100,000 Homes Campaign

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The 100,000 Homes Campaign was an initiative of

homeless people in 186 communities in the United States into permanent supportive housing."[1] Due to the cost of emergency department treatment, the program aims to provide housing for the homeless, as it is cheaper in the long run. In 2014, the program was featured on 60 Minutes, focusing on the homeless population in Nashville, Tennessee.[2] Becky Kanis Margiotta was the campaign director. By July 2014, the 100,000 Homes Campaign had reached its goal and housed 105,580 of the most vulnerable homeless individuals.[1][3]

Housing First

One of the vehicles focusing on housing the chronically homeless is

Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) as a "best practice" for governments and service-agencies to use in their fight to end chronic homelessness in America.[7]

Name and Need and Vulnerability Index

Journalist David Bornstein of The New York Times summarized key elements of the 100,000 Homes Campaign that campaign leaders indicate are critical to its success.[1] This included learning individual homeless people's "name and need" by mobilizing volunteers to go very early in the morning to check on them, establishing a "vulnerability index" so they could prioritize certain homeless people and "bring housing advocates and agency representatives together to streamline the placement processes, and share ideas about how to cut through red tape."[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Bornstein, David (May 28, 2014), The Push to End Chronic Homelessness Is Working, retrieved May 28, 2014
  2. ^ Cass, Michael (9 February 2014). "'60 Minutes' looking at Nashville campaign to house the chronically homeless". The Tennessean. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  3. ^ "See the Impact | 100,000 Homes". 100khomes.org. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  4. ^ "The Applicability of Housing First Models to Homeless Persons with Serious Mental Illness" (PDF). HUD. July 2007.
  5. ^ "Housing First Principles" (PDF). Downtown Emergency Service Center. July 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-22.
  6. ^ "Health Care and Public Service Use and Costs Before and After Provision of Housing for Chronically Homeless Persons with Severe Alcohol Problems". Larimer, Malone, Garner, Atkins, Burlingham, Tanzer, Ginzler, Clifasefi, Hobson, & Marlatt in JAMA. April 2009.
  7. ^ Homeless Crisis Response, Opening Doors Objectives, archived from the original on 2014-08-10, retrieved 2014-05-28

External links