Title: Supportive Housing for Homeless Veterans
1Supportive Housing for Homeless Veterans
- Kelly W. KentSenior Program ManagerCorporation
for Supportive Housing
- National Coalition for Homeless VeteransMay 8,
2008www.csh.org
2The Corporation for Supportive Housing
- CSH helps communities create permanent housing
with services to prevent and end homelessness.
3CSH Products and Services
- Project-Specific Financing and Expertise to help
create supportive housing
- Capacity Building to strengthen and expand the
supportive housing industry
- Public Policy Reform to build an efficient
system for producing and financing supportive
housing
4Where We Work
- National offices in New York and Oakland.
- Local offices in Connecticut, Rhode Island, New
York, New Jersey, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois,
Minnesota, California, Indiana, Washington D.C.
and Texas. - Targeted initiatives in Kentucky, Maine, Oregon,
and Washington.
- CSHs national teams assist supportive housing
practitioners across the U.S.
5Supportive Housing is for People Who
- Are chronically homeless
- Cycle through institutional and emergency systems
and are at risk of long-term homelessness
- Are being discharged from institutions and
systems of care
- Without housing, cannot access and make effective
use of treatment and supportive services
6Housing Services
- HOUSING
- PERMANENT Not time limited, not transitional
- AFFORDABLE For people coming out of
homelessness and
- INDEPENDENT Tenant holds lease with normal
rights and responsibilities.
- SERVICES
- FLEXIBLE Designed to be responsive to tenants
needs
- VOLUNTARY Participation is not a condition of
tenancy and
- INDEPENDENT Focus of services is on maintaining
housing stability.
7Homeless Veterans
- Nearly 200,000 Veterans are homeless on any given
night and nearly twice this many are estimated to
be homeless over the course of a year
- Veterans account for nearly 1/3 of men who are
homeless
- Veterans are twice as likely to meet the
definition of chronic homelessness
- 45 suffer from mental illness
- 50 have substance abuse problems
- 67 served 3 or more years
- 33 were stationed in a war zone
- 25 have used VA services
- 89 received an honorable discharge
- A study by Charles Hoge et al found that 19 of
soldiers who served in Iraq screened positive for
a potential mental health disorder, including
PTSD
8Increasing Veterans Access to Supportive Housing
- Veterans Lens
- Military discharge status- good paper
- Stand-downs
- Veteran-specific resources are available, but
limited
- Homeless Services and Housing Lens
- Veterans may already be accessing
homeless/housing services
- Outreach- identifying veterans at non-veteran
focus service points increasing provider
cultural competency relative to armed services
- Focus has been on transitional housing, not
permanent, for veterans mostly due to funding
source restrictions
9Models of Supportive Housing Development
10Supportive Housing Types
- Buildings developed / rehabilitated
- as special needs housing
- Rent-subsidized apartments
- Mixed-income buildings
- Long-term set asides
- Single-family homes
- Master-leased buildings or units
11Models for Supportive Housing Traditional
Development
- Creates a permanent asset to the community
- Involves acquisition and construction and the
full compliment of development activities,
including finding capital funding.
- Can take 2-3 years (or more) to develop
- Involves establishing on-going funding sources
and providers for operating and services
12Alternatives to Direct Development
-
- Master Leasing
- Scattered-Site
- Turn-key development
13Models for Supportive Housing Accessing
Existing Housing
- Sometimes referred to as Housing First
- Also might be referred to as Scattered Site
Housing
- Integrates residents into the community
- Can retrofit existing affordable housing and
add services in a single site
- Once secure rental subsidy, can move very
quickly
- Involves establishing ongoing funding sources and
providers for operating and services
14Scattered Site One Example
- Using existing apartments in the community
- Provider does not own units but might master
lease
- No rehabilitation or construction involved take
apartments as is
- Owner of apartments typically private landlords
who own large and small apartment buildings or
2-4 family houses
15Veterans Specific Funding Sources
16Veterans Administration
- HUD-VASH
- Partnership between HUD and the VA
- Veterans who are homeless and mentally ill and/or
those with substance abuse disorders
- Combines special set aside of HUD housing choice
vouchers with community-oriented outreach,
clinical care and case management
- 10,000 Vouchers allocated in 2008
- Potentially an additional 10,000 vouchers to be
released in 2009.
- VA Supported Housing Program
- VA services for homeless Veterans focused on
getting them housed and retaining housing
17Permanent Supportive Housing Projects For
Homeless Veterans
18Veterans Academy at the Presidio
- 100 SRO units for homeless vets located in 2
adjacent buildings on the former Presidio Army
base which has been converted into a national
park - Location in national park created unique
challenge of having to go to federal court if
they need to evict a tenant tripled legal fees
- Capital Bonds
- Operating Project Based Section 8
- Services HUD McKinney Vento SHP Permanent
Housing for People with Disabilities
19Volunteers of America - Florida
- 25 scattered site units in Broward County for
homeless veterans with co-occurring diagnoses of
severe and persistent mental illness and
substance use disorders - Operating and Services are funded through the HUD
McKinney SHP permanent housing for people with
disabilities program.
- Fort Lauderdale/Broward County has a Veterans
Affairs clinic that refers tenants to this
project and provides services to them once they
are housed
20Chronic Homelessness Collaborative Initiative
- In 2003 the HUD, VA and HHS launched a 35
million initiative to provide permanent
supportive housing and supportive services to
people who are chronically homeless - Eleven cities received grants to create these new
permanent supportive housing projects
- An average of 25 of the units serve homeless
veterans
21- Manteno Housing Program for Disabled Vets
22Manteno Project
- Permanent Supportive Housing project created by
the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs
- 14 units for Veterans who are homeless and
disabled
- Converted a former transitional housing facility
to permanent supportive housing
- The building is located on state land adjacent to
the Manteno Veterans Home
23Project Financing
- Capital
- Illinois Housing Development Authority Trust
Fund
- HUD McKinney SHP
- Federal Home Loan Bank
- Operating
- HUD McKinney SHP Permanent Housing for People
with Disabilities
- Services
- U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs Per Diem
- Access to services at the Manteno Veterans Home
24Replicable Model
- This is the first time a State Department of
Veterans Affairs has used their Federal VA per
diem in this manner
- Way that States can address the need of homeless
Veterans
- Way that States can use existing resource to
create new housing opportunities in a more
appropriate residential setting
25- Questions?
- Kelly W. Kent
- kelly.kent_at_csh.org
- www.csh.org