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“Untangling the Web: Collaborations Between Housing Agencies and School Districts to Meet HEARTH Act Requirements” November 6, 2011 Presenters DeKalb KidsHome Collaborative Fulton County Schools Atlanta Public Schools. Themes of today’s workshop
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“Untangling the Web: Collaborations Between Housing Agencies and School Districts to Meet HEARTH Act Requirements” • November 6, 2011 • Presenters • DeKalb KidsHome Collaborative • Fulton County Schools • Atlanta Public Schools
Themes of today’s workshop • HEARTH Act and Implications for HUD Homeless Assistance Programs • Models for Replication • Financial Resources • Impact of Stable Housing on Educational Outcomes
Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH Act) • http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/2010-8835.pdf • Consolidates three separate homeless assistance programs • Codifies the Continuum of Care Planning Process • Defines the terms, “homeless”, “homeless individual” and so forth
Codifies the Continuum of Care Planning Process • http://www.naehcy.org/hudnofa.htm • The Continuum of Care (CoC)Applicant must demonstrate collaboration with education agencies. • The CoC must consider the educational needs of children and not disrupt children’s education. • Project applicants must demonstrate practices consistent with McKinney –Vento Act. • Applicants must designate staff to ensure children are enrolled in school and connected to services.
Continuum of Care (CoC) HUD awards homeless assistance grants to organizations across the country to ameliorate homelessness and its effect on people's lives. With the link below you can locate CoCs around the country, find CoC contact information and find report data. http://hudhre.info/index.cfm?do=viewCocContacts The CoC lead agency should be able to direct you for assistance to specific homeless assistance programs serving the CoC area.
Defines “homeless”, “homeless individual”… http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/2010-8835.pdf “The proposed rule clarifies that individuals and families may qualify as homeless under four possible categories, corresponding to the broad categories established by the statutory language of the definition in section 103 of the McKinney-Vento Act as amended by the Hearth Act.”
History of DeKalb KidsHome Collaborative Inspired by a mother and son struggling with homelessness in early 2010. Project Community Connections, Inc. (PCCI) and Decatur Cooperative Ministry (DCM) partnered with the DeKalb County School System, DeKalb County Public Schools Foundation, and First Step Staffing to launch the DeKalb KidsHome Collaborative. The purpose of the collaborative is to create whole, stable lives for families with school-age students struggling against homelessness.
VIDEO The DeKalb KidsHome Collaborative Housing + Education = Success
What we did and why • Challenges to Family Success • Lack of affordable housing and/or family emergency and transitional housing options • Fragmented system and lack of capacity make it hard for families, on their own, to negotiate the system and address their needs • Lack of stable employment
What we did and why • Opportunities for Increased Success • One-stop shop concept where family needs can be addressed in individualized fashion. • Reduce redundancy in services, specialize in areas of expertise, and ensure more comprehensive approaches for clients. • Get/keep families stably housed and provide educational environment that has been shown to be important for good child outcomes.
Marketing and Educational Awareness • Getting “Buy In” • In-Service Training with School Social Workers • Trained homeless services staff on referral process. • Presentation at Regional, Statewide, National Meetings • Video Production and Brochure
VIDEO Fulton County Schools Where Students Come First “The Role school can play in the lives of Fulton County’s homeless students”
Financial Resources • Seed funds from School Foundation • Focus on private funding: • Family and Corporate Foundations • United Way and Community Foundation • Chamber of Commerce • Received over $175,000 to date • Emergency Solutions Grants
Sustaining the Collaborative • Developing MOUs on protocols • Develop joint release of information forms • Develop online data & referral tracking system • Expanding collaborative partnerships • Secure new facility – One Stop Shop • Unrestricted Financial Resources to “fill in gaps” • Create Advisory Committee • Marketing and Educational Awareness • Funding… funding… funding
Final messages from today’s workshop • Prepare for HEARTH Act Assurances • Participate in CoC Collaborations • Research Models and Best Case Practices • Avoid Duplication and Emphasize Efficiency • “Stable Housing + Education = Success”