: Agencies received one referral per 5 openings for PSH • Now: Referrals come from CI and off the prioritization lists • Then: Agencies could choose the easiest to serve • Now: The most vulnerable (based on SPDAT) are referred to programs resulting in programs serving those with the most barriers • Then: Case Management services were mandated and necessary to obtain housing • Now: Case Management is voluntary as are all services
Benefits of CI & Prioritization: • Standardized assessment (HMIS) • Ensures the most vulnerable in the community receive services first • Serve hardest to house before those with fewer barriers • Standardized referrals based on prioritization and without caseworker judgement. • Polk County CoC adopted the VI-SPDAT for individual, F-SPDAT for families; and the TAY-SPDAT for youth for the purposes or prioritization for shelters and housing programs. • Polk County currently has a wait list for all programs.
Successful Strategies • Relationship building leads to non-judgmental interactions • Unit transfers • Program staffing • Appeal process that is used to “reset” and is trauma informed • Community partnerships • Taking “Vacations” from units • Care planning and service goals are client driven • Payment plans and flexibility in rent payments
Effectiveness: • People being served have complex needs and co-occurring issues. • Decrease in use of expensive primary services. (ER, Jail, etc. • 90%+ remain in housing • Improved quality of life: • Address MH, SUD and health issues. • Reconnection with family and other supports • Return to their vision of life affirming activities • Cost Efficient • Data Driven • No end date to program means people can age in place (This creates a new set of problems: how to serve an aging population)
Housing First in Practice • Trauma Informed Intakes • Unit selection process • Full Circle Group – Addressing loneliness through Cultural Competency • Live In Aids • Housing Camp “friends” at the same time • Leveraging timing, author and delivery of notices • Taking “Vacations” from units • Creating opportunities for tenants to take care of health, mental health, outstanding warrants, Treatment without fear of loosing unit or place on program
Fidelity to Housing First • Quick test Assessment tools • Rigorous personal assessment • Rigorous department assessment • Rigorous agency assessment • Community wide commitment to Housing First practices
Lessons Learned • Flexibility and agility are essential in both management and practice • Team approach - Creativity and experience of the whole are an advantage • Sometimes despite our best efforts, we fail. • There are vast and varied solutions found within Housing First and harm reduction practices. Embrace the challenge. • Civilians will not understand the work we do. Support and humor of colleagues is helpful and fun. • Burnout is not inevitable
Case Management “Try to learn something about everything and everything about something” -Thomas Huxley We strive to be: • Stage Matched • Trauma Informed • Strength-Based • Person Centered
Stage of Change • Pre-contemplation: It’s not an issue-Don’t bug me • Contemplation: I am willing to discuss but I don’t want to change • Preparation: I am ready to start changing- but I need help to begin • Early Action: I have already begun to make changes but need help to continue • Late Action: I am working towards maintenance- but haven’t gotten there and need help • Maintenance: I am stable and I am trying to stay that way as life throws challenges at me
Case Management • Our Strengths: • Case management comes with housing • Low to no barrier-Just like the housing we provide • Case managers not restricted by billing • No Exit Date • Provides time for participants to engage at their own pace • Allows for case managers to forge trusting relationships • Reduces participant stress regarding hitting goals • Case Planning • Client driven-programmatic goals reached through being housed • Case plans are fluid and frequently change • Clients can focus on their version of a happy/successful life
Case Management cont. • Flexibility • CM can spend as much time with people as needed. We meet people where they are at. • Team approach utilized- We know each other’s participants and participants know us. Keeps us aware of community issues and provides for immediate case coverage when needed • We can be creative in our approaches to unique problems and can provide services to participants that would be challenging to find in community. • The Challenge: • Boundaries • Frequent participant staffing to ensure CM has proper support • Accepting participant choices
Case Management challenges cont. • Substance Use Disorder • Public Intox. charges and resulting fines and jail time. • Methamphetamine Use • No great treatment models • Tinkering/dismantling/damages/Hoarding • Criminal element-Manufacturing and Dealing • Guests and squatting • Meth Psychosis • Co-Occurring Disorders • Accessing Mental Health Services • Need municipal court and increased Drug court
Case Management cont. • Community Partnerships • What we can do for community partners. • Basic level needs of participants are met • We can get you in to see your people • Participants are easier to find when they are housed • What we are looking for from community partners. • Items that provide an added value • Increase frequency of contact when needed
What is Harm Reduction? • A compassionate approach that addresses the harms caused by the risk-taking behavior without forcing clients to eliminate the behavior while not minimizing or ignoring the real and tragic danger and harm connected to risky behavior. • Building rapport and relationships- Non-judgmental communication • Motivational interviewing/ TIC/ wellness self-management • Progress often takes years and is not linear. • Mental Health- Low barrier mental health providers • Addiction-“safer” use. In DSM offer bleach kits- other communities offer needle exchange. Use in safe places. • How do you define success? • Challenges for Program managers in dual roles • Examples: The quartet housed/ The triplets housed
Landlords • Landlords are carefully matched with potential tenants • Tenants are carefully matched with open units • Scattered site model v. site based • Case Managers act as buffers • Well developed relationships • Standardized engagement • Crisis management & problem solving • The search for landlords never ends!!! • These programs do not work without landlords.
Collaboration in Community • Local Continuum of Care • Community works collaboratively to conduct planning and align resources to ensure a range of affordable and supportive housing options and models are available • Access to other services/entitlements do not require tx. or sobriety • Soft handoffs between partners • Ownership and buy in between agencies-We all have a part in keeping the most vulnerable people housed • Low barrier mental health providers • Law Enforcement • “Homeless tickets” • Point in Time Participation • Judicial/ Policy issues • Hospitals: Discharge planning • Private agencies
Systemic Problems • Mental Health resources: • Limited mental health respites • Loss of Mental Health facilities in Iowa • Criminalization of Mental Health • High utilization of Primary Services (Familiar Faces) • Lack of diversified housing stock within community • No SROs • Loss of YMCA and YWCA and “Half-Hotels” • The ever-present funding challenges • Ideological differences • Abstinence Vs. Harm reduction • Cross Sector communication (Silo effect) • Rural Services
Contact Information Cynthia Latcham Director of Programs & Services Clatcham@anawimhousing.org 515-564-6566