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6 records match your search on "Homelessness programs" - Showing 1 to 6
 

Evaluation of the Collaborative Initiative to Help End Chronic Homelessness  (Report)

A cornerstone effort of the increased focus on chronic homelessness was the development of the Collaborative Initiative to Help End Chronic Homelessness (CICH), an innovative demonstration project coordinated by the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) and jointly funded by the Departments of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Health and Human Services [HHS (SAMHSA and HRSA)] and Veterans Affairs (VA). Recognizing that homelessness is an issue that cuts across various agencies in the federal government, this unique effort across Departments offered permanent housing and supportive service funding through a consolidated application process. The evaluation of the CICH is supported by HHS (Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation), VA, and HUD, and is being conducted by the VA's Northeast Program Evaluation Center.

Published:  March, 2008

Availability:  Full HTML Version 

 

Characteristics and Dynamics of Homeless Families with Children  (Report)

Author(s):  Debra J. Rog, C. Scott Holupka, and Lisa C. Patton

Organization(s):  Westat

This report investigates the availability of data with which to construct a typology of homeless families with the hope that such a typology would foster a better understanding of these families’ characteristics, service needs, interactions with human services systems, and the dynamics of their use of emergency shelter and other services and assistance. The purpose of this report is to identify key knowledge gaps regarding homeless families and to consider whether these gaps may most efficiently be filled through secondary analysis of existing data, adding questions or a module to planned surveys that include low-income populations, or whether additional primary data would be needed. Ultimately, it is intended that an improved understanding of the characteristics of homeless families with children will guide the development of appropriate service responses to such families and provide an empirical foundation for the design of homelessness prevention and intervention approaches. The project consisted of three phases: assessing the availability of already existing data that could be mined through secondary data analysis; proposing a set of questions to modify existing and ongoing surveys that would allow for the key research questions related to homeless families to be answered, and conceptualizing various primary data collections that would specifically collect the kind of data required to develop a typology of homeless families. The research recommendations described in this report lay the foundation for future data collection efforts affecting policy and programmatic decisions for this homeless families with children.

Published:  March, 2008

Availability:  Full HTML Version  Full PDF Version 

 

Toward Understanding Homelessness:  (Report)
The 2007 National Symposium on Homelessness Research

Author(s):  Deborah Dennis, Gretchen Locke, and Jill Khadduri

Organization(s):  Abt Associates, Inc. and Policy Research Associates, Inc.

The National Symposium on Homelessness Research, co-funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (both ASPE and SAMHSA) and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in FY 2005, sponsored the development of twelve research papers in an effort to capture the current state of the research related to homelessness. The Symposium event itself, which was held over two days in March of 2007, brought together 200 researchers, policy makers, government officials, service providers, and consumers from across the country to discuss the research papers and directions for future research related to homelessness. This Symposium was a follow-on event to the first National Symposium on Homelessness Research, which took place in 1998 and was also sponsored by HHS and HUD. This volume presents the twelve papers developed and presented at the 2007 Symposium.

Published:  September, 2007

Availability:  Full HTML Version  Executive Summary  PDF Executive Summary 

 

Strategic Action Plan on Homelessness  (Report)

Author(s):  U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services

Organization(s):  U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has developed the Strategic Action Plan on Homelessness to outline a set of goals and strategies that will guide the Department's activities related to homelessness over the next several years. This strategic action plan serves as the next iteration of the strategic action plan released in 2003, Ending Chronic Homelessness: Strategies for Action, which outlined the Department's strategy for contributing to the Administration goal of ending chronic homelessness. The intent of this new plan is to refine the goals and strategies of the 2003 Plan to reflect the changing set of challenges and priorities four years after the development of the first plan.

Published:  March, 2007

Availability:  Full HTML Version  Full PDF Version  Executive Summary  PDF Executive Summary 

 

Ending Chronic Homelessness:  (Report)
Strategies for Action

Author(s):  The Secretary’s Work Group on Ending Chronic Homelessness

In March 2003, Secretary Tommy G. Thompson released HHS’ plan to end chronic homelessness. The plan supports the commitment of President Bush to end chronic homelessness in a decade. HHS administers health and social service programs that make critical contributions toward fulfilling this commitment.

Published:  March, 2003

Availability:  Full HTML Version  Executive Summary 

 

1996 National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients:  (Report)
A Comparison of Faith-Based and Secular Non-Profit Programs

Author(s):  Laudan Y. Aron and Patrick T. Sharkey

Organization(s):  Urban Institute

In recognition of the historically important role that faith-based organizations play in providing services to individuals who are homeless, ASPE funded a secondary analysis of the 1996 National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients (NSHAPC). This comparison of faith-based and secular non-profit programs draws from a comprehensive, nationally representative survey of programs providing homeless assistance services and the clients they serve.

Published:  March, 2002

Availability:  Full HTML Version  Executive Summary 

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Last Revised:  October 15, 2007

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