The
Ten Year Plan to End Homelessness
Social Work Today
Vol. 4 No. 1 p. 14
By David Surface
It was seven
years ago at a conference for social workers in Berkeley, Calif.,
that Nan Roman had what she calls an “epiphany.” “I
was speaking at this conference,” says Roman. “A retired
social worker came up to me. We were talking and she said, ‘You
know, I used to see families all the time who’d lost their housing
and we’d find them another place to live. Now when they come
in, we say, Oh, you’re homeless, and we send them to the homeless
shelter.’”
What the retired
social worker said resonated with Roman’s own experience. “I’d
been working for a community action agency here in DC,” says
Roman. “We were seeing some homeless people, and mostly we were
dealing with that by finding them places to live. We were just beginning
to refer people to shelters. That was the period when there was a
shift at the community level—where we used to provide people
with services and get them back into housing as quickly as possible.
Instead, we started referring people to the homeless system.”
That was when
Roman realized that “it’s what we do that defines homelessness
as much as the experience that people have.” At the National
Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH), Roman, its president, works not
only to redefine homelessness, but also our nation’s entire
approach to solving the problem.
Changing Perspectives
The problem of homelessness in America started to emerge in the 1980s.
“At that time, we thought it was an anomaly, an emergency situation,”
says Roman. “The thinking was that people needed to be taken
care of in the short term, and that when the economy improved, the
problem would go away. But that’s not what happened.”
Another person
who realized that the problem of homelessness was more complex and
deeply rooted than originally thought was Elizabeth Boyle, MSW, secretary
of the NAEH. “We realized in the mid- to late ’80s that
this wasn’t a temporary problem but more of a structural problem,”
says Boyle. “We began to look into the root causes. There were
many—lack of affordable housing, mainly. Also, the loosening
of the family structure, the loosening of the safety net of social
services. So many elements were playing into all of this.”
Boyle and Roman
first worked together for The Committee for Food and Shelter, a nonprofit
organization incorporated in 1983. The purpose of the committee was
to access federal services for homeless people and cut bureaucratic
red tape.
Roman, who became involved with The Committee for Food and Shelter
in the mid-’80s, traces its evolution. “They did an exceptional
job of accessing surpluses for food and shelter. They’d worked
with Second Harvest and food networks. They’d brokered agreements
with the Department of Defense and Human Services to make commodities,
cots, blankets, buildings available for shelter, and food.”
But, then it
became clear that just meeting survival needs was not enough. As Roman
puts it, “There were bigger forces at work. In 1987, we started
focusing on housing issues and changed our name to the National Alliance
to End Homelessness.”
Reevaluating Needs
To say that housing, or the lack of it, is at the root of homelessness
seems like a no-brainer; yet, it was an idea that was not readily
accepted when Roman first put it forth.
In the ’70s and ’80s when Roman worked at the National
Association of Neighborhoods, she and her colleagues focused on residential
displacement. “We realized that if we kept tearing down affordable
housing buildings and converting them to condos and co-ops, there
would be a shortage of affordable housing in cities. We were scoffed
at by liberals and conservatives alike. They said that homelessness
will never be a problem in the United States because people will not
tolerate it.”
Time, of course,
proved the critics wrong. By the mid-1980s, homelessness had become
a national problem. What was not as obvious to the public at large
was that the homeless assistance system that had sprung up to deal
with the problem was not having the desired effect.
“We were
all doing what we were supposed to be doing,” says Roman, “Yet,
people keep coming into our system from all these other systems—mental
health, veterans, foster care. We can’t control it. For every
person who goes out of the back door, two more come in the front door.”
Using New Data
Roman cites two main forces that were behind the development of the
alliance’s plan.
“First,”
says Roman, “there was a new body of research from the University
of Pennsylvania. All we had previously were these point-in-time counts
that cities would do. These new data were more illuminating. [The
information] described the dynamics of the problem better. It showed
that people were different in how they used the system. Secondly,
we also saw that the homeless system was getting bigger and bigger,
but the problem was getting worse. Nationally, there were 40,000 programs
to help homeless people. Everyone was doing exactly what we thought
they should be doing, providing services, yet there weren’t
fewer homeless people—there were more.”
Boyle agrees
that the new data on homelessness from the University of Pennsylvania
had a galvanizing effect. “We had data coming in that clarified
who the homeless people were, why they were homeless, and what could
best be done to end their homelessness,” says Boyle. “Because
we had this information, we’ve been able to clarify how to solve
the problem rather than Band-Aid it. We couldn’t have gotten
to this step without that data.”
The Plan
The alliance’s plan to end homelessness is comprised of four
steps:
1. Plan for outcomes: Collect better data at the local level, and
create an outcome-driven planning process that involves all mainstream
agencies whose clients are homeless.
2. Close the front door: Reduce incentives for other assistance systems
to shift the cost of serving the homeless to the homeless assistance
system.
3. Open the back door: Get people out of the homeless system and into
permanent, supportive housing as soon as possible.
4. Create the infrastructure: Increase the supply of affordable housing
and make the incomes of poor people adequate to pay for necessities
such as food, shelter, clothing, and healthcare.
Reexamining Incentives
“One of the foundations of our 10-year plan,” says Roman,
“is that if you have an infrastructure into which people can
be shifted, they will be shifted into it. If all these other programs
can shift cost into somewhere else, it will happen—not because
anyone is evil, but because everyone is pressed for resources.”
“The system
does present incentives to hospitals and prisons to dump people rather
than give them the proper case management—because it doesn’t
cost as much,” says Boyle. “It’s more expensive
to have caseworkers on staff, to retrain, reacclimatize people. It’s
not easy to do that. It’s expensive. We want to reallocate the
money that goes into the shelter system. We need to require that our
system help mental health, prisons, and foster care agencies all do
the proper termination case management.”
Boyle recognizes
the good work done by the current homeless assistance system. “What
we’ve done—the shelters, the services for homeless people
in the past 20 years—has been great. Now, we have information
that helps us move on. It’s a reallocation of funds and a rethinking.
Thinking smarter. Using our money smarter.”
Focus on Outcomes
Roman explains where the time frame for the plan comes from. “The
idea with the Ten Year Plan is that this isn’t something you
turn around in a day—it takes time. It came from the notion
that there are around 200,000 chronically homeless people, and that
if we apply the current resources for housing from HUD [U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development], that would do about 15,000 units
per year. Over 10 years, that’s 150,000 units.”
This practical
focus on specific, measurable outcomes distinguishes the NAEH from
other, larger agencies. “I think that’s the role of organizations
like ours more than government agencies,” says Roman. “They
strive to improve things and coordinate better, but they don’t
seem to pick an outcome and direct resources toward it. Coordination
is a factor in improved outcomes, but coordination alone doesn’t
result in the outcome of ending homelessness. We could have an extremely
well-coordinated system that keeps people homeless for years and years.”
The Plan In Action
According to Boyle, by summer 2004, 100 U.S. cities will have signed
off on the alliance’s plan. “The U.S. Conference of Mayors
has taken it on as a project,” says Boyle, “as has the
administration about two years ago. It’s practically common
knowledge now in the political and social services arena.”
Roman cites San
Francisco as one American city that’s successfully implemented
aspects of the alliance’s plan. “There’s a program
in San Francisco called Direct Access to Housing,” says Roman.
“It’s run by the public health department. They noticed
in their emergency rooms that they had a relatively small group of
patients who were extremely expensive because they were constant users
of acute care health systems. They decided to look more carefully
at those folks and found that a good percentage were homeless. They
decided to start providing housing because they found that it would
actually be less expensive to provide housing.”
Another city
that’s done well with the plan is Columbus, Ohio. “They
saw that they had folks who were living in the homeless system and
had spent years there,” says Roman. “At first, they were
considering relocating shelters; then they thought, ‘Why would
we build another shelter? Why don’t we build housing instead?’”
In praising the
Columbus project, Boyle once again stresses the importance of data.
“Columbus is one of the best and earliest programs,” says
Boyle. “The main thing was that they got the data properly.
They did the proper research, got a really good exhaustive count,
and then they took the information they gathered and used it extremely
well.”
Is there a specific
sequence of steps that a city must take to “sign off”
on the NAEH plan?
“No,”
says Roman. “If they tell us they’ve got a plan, that’s
fine. We just have a general framework suggesting that they need a
data system, that they look at prevention and back door stuff. I’d
say Columbus is doing better with the plan than any other city, and
they’re just implementing the strategies—they don’t
have a plan. What you need is an outcome orientation. Some places
have spent a lot of money and time on developing a plan, and they’re
still no closer to solving the problem. What we’re trying to
say is that if you have an outcome orientation, you’re going
to have a real effect on the problem.”
Why, then, has
no one tried this approach before?
“We didn’t
know any better because we didn’t have the data,” says
Boyle. “When a problem arises, it takes people a little while
to figure out what to do about it. There wasn’t the money to
come up with the data. When you’re working with a nonprofit,
you often don’t have the money to come up with the best solutions.”
And how will
the alliance know when its plan is working? “Through data systems,”
Roman answers. “Congress has required HUD to work with communities
to establish homeless information management systems, so we’ll
know some things from that. We have to have fewer homeless people.
On a community level, the data makes it possible to know what ‘fewer’
means.”
Roman acknowledges
the widespread belief that homelessness is an insoluble problem that
may always be with us, but insists that this belief is based on a
misperception.
“Homelessness
in the scope of things is a pretty small problem,” says Roman.
“We ought to be able to solve it. It’s not poverty, it’s
not housing—it’s related to those problems, but it’s
much smaller than any one of them. We ought to be able to solve it.”
— David
Surface is a freelance writer and editor based in Brooklyn, NY.
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