6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

24
Family Matters Family Preservation and Family Reunification Dan McDougall-Treacy Valley Cities Counseling & Consultation

description

6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification Presentation by Dan McDougall-Treacy

Transcript of 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Page 1: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Family MattersFamily Preservation and Family Reunification

Dan McDougall-TreacyValley Cities Counseling & Consultation

Page 2: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

We’ll be coveringSpectrum of housing supportsFUPCollaboration for successProgram

Page 3: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Services that promote housing stability

Low Level Services

Services are provided off site, accessed by the tenant on their own

Moderate Services

Services offered on or off site, usually more intensive in early stages and taper off as client becomes more stable.

Intensive Services

Most services are provided on-site, with intensive case management. Staff is on site or on-call 24/7.

Low Need High Need

3(Deeply Affordable) Supportive Housing Affordable Housing

Page 4: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Very short-term assistance provided to address an immediate housing crisis for those

homeless or at imminent risk.

Emergency/short-term Financial Assistance (homelessness prevention)

Hotel-Motel Voucher

Emergency Shelter

Emergency Housing Assistance

4

Page 5: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Limited duration – usually 30 days to 2 years

Intended to help people transition from a housing crisis to permanent stable housing

Project-Based Transitional Housing

Project-Based Supportive Transitional Housing

Transitional Housing Assistance

5

Page 6: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Ongoing assistance to cover difference between FMR and 30% of tenant’s income

Best administered by partners, such as housing authority + service organization

• Permanent Independent Housing

• Permanent Supported Housing

Permanent Housing Assistance

6

Page 7: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

People who are homeless or at-risk for homelessness, and

face persistent obstacles to maintaining housing, such as:

Supportive Housing works for:

7

Mental Illness

Substance Abuse

Chronic Health Issues

Other Problems

Page 8: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Services are designed to meet the needs of the family or individual

Intensity varies as need varies Services move from housing stabilization

to community buildingOpportunities are provided for vocational,

education, employment

Flexible Services

Page 9: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

HUD Rental Subsidies

Public HousingShelter + CareHousing Choice Vouchers

◦Section 8◦Family Unification Program◦Other special population set-asides

Other HUD Voucher programs (HOME, HOPWA)

Page 10: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

HUD’s Family Unification Program

• Prevent the separation of families by increasing available housing for child welfare involved families

• Ease the transition to adulthood for youth aging out of foster care

• Facilitate and expedite access to housing and supportive services through agency collaboration

Page 11: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Family Unification Program

Joint certification◦ Public Housing Authority - Family income is below established

limits, other regulations

◦ Public Child Welfare Agency/Child Protective Services – Certifies that housing is primary factor in separation of children from family or prevention of reunification

Families experiencing multiple barriers including◦ Mental health/physical health◦ Chemical dependency◦ Development disabilities◦ Domestic violence◦ Child abuse◦ Foster care placement and CPS involvement

Page 12: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Benefits of FUP

• For PHAs: increase the ability to serve clients with more Section 8 vouchers

• For CWAs: expand access to housing solutions for families and caseworkers

• For families: affordable housing, stability, reunification, exit from the child welfare system

• For the community: the preferred and most cost effective alternative to foster care

Page 13: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

DSHS Responsibilities

Case management services for youth ages 18-21

Housing search (including low-poverty census tracts)

Staffing commitment and internal trainingCoordination with Public Housing Authority

and Community Partner Agencies

Page 14: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

PHA Responsibilities

Match waiting lists with FUP-eligible families and youth

Remove jurisdictional barriers to mobilityPre-move and post-move counselingCoordination with DSHS, Children’s

Administration and Community Partner Agencies

Page 15: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Community Partner Agencies Responsibilities

Include housing and related support services in the family’s / youth’s existing service plan

Provide ongoing tailored services to assist family or youth in obtaining and utilizing ongoing mainstream services

Minimum one-year follow upCollect and report relevant data for

program evaluation and planning

Page 16: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

More Info on FUP

Program Descriptionhttp://www.hud.gov/offices/pih/programs/hcv/family.cfm

Regulationshttp://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_00/24cfr982_00.html

Most Recent NOFAhttp://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/grants/nofa10/gensec.pdf

Page 17: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

FUP in Washington State

2010 Statewide FUP MOU

◦Seven public Housing Authorities

◦Washington State Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), Children’s Administration

◦Community Partner Agencies

Page 18: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

FUP in Washington State

Purpose of MOUA stronger and more competitive FUP

application for any Washington State PHA applying for FUP vouchers

Ensure adequate supports for families through DSHS and partner agreements

Continue to build partnership foundations among public agencies and private service providers across the state

Page 19: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Addressing Family Homelessness in King County, WA

High-level Planning◦10 Year Plan◦Family Homelessness Plan

Political Will◦Build and maintain

Page 20: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Addressing Family Homelessness in King County, WA

Multiple Funders◦Coordinate Resources◦Align with the plans

Multiple Stakeholders◦Representation◦Collaboration

Page 21: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Addressing Family Homelessness in King County, WA

Public & Private FundingState and local dedicated fundsCounty and municipalUnited WayFoundationsIntermediary – Washington Families Fund

Page 22: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Valley Cities Families First Program

Bringing it all togetherFUP Vouchers

◦King County Housing AuthorityServices Funding

◦Washington Families Fund◦Desigbnated County CSD funds

DSHS ◦Division of Child and Family Services

Page 23: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Valley Cities Families First Program

Streamlined referral and standardized assessment

Tailored Services◦Intensive case management with individualized

support◦Coordination with DCFS requirements◦Children’s services◦Mental health and chemical dependency◦Employment and Self-sufficiency

Page 24: 6.4: Family Matters: Family Preservation and Family Reunification

Dan McDougall-Treacy, MSWDirector, Homeless Family [email protected]