“What you always do before you make a decision is consult. The best public policy is made when you are listening to people who are going to be impacted. Then, once a policy is determined, you call on them to help you sell it.”
— Elizabeth Dole
Homelessimage

“You know, everyone needs a place they can call home! They need people and a place to go which is theirs, a safe haven. A place to feel protected, where you can be yourself and unwind. A place where you are accepted. A safe roof over your head.”

― Martha Begley Schade, Billa & Buster: The Circle of Kindness

Tackling Homelessness Nationally:
Adapting Services and Improving Housing Options

Key Speakers

https://www.publicpolicyexchange.com/admin/events.speakers.php?evID=40&add=1#
Alice Colegrove, Senior Consultant, Massachusetts Unaccompanied Homeless Youth Commission
Victoria Bourret, Housing Advocacy Organizer, National Low Income Housing Coalition
https://www.csh.org/about-csh/leadership-staff/
Kara Mergl, Director of State Policy, CSH
https://www.cflsdc.org/
Jennifer Speight, Community Advocate, Community Family Life Services
Dan Treglia, Professor of Practice, University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy and Practice

This event was held on Wednesday, December 16th 2020.

Overview

Over half a million people go homeless on any given night in the United States. Approximately 65% can find shelter while the rest (nearly 200,000 people) are forced to live in the streets and other areas not suitable for human habitation. Unsheltered individuals experience a host of medical, safety and psychological risks that make any night on the streets potentially fatal, let alone an extended period. 

Our homelessness crisis has also been characterized with inequity and intense persecution. Homelessness is significantly defined by gender.  Sixty percent of all people experiencing homelessness are male.  Amongst individuals, the numbers are starker—70 percent are men and unaccompanied male youth. Up to 40% of youth experiencing homeless identify as LGBTQ and face a host of challenges because of the stigma and persecution they face. Unsurprisingly, the severity of homelessness also falls on racial lines. Pacific Islanders and Native Americans are most likely to be homeless in America when compared to any other racial/ethnic groups with 160 out of 10,000 people compared to the national average of 17 out of 10,000. Black, Latino and multiracial Americans face rates of homelessness many times higher in comparison to their white counterparts. The systemic oppression America’s vulnerable populations face is compounded by the maltreatment they face from our legal system and homeowning communities that often want to remove homeless people rather than help them.

While many states have made progress reducing rates of homelessness, many others are doing worse than they have in decades. Homelessness is expected to increase in the face of a global pandemic that has stressed public funds and caused unemployment to skyrocket in an economy where thousands of people are a paycheck away from ending up on the streets. We will likely be facing a new wave of homelessness from these circumstances that we’ll be dealing with long after the pandemic is over. Social isolation and stay at home orders are next to impossible to follow when you have no home. Meeting COVID-19 related health requirements while providing services and housing will put a substantial strain on the system many will not be equipped to deal with.

This timely symposium provides an invaluable opportunity for case managers, social workers, community outreach specialists, housing authorities, developers, healthcare and mental health practitioners, and other key stakeholders to reflect on progress made, identify challenges and consider next steps in tackling homelessness across the nation. Cross-sector exchange will help facilitate better partnerships between civil society, the private sector and government actors. It will allow delegates to consider solutions to identified barriers and challenges related to policy implementation. Participants will be able to transfer key learnings and best practices to their own communities whether at the local, state or national level.

 

Delegates Will:

  • Share strategies to adapt medical services in lieu of the pandemic

  • Explore ways to make coordinated entry more equitable and effective 

  • Discuss ways enhance access to shelters and improve shelter conditions

  • Examine legislative trends in zoning laws and land use policy 

  • Learn from street-based service programs 

  • Build community support for affordable housing and homeless services

  • Discuss how different sectors could collaborate to improve services and prevention for people experiencing homelessness

  • Identify how to utilize alternative housing arrangements such as tiny homes, modular housing units, and multifamily homes

  • Develop plans to tackle the growing eviction crisis happening across the country

 

Program

 

9:30  Chair's Welcome and Introduction
9:40

Speaker Presentations and Q&A  

  • Share strategies to adapt medical services in lieu of the pandemic
  • Explore ways to make coordinated entry more equitable and effective 
  • Discuss ways enhance access to shelters and improve shelter conditions
  • Examine legislative trends in zoning laws and land use policy 
  • Learn from street-based service programs 
  • Build community support for affordable housing and homeless services
  • Discuss how different sectors could collaborate to improve services and prevention for people experiencing homelessness
  • Identify how to utilize alternative housing arrangements such as tiny homes, modular housing units, and multifamily homes
  • Develop plans to tackle the growing eviction crisis happening across the country

 12:30

Open Floor Discussion and Debate
  13:00 Chair's Summary and Closing Comments
  13:10 Close **All Times as Presented are in the Pacific Time Zone**

Who Should Attend?

  • Department of Health and Human Services

  • Department of Veterans Affairs

  • Homeless services authorities

  • Housing and community investment departments

  • Affordable housing developers

  • Public housing authorities

  • Directors of housing operations

  • Directors of housing development

  • Family housing agencies

  • Directors of homeless services

  • Directors of residential services

  • Case managers (homeless services)

  • Shelter case managers

  • Shelter monitors

  • Social workers

  • Homeless veteran advocates

  • Veteran support specialists

  • Women's veteran advocates

  • Community outreach specialists

  • Community health workers

  • Housing advocates

  • Housing stabilization specialists

  • Peer housing navigators

  • Housing locators

  • Relocation service managers/caseworkers

  • Benefits advocates (homeless services)

  • Homeless coalition managers

  • Student homelessness liaisons

  • Community programs advocates

  • Family service coordinators

  • Family care coordinators

  • Youth advocates

  • Emergency relief counselors

  • Housing counselors

  • Mental health clinicians/ Specialists

  • Treatment/Substance abuse specialists

  • Public health managers/Administrators

  • Real estate professionals

  • City council representatives

  • City Managers

  • City & Urban Planners

  • County representatives

  • Special interest groups

  • Non-profit organizations

  • Faith-based and interfaith organizations

  • Healthcare professionals

  • Law enforcement

  • Digital information officers and information technology professionals

  • Researchers and academics

This event was held on Wednesday, December 16th 2020.

Forthcoming Events

Sponsorship and Exhibition Opportunities

If you’re interested in promoting your company, products and/or services at our events, please click here to enter your details and we will contact you directly. Alternatively, please call
+1 (310) 385 8750 for more information.

How to Book

+1 (310) 385 8750
bookings.at.publicpolicyexchange.com