Leigh Shields-Church’s “rapid-results” team emerged from a conference room lined
with marker-scrawled battle plans with a new strategy and a bold goal: Place
nearly all of New Haven’s chronically homeless into apartments of their own, by
July 30.
The strategy resulted from a two-day “boot camp” attended by a dozen of New
Haven’s homelessness services providers this week.
On Wednesday and Thursday, staffers from a host of social service agencies
mapped out the ambitious approach to tackle homelessness in the city, and
elected Shields-Church (pictured) of the Connecticut Mental Health Center as
team leader.
The 100-day plan represents a rare coordinated effort between the many
agencies in New Haven that deal with homelessness. For the next three months, a
host of organizations will be teaming up to assess who among the city’s homeless
need housing the most, helping those people to get ready to be housed, and then
assigning them to apartments.
The
100-day challenge, funded by the United Way, is inspired by a similar program targeting homelessness on Los Angeles’ Skid
Row, carried out with the help of the Rapid Results
Institute. That organization usually works abroad, finding ways to
jump-start international development projects with short-term, intensive
efforts. It’s been applying those same techniques to tackle the problem of
homelessness in this country.
Nashville and Chicago have undertaken similar attacks on
homelessness. The initiatives target the chronically homeless, people who may
have been out on the streets for years. The “housing first” model has shown that
cities can drastically reduce homelessness and its costs by simply finding homes
for the people who use the most homelessness resources or who are most
endangered by homelessness.
Read complete article
How's Greater New Haven Ending Chronic Homelessness?
Ending Homelessness
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Help us end homelessness in our region! Join the 100,000 Homes Campaign! Volunteer!
We
need your help! Greater New Haven Opening Doors is part of a nationwide
campaign, called the 100,000 Homes Campaign (http://100khomes.org/),
to survey homeless individuals and prioritize them for available housing based
on vulnerability. Our goal is to house 75 percent of the region's chronically
homeless population — approximately 107 people — into apartments of their own,
by July 30. To do that we need you help!
For more information or to sign-up use the link below or contact Jan McCray at jmccray@uwgnh.org or (203) 691-4216.
I've
invited you to fill out the form Greater New Haven Opening Doors: Registry
Week Volunteer Sign Up . To fill it out, visit:
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