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Reso 2016-116
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Reso 2016-116
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2/5/2018 8:27:11 AM
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10/10/2016 5:52:21 PM
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CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Resolution
Document Date (6)
9/19/2016
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PERM
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_CC Agenda 2016 0919 CS + RG
(Reference)
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\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2016\Packet 2016 0919
4A Public Hearing 2016 0919
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Path:
\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2016\Packet 2016 0919
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Helping homeless persons (especially chronically homeless individuals and families, families with <br />children, veterans and their families, and unaccompanied youth) make the transition to permanent <br />housing and independent living, including shortening the period of time that individuals and families <br />experience homelessness, facilitating access for homeless individuals and families to affordable <br />housing units, and preventing individuals and families who were recently homeless from becoming <br />homeless again <br />Objective: Create Suitable Living Environment <br />Priority: Support public services. <br />Davis Street Family Resource Center (Davis Street) - Affordable Housing Services <br />In FY 2015-2016, the City provided City General Funds to Davis Street to assist individuals seeking housing search <br />assistance, specifically being placed into permanent housing. ,During the fiscal year, Davis Street served 565 <br />clients, of which 13 households were placed into permanent housing throughout the City; 5 clients were assisted <br />with security deposits, 3 clients were assisted with past due rent, and 7 clients received emergency hotel <br />vouchers. Davis Street also provided 487 homeless or at risk of becoming homeless individuals with information <br />on local services to help them with their housing search. <br />EveryOne Home <br />EveryOne Home, Alameda County Housing and Community Development Department and Behavioral Health <br />Care Services are collaborating to create a registry of all homeless and disabled people, who have been assessed <br />and prioritized for permanent supportive housing. The most vulnerable (chronically homeless, high service <br />users) will be assigned housing navigators to aid them in their housing search and application <br />process. Eventually all 1900 units of PSH will be filled from this "Home Stretch Registry", as it is called. As of July <br />2016, Continuum of Care and Mental Health Services Act funded Permanent Supportive Housing in the County <br />fills vacancies using this single registry of homeless disabled persons who have been prioritized based on need <br />and length of time homeless. The Home Stretch initiative is the Continuum's primary focus for bringing an end <br />to chronic homelessness. According to the 2015 Point -In -Time Count, the number of persons experiencing <br />chronic homelessness has dropped from 931 in 2013 to 660 in 2015. <br />Operation Vets Home is the collaborative continuum -wide effort to bring an end to veteran homelessness by <br />12/31/16. The Committee consists of EveryOne Home, the Veterans Administration and four Support Services <br />for Veterans Family grantees, and several street outreach programs. The group has identified all homeless vets <br />by name and assigned them to an agency that has subsidies available and outreach workers to enroll and engage <br />vets. According to the registry, the number of homeless veterans at a point in time has dropped by 36% since <br />January 2016. <br />The HOME Consortium has also expanded resources for families experiencing homelessness and seen the <br />number of homeless families drop by 30% from 462 in 2013 to 324 in the 2015 Point -In -Time Count. One major <br />shift that took effect during this reporting period was to convert a scattered site transitional housing program <br />that served 47 families per year to Rapid Rehousing, which allows the program to step-down the rental subsidy <br />amount gradually over time, allowing the subsidy funds to be spread over more families, doubling the program's <br />annual capacity. Providers within the Consortium have also been awarded funds to rehouse homeless families <br />on TANF using money from the State of California award to the County Social Service Agency. ESG funds and <br />County general funds are also assisting families. <br />City of San Leandro FY 2014-2015 CAPER 13 <br />OMB Control No: 2506-0117 (exp. 07/31/2015) <br />
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