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Continuum of Care: Going for the Gold. Charles W. Coley Nebraska Homeless Assistance Program (NHAP) DHHS. Nebraska Continuum of Care Network. What exactly is a “Continuum of Care?”.
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Continuum of Care: Going for the Gold Charles W. Coley Nebraska Homeless Assistance Program (NHAP) DHHS
What exactly is a “Continuum of Care?” Continuum of Care is a community and regional-based process that provides a comprehensive and coordinated housing and service delivery system The process promotes a coordinated, strategic planning approach for programs that assist families and individuals who are homeless and near homeless A Continuum of Care approach helps communities and regions strategically plan for and provide a balance of emergency, transitional, and permanent housing and service resources to address the needs of people who are homeless so they can make the critical transition from homelessness to jobs, independent living, and permanent housing Seven Nebraska Continuum regions
Continuum of Care (C0C): History and Structure The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) initiated the Continuum of Care process in 1994 Continuum of Care regions exist nationally and are vital to homeless/near homeless service delivery In Nebraska, each of the seven Continuums has an acting chairperson and regional governance
CoC Purpose, Collaboration, and Funding The Continuum of Care (CoC) is a set of competitively-awarded programs created to address the problems of homelessness in a comprehensive manner with other federal agencies Other HUD formula funding streams also support the Continuum of Care process: ESG, HOPWA, etc. The CoC structure mandates collaboration
Nebraska Continuum of Care Network Region I: Panhandle Region II: North Central Region III: Southwest Region IV: Southeast Region V: Northeast Region VI: Lincoln Region VII: Omaha
NHAP Funding by CoC Region Region I: Panhandle=$181,331 Region II: North Central=$285,992 Region III: Southwest=$271,353 Region IV: Southeast=$487,844 (Ardith’s region) Region V: Region=$377,135 Region VI: Lincoln=$395,888 Region VII: Omaha=$580,000 (Erin’s region)
The Nebraska Homeless Assistance Program was established after the McKinney Homeless Assistance Act passed in late 1986 and was signed into federal law July 22, 1987 DHHS NHAP funding=ESG+HSATF (Homeless Shelter Assistance Trust Fund) 66 NHAP grantees statewide State Continuum of Care Committee (a committee of the governor-appointed Nebraska Commission on Housing and Homelessness, or NCHH) Nebraska CoC Network: History and Funding
10-Year Plans to End Homelessness • Credit for the idea of a 10-year plan to end chronic homelessness rests with the National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH), a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C • The NAEH outlined the concept as part of a more ambitious plan, introduced in July 2000, to end homelessness altogether • The goal caught the attention of then-Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Mel Martinez, who endorsed it in a keynote address at the NAEH’s 2001 conference • Now in 2010, HUD continues to emphasize the importance of 10-Year Plans
Nebraska’s 10-Year Plan • In October of 2003, a cross-section of stakeholders from Nebraska attended a “Federal Policy Academy” in Denver, CO. • The Policy Academy was one of several in which all States eventually participated • The purpose of the Academy was to assist States in developing "10-Year Plans to End Chronic Homelessness." • Nebraska's resulting 10-Year Plan was titled Nebraska's Action Plan for Increasing Access to Mainstream Services for Persons Experiencing Chronic Homelessness
Nebraska's 10-Year Plan was unveiled in 2004 and was formally adopted by the Nebraska Commission on Housing and Homelessness To ensured continued implementation of the 10-Year Plan, the Commission created a standing ad hoc committee titled the "Ad Hoc Committee on Ending Chronic Homelessness" The Ad Hoc Committee's membership included State interagency personnel, nonprofit housing and homelessness prevention service providers, and representatives of various consumer demographics 10 Year Plan Successes
10 Year Plan Successes 5 years down, 5 years to go: midway point The Rental Assistance Program (RAP): rental vouchers for consumers with severe mental illness and extreme housing barriers NIFA developed a database on affordable housing statewide, which was integrated into the system put in place by Assistive Technology Partnership (housing.ne.gov) Implementation of a common data system for all grantees (HMIS/ServicePointe) Increased collaboration!!!!!
Ad Hoc Committee on Ending Chronic Homelessness • Standing ‘ad hoc’ committee of the Nebraska Commission on Housing and Homelessness ( both Erin and Ardith are Commissioners) • Future Ad Hoc Meetings: Participation needed and welcomed • 10-Year Plan only successful through sustained partnerships and collaboration • First meeting of 2010: March/April
10 Years Plans: A Summary • Part of a national model • Will be featured at upcoming NAEH conference • Best plans feature: outcomes (ex: units to be developed), funding expectations, and points of accountability (who will do what) • 10-Year Plans do NOT ‘just happen’ – they take work, commitment, and the “Living Document” mindset (incorporating HPRP, for example) • There is much more to be done, but despite these challenges, for the first time in two decades, communities have a plan and homelessness is a problem with a clear solution
Final Thoughts Questions???? My contact information: charles.coley@nebraska.gov (402) 471-9200