Fenty Announces New Housing Facility for Homeless Families Contact: Mafara Hobson, 202-744-4549 (cell)
Administration highlights District’s Point in Time Count that reveals a drop in chronic and street homelessness in the District
Today
Mayor Adrian M. Fenty, joined by Department of Human Services Director
Clarence Carter, officially opened Naylor Road temporary housing for
homeless families, a 28-unit apartment complex that provides shelter
for homeless families.
Standing in front of Naylor Road, the
Mayor announced important progress in addressing homelessness for
families and single adults. At a time where the economic downturn has
resulted in an increased number of families seeking homeless services
across the country, the District has expanded and improved services for
families experiencing homelessness by:
1. Opening a new temporary housing facility for families at Naylor Road
2. Offering rapid re-housing services aimed at shortening episodes of family homelessness
3. Increasing placements in transitional housing programs
4.
Working to place 80 families, needing longer-term supports, in
permanent supportive housing (PSH) with associated wrap around services.
"We
made the promise early in this administration to serve families
experiencing homelessness with dignity and work as fast as humanly
possible to reintegrate them back into our communities” said Mayor
Fenty. “In these difficult economic times, we remain steadfast in that
commitment.”
The facility is the newest of four temporary
housing shelters in the District. Currently, twenty-eight families are
housed at Naylor – each has been assigned a case manager and has access
to a range of services, which help families move beyond homelessness.
Moreover,
the District is working to reduce the length of time families
experience homelessness. As one of only 23 jurisdictions awarded
funding to pilot the Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) new Rapid
Re-housing Initiative, the District is receiving $1.9 Million over
three years. The innovative program targets families in emergency
shelters and provides 12-15 month subsidies to assist 50 families in
existing homelessness.
For the families who need long-term
supports, the District is committed to providing tailored services.
Currently, 80 families are in the process of transitioning into
permanent supportive housing (PSH). All have been engaged with case
managers and six have already been placed in their own apartments.
Further,
the District's Housing First Initiative, announced less than a year
ago, is already serving more than 400 formerly homeless individuals
with supportive services and housing assistance. As a result, the
District's 2009 homeless enumeration revealed an unprecedented
reduction in street homelessness, chronic homelessness and use of
emergency shelters.
Mayor Fenty and Director Carter also
announced the results of the 2009 Point in Time enumeration, an annual
initiative that captures an unduplicated count of homeless and formerly
homeless people in the District on a single day. The District’s count
was held on January 28, 2009 and revealed:
• 10-percent decrease in individuals relying on emergency shelters • 12-percent decline in individuals identified as chronically homeless •
15-percent overall decrease in street homelessness. Downtown
Business Improvement District (BID) reports a 42-perecent drop in
street homeless in the Downtown area.
The Point in Time count
presents an opportunity to gather information on clients served, assist
in identifying gaps in HUD’s Continuum of Care, and helps plan for
future homeless service programs. Since 2001, the Community Partnership
for the Prevention of Homelessness has managed the District’s Point in
Time.
“We are creating a robust continuum of services for
families and single individuals. As we can see at Naylor Road and
through the Point in Time data, our new approach to serving our
homeless neighbors is working,” said Director Clarence Carter.
Article from DC.gov http://dc.gov/mayor/news/release.asp?id=1500&mon=200903
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