A national network of funders supporting strategic, innovative, and effective solutions to homelessness

Thinking More Broadly About a Place to Call Home

In the shadow of sequestration and increasingly constrained public sector resources, the goal of ending family homelessness seems to move continually further out of reach.  

In the shadow of sequestration and increasingly constrained public sector resources, the goal of ending family homelessness seems to move continually further out of reach.  Even without new budget cuts, the numbers are daunting:  Today, public housing subsidies are not available for more than three-quarters of the Americans who could benefit from supports that would make the rents in their communities affordable. To stay housed, many of these individuals and families are paying far more than the target of 30% of their incomes for rent. For more than 1.5 million Americans every year, homelessness results when keeping the housing you have is simply no longer possible.

We know that the way to end homelessness is to house everyone, and ensuring everyone has a place to call home requires a housing supply that is affordable to all, regardless of their incomes. The simplicity of this argument seems well suited to a freshman college logic course.

I wish the reality was that simple.  In the current economic environment, the option of “building our way out of homelessness” (and linking every tenant to the services and supports they need to stay housed) is no longer feasible as the sole strategy to ending family homelessness– if it even ever was.  The the billions and billions of dollars required for that approach are not, and likely will not, be available in the foreseeable future.

This requires us to think more broadly about what we mean when we say ending homelessness is all about housing.  We need to expand our conversation – and our activities – to include at least five different components to that freshman logic class argument.  These include:

  1. Increase resources for capital projects & subsidies (build more housing, add more subsidies):  This traditional approach to ending homelessness must remain a top priority.  Vehicles like Housing Trust Funds, Housing Levies, tax credits, Section 8 vouchers and other tools are essential to continuing to increase the stock of affordable housing.
  2. Make best use of the existing stock of subsidized housing:  The public housing resources we currently have – including public and transitional housing and housing vouchers are a limited and precious resource that must consistently be prioritized for the best possible uses in every local community.
  3. Increase the use of market rate housing:  We’ve only begun to tap into the potential uses of the private rental housing stock in communities across the nation through such tools as short and intermediate term subsidies and rapid re-housing.  These promising practices appear to work effectively than more traditional approaches for many highly vulnerable families.
  4. Integrate existing subsidized and public housing with mainstream systems:  Creating service-enhanced housing opportunities through partnerships with the child welfare providers, the workforce and employment systems, and even public school districts offer pathways to both increased housing stability and mobility as families stabilize and incomes increase over time.
  5. Promote “housing as health care:” As  the Affordable Care Act moves forward, we must make the case that housing stability actually promotes wellness, as well as efficiencies in the health care system that can help contain costs over time.

Housing is, and will remain, the essential platform upon which we build healthy and productive lives for ourselves and our children.  It remains a critical component in the work of interrupting the cycles of poverty that can reach across generations.  The argument from the freshman logic course isn’t flawed, it’s just an oversimplification.

While the concept that ending homelessness means housing everyone is helpful, we must be sure to understand the complexity of the work required to achieve the desired goal.

David_Wertheimer_2012a.jpgDavid Wertheimer is the Deputy Director of the Pacific Northwest Initiative at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in Seattle, Washington, as well as the Board Chair of Funders Together to End Homelessness. Find him at @DavidWSeattle.

 

 

We joined Funders Together because we believe in the power of philanthropy to play a major role in ending homelessness, and we know we have much to learn from funders across the country.

-Christine Marge, Director of Housing and Financial Stability at United Way of Greater Los Angeles

I am thankful for the local partnerships here in the Pacific Northwest that we’ve been able to create and nurture thanks to the work of Funders Together. Having so many of the right players at the table makes our conversations – and all of our efforts – all the richer and more effective.

-David Wertheimer, Deputy Director at Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Very often a lack of jobs and money is not the cause of poverty, but the symptom. The cause may lie deeper in our failure to give our fellow citizens a fair chance to develop their own capacities, in a lack of education and training, in a lack of medical care and housing, in a lack of decent communities in which to live and bring up their children.

-President Lyndon B. Johnson, 1964 State of the Union Address

Funders Together has given me a platform to engage the other funders in my community. Our local funding community has improved greatly to support housing first models and align of resources towards ending homelessness.

-Leslie Strnisha, Vice President at Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland

Our family foundation convenes local funders and key community stakeholders around strategies to end homelessness in Houston. Funders Together members have been invaluable mentors to us in this effort, traveling to our community to share their expertise and examples of best practices from around the nation.

-Nancy Frees Fountain, Managing Director at The Frees Foundation


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