Title: The McKinney-Vento Act and Eligibility Issues
1The McKinney-Vento Act and Eligibility Issues
- Barbara Duffield
- Policy Director, NAEHCY
- National Association for the Education of
Homeless Children and Youth
2Our Agenda Today
- The Definition Who is Covered by the
McKinney-Vento Act? - The Process How do We Apply that Definition to
Real Life Situations? - Lets Practice A Case Study
- This Power Point is based on an issue brief from
the National Center for Homeless Education
(NCHE) Determining Eligibility for Rights and
Services Under the McKinney-Vento Act, available
at - www.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/det_elig.pdf
3The McKinney-Vento Act
- Originally passed in 1987
- Reauthorized in 2002 by NCLB (Title X, Part C)
- Main themes
- School stability
- School access
- Support for academic success
- Child-centered, best-interest-based decision
making - Protects the educational rights of children and
youth experiencing homelessness
4McKinney-Vento at a Glance
- Liaisons in every school district with
responsibilities to identify homeless children,
assist with enrollment and participation, refer
families to Head Start and other services - School Stability
- Transportation
- Immediate Enrollment
- Enrolled During Disputes
- Comparable Services
- Covers preschool programs administered by LEAs
- Title I set-aside for homeless students funds
may be used to serve pre-school-age children
5Setting the Context Defining Homelessness
- The Head Start Act includes a definition of
homelessness that matches the definition of
homelessness in the education subtitle of the
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, which
governs public schools - Identical definition is in the Child Nutrition
Act, the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act, and the Violence Against Women Act - Housing and Urban Development (HUD) homeless
programs use a more restrictive definition that
has recently been amended to include more
families
6EligibilityWho is Covered?
- Children who lack a fixed, regular and adequate
nighttime residence. - The law lists a number of specific living
situations that are covered. - Other situations are also covered, if they are
not fixed, regular and adequate.
7Specific covered situations
- Sharing the housing of others due to loss of
housing, economic hardship, or similar reason - Also called doubled-up or couch-surfing
- 95 of identified students in Kentucky in
2007-2008 68 in Tennessee 44 in North
Carolina 62 in South Carolina 70 in
Mississippi 61 in Florida 65 nationally - Living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, camping
grounds due to lack of adequate alternative
accommodations - Motels Less than 1 of identified students in
Kentucky in 2007-2008 less than 1 in North
Carolina 12 in South Carolina less than 1 in
Mississippi less than 1 in Florida 7
nationally - Living in emergency or transitional shelters
- Less than 1 of identified students in Kentucky
in 2007-2008 21 in Tennessee less than 1 in
North Carolina 20 in South Carolina 26 in
Florida 22 nationally
8Specific covered situations (cont.)
- Awaiting foster care placement
- Living in a public or private place not designed
for humans to live - Living in cars, parks, abandoned buildings,
substandard housing, bus or train stations, or
similar settings
9Homeless Definition Why So Broad?
- Shelters are often full shelters may turn
families away, or put families on waiting lists - Shelters do not exist in many suburban and rural
areas - Eligibility conditions of shelters often exclude
families with boys over the age of 12 - Shelters often have 30, 60, or 90 day time limits
- Motels may not be available, or may be too
expensive - Families may turn to friends or family after
initial eviction, living in over-crowded,
temporary, and sometimes unsafe environments - Families may be unaware of alternatives, fleeing
in crisis
10What do Fixed, Regular and Adequate mean?
- Fixed
- Stationary, permanent, and not subject to change
- Regular
- Used on a predictable, routine or consistent
basis - Adequate
- Sufficient for meeting both the physical and
psychological needs typically met in home
environments
11From Law Into Practice
- Determining eligibility is a case-by-case
determination made by examining the living
arrangement of each individual student. - Some instances will be clear-cut others will
require further inquiry and then a judgment call. - It is helpful to have a system in place to guide
the process of determining eligibility
12Step 1 Get the Facts
- Incorporate a question on a standard enrollment
form for all families this will assist with
identifying eligible students. - If the form indicates a possible homeless
situation, refer to appropriate staff for follow
up. - Discuss the living arrangement in a private place
and with sensitivity.
13Step 1 Get the Facts (cont.)
- Let parents know why you are asking about their
living situation not to invade their privacy,
but to offer services. - Describe available help.
- Do not contact landlords, etc., to probe for more
information regarding the familys living
arrangement. - www.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/verif_II.pdf
14Step 1 Get the Facts (cont.)
- Provide awareness activities for Head Start staff
and community partners - Avoid using the word homeless
- Describe the living situation instead of labeling
it. For example, Are you living there because
you lost your housing? Is this a temporary
situation?
15Step 2 Analyze the Facts
- Does the familys living arrangement fit into one
of the specific examples of homelessness in the
law? - If so, the family is categorically eligible for
Head Start. - If not ?
- Does the student lack a fixed, regular and
adequate nighttime residence? - If so, the student is categorically eligible for
Head Start.
16Step 2 Analyze the Facts (cont.)
- Ask yourself Does the familys living situation
create a high risk to his consistent enrollment
or participation in Head Start? - If the answer is yes, the homeless definition may
very well apply. - Use the information/questions contained in the
Determining Eligibility brief to assist in
answering these questions.
17In a Public School Context Resolution of Disputes
- If a dispute over eligibility or enrollment
arises, the child must be admitted immediately to
the school of choice (school of origin or local
school) while the dispute is being resolved. - The parent/guardian/unaccompanied youth must be
given written notice of the dispute and how to
access the dispute process. - The parent/guardian/youth must be referred to the
liaison for assistance with the dispute process. - Liaisons must ensure unaccompanied youth are
enrolled immediately, even if a dispute is
pending.
18Case Study The Smiths
- The Smith family had been living in an apartment
in Stamford when their landlord foreclosed on the
apartment building property. The Smiths moved in
temporarily with relatives in Sandy Point. Since
the Smiths are no longer living in Stamford, they
enrolled their school-age children in Sandy Point
schools and called the local Head Start program
for their four-year old.
19Smith Family Discussion Questions
- What follow-up questions might you ask to see if
the Smiths are covered under the McKinney-Vento
definition of homelessness? - Are the Smiths eligible for Head Start under
these facts? - If the Smiths relatives in Sandy Point were
living in Section 8 housing and the landlord was
unaware that they had moved in, would that affect
your questions or your determination?
20Smith Family Discussion Questions
- If the Smiths contribute financially to the
household, would that affect your determination? - If the Smiths are staying in a separate
apartment above the host familys garage, with
its own bathroom and kitchen, would that affect
your determination? - If the Smiths and the host family decide the
arrangement is working and is a good way for each
of them to save money, would that change your
determination? Would you want more information?
21Smith Family Discussion Questions
- If instead of having lost their home, the Smiths
decided to sell their house and purchase a new
home in a neighboring district but the deal fell
through, how would that affect the situation? - If instead of losing their home to foreclosure
the Smiths lost it to a hurricane or fire, how
would that affect your determination? - If after staying with their relatives for several
weeks, the Smiths rent an apartment in Sandy
Point, how would that affect the situation? What
if the Smiths do not have a written lease and
they continue to look for permanent housing in
Stamford?
22Step 3 Call for Back-up
- Kentucky State Coordinator Mary Marshall, (502)
564-3791 mary.marshall_at_education.ky.gov - North Carolina State Coordinator Lisa Phillips,
(336) 315-7491 lphillip_at_serve.org - South Carolina State Coordinator Brenda Myers,
(803) 734-3215 bmyers_at_ed.sc.gov - Mississippi State Coordinator Kelsey Blumenberg,
(601) 359-3499 KEBlumenberg_at_mde.k12.ms.us - Florida State Coordinator Lorraine Allen, (850)
245-0668 Lorraine.Allen_at_fldoe.org
23Step 3 Call for Back-up
- National Center on Homeless Education
- www.serve.org/nche/
- NAEHCY
- The 100 Most Frequently Asked Questions on the
Educational Rights of Children and Youth in
Homeless Situations www.naehcy.org/faq.html - My email bduffield_at_naehcy.org or 202.364.7392
24Additional Identification Strategies
- Coordinate with community service agencies, such
as shelters, street outreach programs, soup
kitchens and food banks, drop-in centers, housing
and social service agencies, teen parent
programs, CPS, and public health departments. - Provide outreach materials and posters where
there is a frequent influx of low-income families
and youth in high-risk situations, including
motels, campgrounds, parks, convenience stores
and laundromats.
25Additional Identification Strategies (cont.)
- Develop relationships with school district
homeless liaisons - Collaborate with special education and IDEA Part
C child find activities.
26New HUD Homeless Assistance Law Head Start
Collaborations
- Head Start is a key community collaborator with
HUD homeless agencies - Complete re-write of law governing HUD homeless
programs passed this year - Effective Dates
- New HUD homeless definition effective by
11/20/09 - HUD given 12 months to write regulations (5/20/10)
27New HUD Definition
- HUD definition of homeless is amended
- In motels if families/youth have resources to
stay no more than 14 days - Doubled-up families/youth if they can only stay
there for 14 days - Sub-categories of education definition (long
time, multiple moves, barriers to housing) - Fleeing DV or other dangerous conditions
(including for kids) - Needlessly complex, but if providers know rules,
many people can be covered
28Recently Enacted LegislationHUD McKinney-Vento
ReauthorizationProvisions Related to Children
and Youth
- Plans must describe collaboration with LEA,
including identification and informing of rights - 2 years after enactment (5/20/11), no denying
shelter based on age unless appropriate
alternative living arrangements made - Agencies must certify that programs that provide
housing or services to families will designate a
staff person to ensure that children are enrolled
in school and connected to appropriate services
in the community, including early childhood
programs such as Head Start, part C of the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, and
McKinney-Vento education services. - Agencies must certify they will not restrict the
exercise of educational rights - Educational needs of children must be taken into
account when placed in shelter, placing children,
to the maximum extent practicable, close to
school of origin
29Contact Information
- Barbara Duffield, Policy Director
- National Association for the Education of
Homeless Children and Youth - 4701 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 402
- Website www.naehcy.org
- Phone 202.364.7392
- Fax 202.318.7523
- bduffield_at_naehcy.org
- Web www.naehcy.org