Title: The Potential of Supportive Housing
1The Potential of Supportive Housing
- NM LEGISLATIVE
- HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMITTEE
- Marti Knisley
- The Technical Assistance Collaborative
- October 15, 2008
- www.tacinc.org
2What is Supportive Housing
- A cost-effective combination of permanent,
affordable housing with services that helps
people with disabilities and persons with limited
incomes who have needs for supportive services
live more stable, healthy productive lives
3What is Supportive Housing ?
- It is permanent, meaning each tenant may stay as
long as he or she pays rent and complies with
terms of lease or rental agreement - It is affordable, meaning each tenant pays no
more than 30 to 50 of household income - Tenants have access to an array of support
services that are intended to support housing
stability, recovery and resiliency, but
participation in support services is not a
requirement for tenancy - Options are available for adults who are single,
those who choose to share housing, youth
transitioning out of juvenile or protective
services and families with children - Housing First low demand models provide
access for tenants with long histories of
homelessness, incarceration, foster care
institutionalization, residential treatment and
significant obstacles to housing stability often
at much lower cost than they are being served in
traditional care
4Supportive Housing is Cost Effective
- Medicaid, health and other human services systems
incur substantial costs providing care often with
mixed success - Costs of serving homeless people with serious
mental illness up to - 40,000 / year or more mostly in health care
systems - 28,000 annual costs in Maine mostly health care
in hospitals - 28,000 average annual health costs for Boston
street dwellers - Health care costs for public inebriates typically
exceed 8,000/year - 46,700 average Medicaid charges prior to
supportive housing move-in for chronic alcoholics
in Seattle
5Supportive Housing is Cost Effective
- Supportive housing significantly reduces the need
for costly emergency care and hospitalizations - 45 fewer days of nursing home care and 42
fewer days inpatient hospitalization in Chicago
- 56 fewer emergency room visits and 44 fewer
inpatient admissions in San Francisco - 77 fewer inpatient hospitalizations and 60
fewer ambulance transports in Maine - 34 fewer emergency room visits and 40 fewer
inpatient hospital days in Denver - Health outcomes improve with better engagement in
more appropriate outpatient care - However, cost offsets only work when persons
getting the supportive housing intervention have
used or will use public services
6The NM Purchasing Collaboratives
Approach to Supportive Housing
- The Behavioral Health Purchasing Collaborative is
taking a very proactive, sensible approach to
supportive housing - The Collaborative began this approach by
developing a Long Range Housing Plan in 2007
that began with an assessment of need, an
inventory of what housing and services resources
exist and a blueprint for capacity building,
new and use of available development and rental
resources and implementing best practice service
approaches - The Plan provided insight to opportunities for
leveraging resources, drawing down federal funds
and efficient use of existing resources - ---with one caveat these opportunities are
tied to successful partnerships between the
services system and housing development and
management systemsthe MFA, local Public Housing
Authorities, Community Development organizations
and developers
7The NM Purchasing Collaboratives
Approach to Supportive Housing
- The assessment was also revealed
- Over 30,000 New Mexicans with disabilities living
on fixed incomes at 30 or below the Area Median
Income are in need of supportive housing - Vets, tribal members, families in the protective
services system have high service needs and low
incomes - Most New Mexico communities have little capacity
and infrastructure to create and sustain deeply
affordable housing with services attached to
their housing - Rental resources, the backbone of any supportive
housing plan are scare and need to generated for
the Plan to be successful - Based on these assessments, the Purchasing
Collaborative immediately began implementing the
Plan with a FY 2008 funding request of 750,000
to high priority areas and a focus on creating
partnerships and a focus on capacity building and
creating rental resources tied to services
8The NM Purchasing Collaboratives
Approach to Supportive Housing
- The 750,000 Allocation was targeted to
- 150,000 in MFA Pre-development grant funds that
was awarded to two developers who agreed to
target units for persons needing supportive
housing - 250,000 for Capacity Building grants also
administered by MFA to two organizations who are
developing housing and targeting units for
supportive housing - 350,000 to pilot Linkages, a new bridge rental
subsidy program jointly administered by local
housing administrators and service providers to
test out the feasibility of model that utilizes
rental subsides and services funds---ultimately
leading to a largely federally funded program
once capacity is established - This program began with serving 30 persons in the
Silver City and Demming area, Santa Fe and
Albuquerque - The program is focused on seriously mentally ill
persons (including those with substance abuse
disorders) who are homeless, those at risk of
homelessness and off reservation Native
Americans
9The NM Purchasing Collaboratives
Approach to Supportive Housing
- In FY 2008, CYFD utilizing 150,000 of their own
operating funds developed a small 20 youth
rental assistance/services pilot in partnership
with the Supportive Housing Coalition of New
Mexico to test out the feasibility of this model
for youth transitioning out of the juvenile
services and protective service programs in
Albuquerque - Early indications from both pilots this is a
feasible model and should be expanded across the
state - Armed with this Plan and experience with pilots,
the Collaborative is moving forwarded with---a
new partnership for with MFA in their 2009 Low
Income Tax Credit Program application giving
incentives to developers who target units for
persons with disabilities - ---work with local communities to build capacity
- ---preparing to take advantage of federal
funding opportunities
10Federal Housing Actions
Potential for New Mexico
- We are entering into an unusually positive and
active - period of supportive housing activity at the
federal level - Greater Congressional interest due to major
alliances among national policy, advocacy and
trade groups, very positive outcomes of
supportive housing and the housing and credit
crisis creating a need for more affordable
housing and jobs - This interest has translated into
- Passage of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act
which includes the National Housing Trust Fund,
the Neighborhood Stabilization Program and many
other provisions - Movement on the Frank Melville Act
11Federal Housing Actions
Potential for New Mexico
- The National Housing Trust Fund (part of Natl.
Housing and - Economic Recovery Act)
- 90 of the funds must be used for production,
preservation, rehabilitation or operation of
rental housing - 75 of the funds must benefit extremely low
income households (people at or below 30 of the
AMI) and all funds must benefit very low income
households. - It will be distributed by HUD in grants to the
states - The HUD Secretary will establish a distribution
formula within 12 months and the state has two
years to spend its allocation - Funds will be available in 2010/funding is
generated on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
transactions - States need capacity to use funds within allotted
timeframes
12Federal Housing Actions
Potential for New Mexico
- Neighborhood Stabilization Program (part of the
Natl. Housing and - Economic Recovery Act)
- A 3.92 billion CDBG program for the
redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed
properties - Grantees are CDBG jurisdictions (both state and
local) - Funds can go toward both single family and rental
properties and 25 of the resources must benefit
people at 50 or below of Area Median Income - Based on huge rush to get these funds into
communities and create construction jobs, many
CDBG requirements can be waived and there is no
one-for-one replacement requirement - Natl. disability groups are working this week to
proposes mechanisms to assure people with
disabilities will benefit from this program
13 Federal Housing Actions
Potential for New Mexico
- Section 811 Reform Frank Melville Act (HR
5772) - Section 811 is a federally funded, deeply
affordable permanent rental housing program for
people with disabilities. Funding covers housing
production, rental assistance and services - This bill reforming the Section 811 program has
passed out of the House and just introduced in
the Senate - It authorizes a new and innovative Section 811
Project Rental Assistance Contract (PRAC)
Demonstration program to create thousands of new
Section 811 units each year without substantially
increasing Section 811 appropriations levels by
leveraging new set-asides of supportive housing
units in federal Low Income Housing Tax Credit
(LIHTC) properties and HOME-funded projects - This program uses a competitive funding process
and states with supportive housing capacity will
likely be more successful