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July 18, 2018
In case you missed it, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced $43 million in grants to help end youth homelessness, and $7 million is coming to Washington state. Our state’s bold leadership and innovative approaches were rewarded for the second consecutive year, with two of just 11 grants awarded nationwide coming here. Last year, King County received one of the limited number of annual awards from the Youth Homeless Demonstration Program to support a range of housing interventions.
Congratulations to Snohomish County Human Services Department on its $2.39 million grant, celebrated yesterday at a press event at Cocoon House in Everett. The Department of Commerce is honored to have earned $4.63 million to support our ongoing efforts in rural communities. In its announcement, HUD said, “Washington State has one of the strongest commitments to addressing youth homelessness in the nation.”
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U.S.
Department of Housing & Urban Development Washington
State Office 909
First Avenue, Suite 200 Seattle,
Washington 98104 www.hud.gov/washington
Contact: Lee Jones (206) 220-5356 (work) or (804) 363-7018
(cell)Leland.Jones@hud.gov
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For immediate Release July 16, 2018 Washington News UpDate
They are among 11 organizations
nationwide that will use “wide range” of tools to “get young people off the
streets and their lives back on track”
SEATTLE
- The Washington State Department of Commerce and Snohomish County are among 11
organizations nationwide that have won U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Youth Homelessness Demonstration Project funding to use a wide range of housing interventions
including rapid rehousing, permanent supportive housing, transitional housing,
and host homes in preventing and ending youth homelessness.
Today
HUD announced the that it is awarding the Washington Department of Commerce $4,629,391
and Snohomish County was awarded $2,387,593 in Youth Homelessness Demonstration
Project funds. Other communities awarded funds include Boston, Columbus,
,Lincoln, Louisville, Nashville, San Diego, Santa Fe, the State of Vermont and
three Tribes in northwest Minnesota.
The Municipality of Anchorage and the Seattle-King County Continuum of
Care were awarded Youth Homeless Prevention Demonstration grants in 2017.
To
ensure the Youth Homelessness
Demonstration Program meets the
needs of young people, HUD relied upon the recommendations of young
people who experienced homelessness themselves. Many of these same young people
participated in reviewing the applications of communities seeking YHDP funds.
Their input helped ensure that the communities
selected for funding understand the needs and preferences of the young people
they will serve. HUD also worked closely
with its federal partners at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS),
the Department of Education (DOE), and the U.S. Interagency Council on
Homelessness (USICH) to help develop the program and review applications.
“Young
people who are victims of abuse, family conflict or aging out of foster care
are especially vulnerable to homelessness,” said HUD Secretary Ben Carson. “We
are working with our local partners to support innovative approaches to help
young people find stable housing, break the cycle of homelessness and lead them
on a path to self-sufficiency.”
“The
sight of anyone living on the streets is heartbreaking. But the sight of a young person sleeping in a
doorway or rustling through a garbage bin is especially sad,” said HUD
Northwest Regional Administrator Jeff McMorris. “Like last year’s Youth
Homeless Prevention Program grantees, this year’s grantees have demonstrated
success in helping homeless young people off the streets and getting their
lives back on track. Expanding and building on their successes, we hope they
will serve as examples of how other communities can do the same.”
“Our
highest calling is to protect our most vulnerable residents,” said Dave Somers,
Snohomish County Executive. “Our local partners and this project will allow us
to protect thousands of youth who find themselves in harm’s way. We appreciate
the support of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development
and their commitment to our community. We will continue to pursue innovative
and compassionate solutions to these widespread challenges.”
“Washington
is full of creative and talented people working to solve this complex
issue. Preventing and ending youth
homelessness strengthens communities all over the state, and HUD’s investment
puts us at the forefront to demonstrate that it is possible,” said Kim Justice,
Executive Director of the state’s Office of Homeless Youth at Commerce
The Washington State Department of
Commerce serves as the Continuum of Care organization working with local
projects in 34 small- and medium-sized, mostly-rural counties to prevent and
end homelessness. In January 2017 its
point-in-time count of the homeless identified 314 unaccompanied homeless young
people in its jurisdiction. It has one of the strongest commitments to
addressing youth homelessness in the nation. Strategic efforts underway
include: preventing youth from exiting public systems of care (such as child
welfare and juvenile justice) into homelessness, developing a crisis response
system for families and youth in conflict, and closing educational equity gaps
for homeless students.
Snohomish County Human Services Department (HSD) will build
on successful innovative practices that have transformed the Everett/Snohomish
County Continuum of Care homeless response system, to further transform the
homeless youth response under the Youth Homeless Demonstration Program. Its Continuum of Care’s January 2017
point-in-time count identified 117 unaccompanied homeless young people under
the age of 24.
HUD
selected 11 communities nationwide which will collaborate with a broad array of
partners including a youth action board and the local or state public child
welfare agency. These communities now
have four months to develop and submit to HUD a coordinated community plan to
prevent and end youth homelessness. They will also participate in a program
evaluation to inform the federal effort to prevent and end youth homelessness
going forward and will serve as leaders in the nation on the work to end
homelessness among young people.
YHDP
recipients will use funding for rapid rehousing, permanent supportive housing,
and transitional housing, and to fund innovative programs, such as host homes.
Recipients can begin requesting funding for specific projects as soon as they
are ready. YHDP will also support
youth-focused performance measurement and coordinated entry systems. Over the next several months, selected
communities will work with their youth advisory boards, child welfare agencies,
and other community partners to create a comprehensive community plan to end
youth homelessness.
Twitter: @WAStateCommerce
Facebook: facebook.com/wastatecommerce
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