Title: Illawarra Area Management Group
1- Illawarra Area Management Group
- DOCS Presentation
- March 2009
-
2Overview
- Current Context
- 2. Background to SAAP
- 2. Regional Funding Profile
- 3. Client Demographics
- 4. Performance Based Contracting
- 5. Issues
3Current Context
- The NSW Government is committed to preventing and
reducing homelessness and commits significant
resources towards programs to assist those who
are homeless or at risk of homelessness. - Currently, the NSW Government is involved in a
range of national and state initiatives that seek
to develop a more effective response to
homelessness including the National Affordable
Housing Agreement (NAHA) the National
Partnership Agreement on Homelessness the A
Place to Call Home initiative and the NSW
Homelessness Action Plan.
4Key Directions
- Development of the NSW Homelessness Action
Plan is well advanced and has been developed in
close consultation with key non-government NSW
peak homelessness organisations. - This Action Plan embeds national homelessness
policy directions in a coordinated,
whole-of-government response to homelessness in
NSW.
5Key Directions - Cont
- The Action Plan will form the basis for the NSW
Implementation Plan for the National Partnership
Agreement on Homelessness, currently under
negotiation with the Australian Government, due
to be completed early 2009. - Finalisation of the NSW Homelessness Action
Plan Action Plan and the NSW Implementation Plan
for the National Partnership Agreement on
Homelessness will inform future funding of
homelessness initiatives in NSW
6SAAP
- The new National Affordable Housing Agreement
(NAHA), replaces all previous housing and
homelessness support agreements between the
Commonwealth and the states and territories,
including the Supported Accommodation Assistance
Program, from 1 January 2009. - DoCS will continue to deliver the Supported
Accommodation Assistance Program in NSW under the
new NAHA.
7SAAP Background
- SAAP is a State/Commonwealth initiative that
funds more than 400 State wide services to
individuals and families who are homeless and/or
at risk of homelessness. - The Commonwealth is responsible for the policy
leadership role of the program, whereby
State/territory government provide the day-to-day
management and distribution of funding. - The program was established in 1985, and is
currently in its 5th, 5 year cycle (SAAP V
2005-2010). SAAP 5 Commenced in October 2005
note appendix 1
8SAAP Legislation
- The SAAP Act (1994) is the Legislation the
governs SAAP and states the program goals - To resolve crisis
- To re-establish family links
- To re-establish a capacity to live independently
of SAAP
9SAAP Agreements
- There are 2 major agreements that set the
priorities of SAAP - 1. Multi-lateral Agreement (overarching agreement
between all States/Territories) note appendix 2 - 2. Bi-lateral Agreement (agreement with NSW)
note appendix 3 - DoCS is required to report against the terms of
these agreements - through the National Data Collection Agency
(NDCA)
10DoCS Continuum of Care and Support
Brighter Futures Program
DoCS Crisis Caseworkers Joint Investigation
Response Teams
Families NSW
Better Futures
Out of Home Care Intensive Support Services
Aboriginal Child Youth Family Strategy
CSP - Children's Services Program (Pre-Schools,
Child Care, etc)
SAAP- Supported Accommodation Assistance Program
(Homelessness)
Community Development, CSGP- Community Services
Grants Program, Family Support Services
11Regional Funding Profile
- In 2008/09, DoCS Southern Region will fund 33
SAAP projects, totalling 9,767,534 (This
represents 8 of the NSW SAAP budget). - Illawarra Network Office funds 15 of these
services are located in the Illawarra totalling
5,286,323 - -covering the Wollongong, Shellharbour, Kiama
and Shoalhaven Local Government Areas. - Southern Highlands Network office funds 18
projects totalling 4,481,211 - -covering the Bombala, Eurobodalla, Bega Valley,
Boorowa, Cooma-Monaro, Eastern Capital Region,
Greater Queanbeyan, Harden, Snowy River, Upper
Lachlan, Yass Valley and Young Local Government
Areas. -
12Southern Region SAAP Funding (08/09)
- Target Group Project Funding
-
- Young People 12 3,561,098
- Women and Women
- with Children Affected by
- Domestic Violence 8 2,793,4598.
- Single Men 4 941,516
- Cross Target/
- Generalist Services 9 1,790,610
- Total 33 9,767,534
13Illawarra /Shoalhaven SAAP services
- Southern Youth and Family Services Association
Inc - Wollongong Youth Refuge (Combined) - Illawarra Youth Housing Wollongong Long Term
Service, Treehouse - Shoalhaven Youth Accommodation SYA, Aboriginal
Outreach Worker - Nowra - Lighthouse Community Care - My/Place Youth House,
Youth Outreach Worker - CareSouth Short term Accommodation Service
- Women's Resource Group - Rosa Refuge
- Warilla Women's Refuge
- Wollongong Women's Refuge
- Nowra Women's Housing Scheme
- Women's Housing Scheme Inc
- Wollongong Emergency Family Housing
- The Trustees of the Society of St Vincent de Paul
(NSW) - Wollongong Diocesan Council St Vincent
De Paul House
14National Data Collection
- All SAAP services submit data on clients, and
services provided to clients to the SAAP National
Data Collection Agency (NDCA). - This information is collated and analysed by the
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW)
in Canberra. - In 2008/09, all NSW SAAP services will be
measured for performance against their NDCA data,
and this will be the tool the Federal Government
use to determine adherence to the Bi-lateral
Agreement.
1506/07 NDCA Client Profile Illawarra
- Total number of clients 1698 2344
- (nb increase of 40 clients (1218) from 05/06
possibly due to the inclusion of accompanying
children, and improvements in data collection
reporting) - Total number of accompanying children 1,199 -
1645 - Number of support days 224,310
- Average length of support 118.9 days
- Average length of accommodation 101.8 days
1606/07 NDCA Client Profile - continued
- Gender
- Female 65
- Male 35
- Indigenous status 15
- Age
- 20-24 years 19.0
- 15-17 years 16
- 18-19 years 11
- 25-29 years 11
- Person requesting assistance
- Person alone 53
- Person with child(ren) 34
1706/07 NDCA Client Profile - continued
- Most common location of period before
homelessness - Wollongong 32
- Nowra 27
- Length of support period
- 4-13 weeks 27
- 13-26 weeks 10
- 36-52 weeks 7
- Accommodated support periods
- 4-13 weeks 27
- 26-52 weeks 17
- 2-4 weeks 11
1806/07 NDCA Client Profile - continued
- Tenure before and after support
- Private rental 30 32
- Boarding 17 12
- SAAP crisis/short term 11 5
- Rent free accommodation 7 4
- Living situation before and after support
- With relatives/friends temporarily 19 11
- Living with unrelated persons 16 12
- With spouse/partner and child(ren) 14 11
- Alone 13 13
1906/07 NDCA Client Profile - continued
- Income support before and after support
- Parenting payment 31 30
- Newstart 19 18
- Youth Allowance 17 18
- No income 6 3
- Labour force before and after support
- Not in labour force 65 65
- Unemployed 23 22
- Accommodation type before and after support
- House/flat 72 68
- Hostel/hotel/motel 6 4
- Boarding/rooming house 6 4
2006/07 NDCA Client Profile - continued
- Source of referral
- Self 23
- SAAP agency 17
- Other Gvt department 13
- Main reason for seeking assistance
- Domestic/Family Violence 20
- Relationship/family breakdown 17
- Eviction/asked to leave 11
- Support provided to client
- Advice/information 10
- Emotional support 9
- SAAP/CAP accommodation 8
21 06/07 NDCA Unmet Demand Snapshot in time
- Person requesting accommodation
- Person without child(ren) 74
- Person with child(ren) 19
- Total persons 305
- Indigenous status 21
- Gender
- Female 68
- Male 32
- Age
- 15-17 36
- 25-44 19
- 20-24 10
2206/07 Unmet Demand - continued
- How soon is accommodation needed
- Tonight (within 24 hours) 47
- In 7-14 days 17
- Did person try to get accommodation earlier that
day - Yes 74
- Reason why accommodation was not offered
- Insufficient accommodation available 76
- Agency inappropriate /wrong target group8
- One-off assistance provided
- Information 34
- Emotional support/counselling 20
- Referral for non accomm support services 17
23Performance Based Contracting
- DoCS is in a process of reform an evolutionary
program of change. In 2007/08, DoCS funded
services began transitioning onto Performance
Based Contracting (PBC). - The aim of PBC is to improve service performance
by shifting away from telling services how to
perform the work or deliver services (inputs) in
favour of measuring results for clients and
supporting good service performance (results/
outcomes). - This allows projects a greater flexibility in
the delivery of services provided to clients
and/or the community. - Another key element of PBC is reporting
performance and the management of funded
services. -
-
-
24Performance Based Contracting
- - Focuses on results for clients
- - Helps to demonstrate the benefits of the
services you deliver - - links results to funding
- - Clear understanding of what is expected of
service providers - - Flexibility in service provision
- - Less onerous reporting
- - Ability to gauge how well you are doing
- - Incentives for performance
- - Aligned goals
- - Accountability and transparency
25PBC involves the negotiation and implementation
of
- 1. Service Specifications.
- (outlines the services to be provided, the
outcomes / results to be achieved and how they
will be measured, monitored and reported). - 2. Performance Monitoring Framework (PMF)
- (provides the basis for monitoring and managing
all DoCS renewable contracts. It is an annual
cyclical process and will consider compliance
with service agreement / extent in which client
outcomes are achieved against service
specifications/ progress in integrating GPG into
practice) - 3. Good Practice Guidelines
- (The GPG is a set of standards that support
services to facilitate good practice by improving
governance, management and service design, and
ultimately deliver better services to clients).
26Elements of new SAAP Service Specifications
- New 2008/09 Service Specifications was developed
in consultation with DoCS Central Office and SAAP
peaks (YAA, NSW Womens Refuge Movement and
Homelessness NSW) - Document will include new outcome costings (in
trial until June 09) and activities. Activities
to be negotiated include - SAAP homelessness Prevention and Community
awareness (not a SAAP client) - SAAP Case Management (Early Intervention and Post
Crisis) - SAAP Intensive Supported Crisis Accommodation (24
hour on site) - SAAP Supported Crisis Accommodation (24 hour on
call) - SAAP Supported Transitional Accommodation SAAP
service has nomination rights to the property eg
CAP - SAAP Supported Semi-independent Accommodation
arrangement with other housing providers where
case management is time limited
27Identified Issues Surrounding Service Provision
as described by Service Providers
- Possible impact of NAHA
- Renegotiation of new specs and unit costings
- Lack of growth funding for the program
- Increased proportion of clients with high support
needs and complex problems. Eg dual diagnosis of
mental health / drug alcohol problems. - High demand for services hence high turnaway
rates. ( more turned away than housed.) - Lack of exit points in provision of basic
long-term permanent housing particularly for
larger single parent families and koori families. - Difficulties in physical maintenance of SAAP
housing stock. Eg high rates of wear and
tear/vandalism.
28Identified Issues Surrounding Service Provision
as described by Service Providers
- Need for better inter-agency cooperation between
other government agencies such as Health, Housing
and Juvenile Justice, In relation to
case-management of clients. - Diminishing capacity of agencies to attract and
maintain well qualified staff due to inequities
between the community and government awards and
provisions. - Increase turnover in staff.
- Difficulties in maintaining and retaining casuals
and volunteers, particularly at short notice. - Statistical information of people of an
Aboriginal background. - Shorter stay in women refuges, particularly women
with DA issues. - Initiatives need increase funding to meet demand
but no funding available. The more complex the
client the more strain on resources .
29What is SAAP sector doing to address homeless -
- Quality partnerships and linkages with other
support services eg health, housing - Attendance at interagency networks ie X SAAP
sector meetings and Social Housing Forums, - representation and participation in peak
organisations.
30Support provided to SAAP Service Providers
- Access to free NGO Training Unit courses
- Support provided to transition services to
electronic data collection tools - Regular information and communiqués forwarded to
service providers - DOCS internet
-
31Appendix 1
- SAAP V Program Results
- Clients immediate crisis is resolved and they
are offered safe temporary accommodation where
require and - Clients are supported to recover and avoid
recurrence of crisis - Clients who have required temporary
accommodation do not become, or cease to be,
homeless - Clients resume self-sufficient living
32Appendix 2
- Multi-lateral Agreement
- The Multi-lateral agreement, is the contract
between the Australian Government, and all
states and territory governments. The
Multi-lateral agreement focuses on the following
three Strategic Priorities over the life of the
SAAP V. - 1. Improving early intervention/prevention
strategies for those at imminent risk of
homelessness - 2. Strengthening post crisis/ transition
strategies for clients exiting SAAP,
particularly those with multiple and/or complex
support needs. - 3. Providing better linkages and assistance to
people who have a number of support needs
33Appendix 3
- Bi-lateral Agreement
- The Bi-lateral agreement is the arrangement
between the Commonwealth and the state of NSW
with DoCS as the administrator of SAAP funding in
NSW. This agreement was signed in January 2006.
The State Strategic priorities are - Address service viability in the NSW SAAP service
system through reforms to the SAAP sector. - 2. Improve client assessment processes so that
clients are linked to the most cost efficient
service that meets their presenting need. - 3. Provide better assistance to people who have a
number of support needs - 4. Increase involvement in early intervention and
prevention strategies, and provide ongoing
assistance to ensure stability for clients post
crisis - 5. Improving service responses for Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander people
34Resources
- DoCS Homepage
- Provides information about DoCS, SAAP info
QAs and communiqués, publications and
resources, media - releases and news, career information and program
updates. - www.community.nsw.gov.au
- FAHCSIA website SAAP
- - Provides program information and policy
directions - -www.facs.gov.au
- Community Builders Website
- Lists funding opportunities, info on programs,
policies - www.communitybuilders..nsw.gov.au
- NGO Training
- www.commuinity.nsw.gov.au -gt for our community
partners -gttraining - - Lists regional training courses on the DoCS
Website - gtshort courses