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Developing Local Capacity for Supportive Housing: The Columbus Experience

Developing Local Capacity for Supportive Housing: The Columbus Experience. Barbara Poppe Executive Director Community Shelter Board www.csb.org Presented at the 2007 Enterprise Community Conference November 16, 2007. Who is CSB?. Community Shelter Board.

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Developing Local Capacity for Supportive Housing: The Columbus Experience

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  1. Developing Local Capacity for Supportive Housing: The Columbus Experience Barbara Poppe Executive Director Community Shelter Board www.csb.org Presented at the 2007 Enterprise Community Conference November 16, 2007

  2. Who is CSB?

  3. Community Shelter Board • Created in 1986 to respond to growing needs of homelessness in Franklin County • "It is unacceptable for anyone in our community to go without food or shelter for even one night." Mel Schottenstein, CSB Founder

  4. CSB’s Founders • Public/Private Partnership: • City of Columbus • Franklin County Commissioners • United Way of Central Ohio • Columbus Chamber • Metropolitan Area Church Council • ADAMH Board • The Columbus Foundation • Leo Yassenoff Foundation

  5. Investing in quality programs Innovating solutions Creating collaborations Organizational Methods

  6. What isRebuilding Lives?

  7. A New Strategy - 1998 • Short-term needs -- Ensure basic emergency shelter during a crisis • Long-term needs -- Establish permanent housing with supportive services

  8. Rebuilding Lives -- Policy Shift • Reconfigure emergency shelter system • Develop 800 units of supportive housing • Establish a Funder Collaborative • Create Good Neighbor Policies and Procedures • Institute a community relations plan

  9. Rebuilding LivesFunder Collaborative • Provide funding for capital, services and operations of supportive housing • Strategy • Program guidelines & standards • Underwriting criteria • Program evaluation, outcome measurement & reporting requirements

  10. Rebuilding LivesFunder Collaborative • Members Affordable Housing Trust of Cols/Franklin Co. ADAMH Board City of Columbus, Administration Columbus City Council The Columbus Foundation Columbus Health Department Columbus Mayor’s Office Columbus Medical Assoc. Found. Columbus Metro. Housing Authority Community Shelter Board Corporation for Supportive Housing Franklin County Administration Franklin County Children Services Franklin Co. Dept. Job & Family Services Franklin Co. Office on Aging Franklin County MR/DD Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing Osteopathic Heritage Foundation United Way of Central Ohio Veterans Service Commission

  11. The Result • 3 new emergency facilities • 772 units of permanent supportive housing operational for men, women and families who have experienced long-term homelessness • 175 more units under development • Homeless men and women “rebuilding their lives”

  12. What has contributed to success?

  13. Keys to Project Success • Success due to tremendous partnership • Between funders, providers, and neighbors • Project Development: • Good Neighbor Agreements • Diverse locations • Strong political and business community support • Strong developers and providers

  14. Keys to Project Success • Funding • Board, system and funder support and consistent leadership • Availability of local and federal funding • Creativity in securing funding sources • Housing First Program Model • Low-demand housing and voluntary services

  15. What impact has occurred? • New investment from key stakeholders - City, County, ADAMH, CMHA, United Way • Broad range of implementing agencies (board and staff) are informed and on board • High level of media attention and focus

  16. What impact has occurred? • Pressure for public policy action and investment • Real Estate Transfer Fee • $6.5 million annually for homeless services & affordable housing

  17. How is public will sustained?

  18. What ‘hooks’ have kept political, business, & community leadership invested? • “Caring community – Moral Foundation” • Partnership approach • Media coverage – generate positive and manage the negative

  19. Results -- the plan did not sit on the shelf – it actually was implemented • Broad & diverse investment • Consistent, quality communication – “Care & Feeding” of leadership

  20. How have new leaders been engaged? • Immediate one-on-one briefings • Tours • Establish relationship with staff • Use CSB trustees and their government affairs staff

  21. What are the opportunities? • Recognition of leaders • Ongoing engagement of champions • National Model

  22. What’s Next?

  23. Rebuilding Lives Updated Strategy • Comprehensive research & resources inventory of current PSH system, plus family system • Identify successes and challenges in Rebuilding Lives initiative • Compose a plan based on the current situation, data driven solutions, community input, and result affective programs • Community steering committee

  24. Columbus’ Report Card • PSH programs successfully target heavy shelter users. • PSH programs reduce demand for shelter by at least 5% per year. • PSH reduces shelter use by 35 days per placement.

  25. Columbus’ Report Card • PSH residents have much less subsequent admission to shelters. • 70% of residents either retain housing or exit to successful housing placement over a 5-year period. Only 9% return to homelessness.

  26. Columbus’ Report Card • Average cost of $33/day is much lower than institutional care. Cost per unit varies widely by program. • Federal source provide 58% of total operating & services funding for Rebuilding Lives programs; CSB provides 19%; the State of Ohio only 2%.

  27. New Strategies • Recommendations for PSH • Develop 1,600 units of PSH • Create centralized access • Offer ‘move up’ incentives

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