Title: Permanent Supportive Housing: The Basics
1Permanent Supportive Housing The Basics
- Kelly Kent
- Stephanie Hartshorn
- Corporation for Supportive Housing
- Presented June 24, 2008
2AGENDA
- Who we are and what we do
- What is Supportive Housing?
- Models of development
- Models of ownership structures
- Overview of Services in Supportive Housing
- Case Studies of projects serving homeless
veterans
3Our Mission
- CSH helps communities create permanent housing
with services to prevent and end homelessness
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.
5CSHs Core Services
- Project development and finance assistance
- Organizational/industry capacity building
- Advocacy/public policy reform
6Results of Our WorkCSH has
- Created 14,881 units, with 8,000 more in the
pipeline - Invested 95 million in project sponsors and
service providers - Ended homelessness for at least 17,000 adults and
children - Leveraged over 1 billion in federal, state,
local public and private sector financing for
capital, operating, and service costs
7What is Supportive Housing?
- A cost-effective combination of permanent
affordable housing with services that helps
people live more stable, productive lives.
8Who Lives There?
- Formerly homeless individuals, families, youth,
veterans - People with serious, persistent issues substance
use, mental illness, HIV/AIDS - People being discharged into homelessness from
the criminal justice system or other
institutional settings
9A Distinctive Solution
Temporary Interventions
Supportive Housing
- Permanent
- Independent living
- Belong to a community
- Personal responsibility for
behavior and rent
- Uncertain length of stay
- Program requirements
- Isolated
- Reinforce dependency
10Supportive Housing Types
- Dedicated buildings
- Rent-subsidized apartments
- Mixed-income buildings
- Long-term set asides
- Single family homes
11Consistent Findings Housing Services Make a
Difference
- More than 80 of supportive housing tenants are
able to maintain housing for at least 12 months - Most supportive housing tenants engage in
services, even when participation is not a
condition of tenancy - Use of the most costly (and restrictive) services
in homeless, health care, and criminal justice
systems declines - Nearly any combination of housing services is
more effective than services alone - Housing First models with adequate support
services can be effective for people who dont
meet conventional criteria for housing readiness
12Solutions to Chronic Homelessness
- Low demand housing models have these 3 components
- Less complex application process for housing -
simplify site visits, interviews, documentation,
wait lists - Do not require that applicants be housing ready
in terms of medication, sobriety, money
management, etc. - No / few conditions that impinge upon resident
autonomy - The amount of preparation needed before entering
housing depends on the type of housing available - Change the housing options instead of focus on
preparing people with greatest barriers to
housing - Low demand housing models work even for those
with most severe psychiatric disorders or
substance use problems
13Results of Supportive Housing
- 57 ? emergency room visits
- 85 ? emergency detox services
- 50 ? incarceration rate
- More than 80 stay housed for at least one year
14Framing The Issue
15Why are We Doing Work with this Population?
- Nearly 154,000 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
16Increasing 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
17Veterans Specific Funding Used in PSH
- 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
18Models of Supportive Housing
19Models 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
20Allegan County, Michigan
- 47 units
- Rural, multi-site
- For people with special needs
- On- and off-site services provided by consortium
of local agencies
21LA No Fail Housing
- Lamp Lodge is the permanent housing component of
LAMP Inc.s continuum of housing opportunities
for people with mental illnesses in Los Angeles - All are homeless when they arrive, and have a
history of mental illness they may have
substance use issues as well - LAMP focuses on a philosophy of no fail housing
and a non-linear case management model
22Models 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
23Scattered 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
24Direct Access to Housing in CA
- The city of SF acquires sites for the DAH program
through master leasing - Most units have private baths and shared cooking
facilities - DAH housing presently includes
- The Camelot Hotel (51)
- Windsor Hotel (78 units)
- Star Hotel (54 units)
- Pacific Bay Inn (75 units)
- Le Nain Hotel (86 units)
- Broderick Street Adult Residential Care Facility
(34 units). - Â Â
25Key Components of Master Leasing
- Identifying privately-owned buildings that are
vacant or nearly vacant where the buildings
owners are interested in entering into a
long-term lease - Negotiating improvements to the residential and
common areas of the building prior to executing
the lease - SFDPH contracts with one or more organizations to
provide on-site support services and property
management - Most buildings include a collaborative of two or
more entities
26Collaborating in Developing Supportive Housing
- Ownerships Models To Be Considered
27Typical Ownership Models in Supportive Housing
- Single Owner Models
- Social service agency owner
- Nonprofit housing developer owner
- Shared Owner Models
- Turn-key
- Joint venture between existing organizations
- New jointly controlled corporation
28Typical Ownership Models in Supportive Housing
Single Owner
- Creates a single decision-making structure with a
single mission.
29Typical Ownership Models in Supportive Housing
Shared Owner
- Turn-key
- Developer owns the project during the development
process and develops it under contract with the
service provider. After project is constructed,
developer turns the key over to the social
service agency. Specific time of transfer may
vary. - Joint Venture
- Two organizations co-own the project as general
partners over the long term. Each organization
can still be separately liable for the joint
venture activities. - New, jointly controlled corporation
- Two organizations establish a separate new
nonprofit.
30Advantages and Disadvantages to Both Models
31Services In Supportive Housing
32Services are voluntary for the tenants not
the staff
- Tenants choose as much or as little services as
they desire without having to move as their
service needs change - Engagement is an ongoing activity to establish
and sustain relationships - Begin with tenants practical needs and personal
goals - Help tenants recognize the connection between
recovery and getting what they want out of life - Housing is the base for engaging tenants in
treatment and supports that can help achieve the
primary goal of housing stability - The tenant is the host service providers are
guests
33Approaches SERVICES SIDE
- Services located on-site with housing
- Services located off-site and coordinated with
housing - Services formally coordinated and delivered by
multiple providers - Linkages to existing services in the community
- Set asides or priority for supportive housing
project residents at service delivery location
34Support Services Considerations
- Standards
- Services are ongoing and meet tenants needs
- Tenants maintain stable residency in the
community - Tenants are maximizing their capacity to live
independently - Tenant support systems are formed and nurtured
35Support Services Considerations
- Responding to Different Populations and Levels of
Need - Homelessness
- Physical Disabilities
- Older Adults- Aging in Place
- Younger Adults
- Family Support
- Homeless Veterans
36Services to support tenants goals
- A broad array of services available
- Mental health and substance use management and
recovery - Vocational and employment
- Money management benefits advocacy
- Coordinated support / case management
- Life skills
- Community building and tenant advocacy
- Medical and wellness
- Match with Appropriate Resources
37Support Services Considerations
- Staffing Patterns
- Staff Specialists
- Evenings, Overnight and Weekend Staffing?
38Permanent Supportive Housing Projects For
Homeless Veterans
39Veterans 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
40Volunteers 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
41Manteno 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
42Project 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
43Replicable 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
44How to approach development and financing of
affordable housing with services Additional CSH
Resources Publications - Not a Solo Act-
Between the Lines Legal Issues in Supportive
Housing- Laying A New the Foundation- Family
Matters- Developing the Support in Supportive
Housing- Supportive Housing Financing Sources
Guide
45Questions?
- Kelly W. Kent and Stephanie Hartshorn
- 203 N. Wabash, Suite 410
- Chicago, IL 60601
- P 312-332-6690
- kelly.kent_at_csh.org
- Stephanie.hartshorn_at_csh.org