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Retooling the Homeless Crisis Response System

Informed and inspired by Opening Doors, communities across the country have made tremendous advances toward retooling the homeless crisis response system. We have gained critical new insights on the necessary components of an effective crisis response system for all people who experience or are at risk of homelessness, including more advanced thinking about the critical elements of coordinated entry systems. The development of these systems is making it possible for communities to quickly and effectively connect citizens in need with support tailored to their individual, unique needs by utilizing rapid re-housing to quickly connect individual and families to the supports they need to prevent or exit homelessness, target permanent supportive housing for those who are experiencing chronic homelessness, and utilize the existing inventory of transitional housing to connect people to a safe and rapid pathway to housing stability. There is still much more work to be done, however, in furthering the development of such systems, and the implementation of such strategies, in communities across the country.

Since the launch of Opening Doors, our understanding of what works has further solidified, and we’ve seen tremendous progress. Your input is essential to the ongoing success of Opening Doors. Please share and vote for the ideas you think would have the greatest impact in an amendment to Opening Doors.

Please consider these questions when crafting your feedback and voting for the feedback you think is most valuable. And please use the Opening Doors Amendment 2014 Participation Guide for more information on what strategies are currently included in Opening Doors. Find it here: http://bit.ly/USICH2014

1. Are there additional strategies for retooling the crisis response system that you think should be reflected in an amendment to Opening Doors?

2. How would your community/organization benefit from greater clarity on issues such as: the roles coordinated assessment, rapid re-housing, and transitional housing play in effective coordinated response systems? Please explain what information would be most helpful.

3. Are there other areas of the Plan you feel would benefit from updated information or the incorporation of additional strategies?

Thank you!

22 results found

  1. Build on progress with mainstream resources

    Strategy B: Determine opportunities to utilize mainstream resources to provide housing stabilization to clients who are homeless or at high risk of homelessness.
    There has been significant progress in the last few years in this arena. Recently HHS has issued Information Memorandums re: how TANF and Community Services Block Grant can be used to support rapid re-housing. USICH should examine ways to build upon this progress by ensuring that local communities and mainstream agencies are aware of such opportunities by developing a communications strategy to promote them.

    23 votes
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  2. Do more to promote best practices

    Objective 10 of Opening Doors includes the following strategy: Develop and promote best practices for crisis response programs and increase their adoption by agencies receiving federal funds.
    There is a great need in communities for best practices. This is an area that should become a priority in the upcoming year. Activities under this strategy might include the following:
    • Identify and document the most promising models of preventing homelessness.
    • Promote coordination of homelessness prevention resources with programs/systems that are functioning as the “front door” of the homeless shelter system.
    • Identify and document effective homelessness diversion strategies that expand…

    56 votes
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