Title: Housing Opportunities for Persons with Mental Illness
1HousingOpportunities for Persons with Mental
Illness
- Carol Wilkins
- Director of Intergovernmental Policy
- Corporation for Supportive Housing
- www.csh.org
2People Disabled by Mental Illness Are Often
Priced Out of Housing
- In 2000, people with disabilities receiving SSI
needed to pay on a national average 98 of
their SSI benefits to rent a 1-bedroom apartment - In 2000, there was not one single housing market
in the country where a person with a disability
receiving SSI benefits could afford to rent a
modest efficiency or 1-bedroom unit - Because of their extreme poverty, the 3.5 million
non-elderly people with disabilities receiving
SSI benefits cannot afford decent housing
anywhere in the country without some type of
housing assistance - Source Technical Assistance Collaborative Priced
Out in 2000 The Crisis Continues
3Expanding Housing Opportunities and Choices
- Improve access to housing created or subsidized
through mainstream housing programs - Target resources to creating permanent housing
for people with disabilities - Enforce Fair Housing protections against
discrimination - Build community acceptance for housing for people
with special needs - Strengthen partnerships between agencies that
finance and deliver housing and services - Create 150,000 units of supportive housing to end
long-term homelessness within 10 years
4Supportive Housing Housing Services
- Housing
- Permanent not time limited
- Affordable generally tenants pay 30 of income
for rent - Independent private living space and lease with
normal tenant rights responsibilities - Services
- Flexible and responsive to tenants needs
- Maximize independence and housing stability
- Participation is not a condition of tenancy
- Services Property Management Tenants
- Effective Partnerships
5Supportive Housing for the people who
- But for housing cannot access and make effective
use of treatment and supportive services in the
community and - But for supportive services cannot access and
maintain stable housing in the community
6Target Population(s)
- Individuals and families who
- Are very poor
- Have persistent health conditions or multiple
barriers to housing stability - Are homeless and/or do not have access to
appropriate and stable housing in the community
and - Would be unable to access or retain housing
without tightly linked services
7A Range of Models Strategies
- Apartment or SRO buildings developed by
non-profit owners for people with special needs - Single family homes may be shared
- Rent subsidized apartments leased in the private
market - Units set aside for people with special needs in
mixed income housing developments - Units secured by project sponsors through
long-term lease with private owners - Services integrated within existing affordable
housing
8A range of services to support tenants in their
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
9Services 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 - Service strategies anticipate and help to manage
the risks and consequences associated with
substance use and relapse - Building a strong and safe community to reinforce
norms of behavior and hope for recovery and
growth - Supportive housing tenants must pay rent and meet
other lease obligations - Participation in services can help tenants meet
their obligations, solve problems, and avoid
eviction - Evictions are for failure to pay rent or for
problem behavior not for choices about
participation in services
10Supportive housing provides opportunities for
tenants to
- Access appropriate care for and manage chronic
health and mental health conditions - Take steps toward achieving and maintaining
sobriety - Achieve housing stability
- Work
- Socialize
- Be leaders in their community
- Connect with the wider world
- Pursue goals and interests
11Expanding housing opportunities for people with
co-occurring disorders
- Eligibility criteria for the housing (or
subsidies) targets people with disabilities and
those who are homeless for the long-term - Outreach, marketing and tenant selection
procedures and program rules facilitate access - Supportive services and property management
practices are designed to help people achieve
housing stability and reduce reliance on
emergency care - Requires strategies for effectively engaging and
housing people with ongoing or relapsing
substance use problems
12Supportive Housing Worksas documented by
researchers across the country
- 80 of tenants coming from streets and shelters
achieve housing stability for at least a year - Emergency room and hospital visits drop by more
than 50 - Increase use of primary care and services to
address substance abuse problems - Increase participation in work and employment
services
13Â The Impact of Supportive Housing for Homeless
Persons with Severe Mental Illness on Use of
Public Services in New York City Dennis
Culhane, Ph.D., Stephen Metraux, M.A., and Trevor
Hadley, Ph.D. Center For Mental Health Policy
Services Research University of Pennsylvania
- Study analyzed patterns of service utilization in
shelters, state mental health facilities,
hospitals, VA, Medicaid, jails, and prison
before and after housing placement for 4,679
individuals - The cost of homelessness for persons with serious
mental illness was more than 40,000 per year
with 86 of costs in health care and mental
health systems - Costs of creating and operating supportive
housing are offset by savings in other public
systems
14The Cost of Homelessness in NY
15Savings in Services UsePer NY/NY Placement
16 NY/NY Housing - Costs and Savings
17Ending Long-Term Homelessness
- 250,000 individuals and 15,000 families have been
homeless for more than a year - Most face multiple barriers to housing stability
including mental illness, addiction, and other
chronic health conditions - About 10 - 15 of those who become homeless
remain in streets or shelters, or cycle between
homelessness, hospitals, or jails for years - The goal 150,000 units of permanent supportive
housing within 10 years
18Creating and Sustaining 150,000 Units of
Supportive Housing - The Challenge
- Supportive housing is a product with proven
results without a system to produce it - Every project is a patchwork of authorizations
and funding - Often, success means using money for purposes
that werent officially intended making it
difficult to replicate creative strategies
19Partnership Strategies to expand housing
opportunities
- At federal, state, and local levels government
and non-profit agencies and other stakeholders
from Mental Health, Housing, and other service
systems work together to - Agree on priority needs, target population(s) and
goals - Coordinate and streamline funding decisions for
housing and services - Manage projects as they move through the
pipeline - Build community acceptance for housing for people
with special needs
20Policy Implications
- Provide sustainable funding for rent subsidies
operating costs of housing targeted to people who
are homeless and disabled - Strong and effective interagency partnerships
involving HHS, HUD, and other federal agencies
must provide resources and incentives to leverage
state and local investments and systems change - Streamline funding for approaches that integrate
housing and services to support recovery in
community settings
21Some specific policy recommendations
- Provide permanent solution to renewal funding for
permanent housing funded through HUDs Homeless
Assistance and 811 Programs - Increase federal investment to produce rental
housing for people with disabilities and with
incomes below 30 of AMI (Area Median Income) - Implement, expand, and learn from Presidents
Interagency Council on Homelessness initiative on
chronic homelessness and Policy Academies - Authorize more flexible Medicaid benefits
consistent with recovery principles, and
encourage use of Medicaid for services in
supportive housing - Provide Medicaid eligibility for chronically
homeless adults with co-occurring disorders who
are not receiving SSI benefits
22For More Information
- Corporation for Supportive Housing www.csh.org
- Technical Assistance Collaborative www.tacinc.org
- National Resource Center on Homelessness and
Mental Illness - www.prainc.com
- National Alliance to End Homelessness
www.endhomelessness.org - AIDS Housing of Washington www.aidshousing.org