- Written by: Adia White
By David Wagner, KPCC
A Chicago call center worker asks callers how they ended up on the verge of homelessness. Credit: DAVID WAGNER/KPCCDespite billions in new spending, the number of people experiencing homelessness keeps rising in cities across California.
In Los Angeles, taxpayers have put $1.2 billion toward the development of new homeless housing. But some officials are frustrated by how long it’s taking to build these units, which can cost more than $500,000 each.
With an estimated 150 people becoming homeless every day in L.A. County, some are now calling for new strategies to reduce homelessness.
“We can't build our way out of this,” said Los Angeles City Councilman Curren Price.
“The construction of housing is not the answer alone. And it's not happening fast enough to really make an impact,” he said.
Earlier this year, Price put forward a motion for Los Angeles to study — and possibly copy — homeless prevention strategies that have worked in other cities, like New York and Chicago.
The move is part of an emerging push to address the crisis evident on California streets by doing more to prevent people from ending up on those streets in the first place.
The hope is that catching more people before they fall — through small grants to avoid eviction and other kinds of targeted help — could help bring down homelessness overall. It’s not an easy task, but research shows that strategies in cities like Chicago and New York have been working.
BEHIND ON RENT AND CLOSE TO HOMELESSNESS
When Southeast Chicago resident Cedric Moore got laid off from his financial consulting job earlier this year, it came as a big shock.
He had savings to keep himself and his three daughters afloat for awhile. But that dried up quickly, and he didn’t have a fallback plan.
“I'm the type of person who tries to think of it from all angles,” Moore said. “And it was lost on me this time. It was completely lost. I had nothing.”
Moore fell three months behind on rent. His landlord gave him notice to pay up in five days or be evicted. He didn’t know where he or his daughters would stay if they lost the apartment.
“The fear of becoming homeless was more than real. It was abundant. It kept me up at night,” Moore said.
Desperate for help, Moore called the city. To his surprise, an actual person picked up the phone.
Chicago funds a homeless prevention call center staffed with workers who can connect callers with emergency aid to help pay for things such as back rent and utility bills. Chicago city officials say that in 2018, they distributed $3.7 million in prevention funds to nearly 3,000 households.
Because Moore got help covering his back rent, he was able to avoid eviction and keep his family out of a shelter.
“I slept for about ten hours that night,” Moore said. “I felt like myself again.”
Moore recently found a new job. He’s getting back on his feet. With some careful budgeting, he expects he’ll be able to buy his daughters Christmas gifts and cover his rent moving forward.
If that call hadn’t connected him to help at just the right moment, he doesn’t know where he’d be today.
IN CHICAGO, A CALL CENTER CAN BE A LIFELINE
The homeless prevention call center is what makes Chicago’s prevention program unique.
It’s a centralized point of entry for people in crisis. Rather than scattering funding across a wide network of service providers, workers at the call center can see what state and local funding is available throughout the system at any given time.
“It definitely streamlines it,” said Wendy Avila, who oversees the city-funded call center run by Catholic Charities.
Workers answer phones throughout the day, screening callers for eligibility. Then, they point clients to service providers in their neighborhoods who can help.
In other cities, people in crisis may not be able to find this kind of help in one place. Avila said the call center is a big improvement over how Chicago’s prevention program used to work.
“Prior to the call center, people would actually have to go to different agencies and see where money is available,” she said. “If they ran out, they ran out. The public didn’t know that until you actually went to the agency.”
Cities like Los Angeles already have prevention programs. But some advocates see Chicago’s call center as a model for centralizing those programs, in order to better and more quickly help Californians on the verge of homelessness.
According to a preliminary analysis carried out by researcher Janey Rountree of the California Policy Lab at UCLA, about 2,800 households have enrolled in prevention programs funded by Measure H, a sales tax increase passed by Los Angeles voters in 2017.
Her analysis found that some of those households did not receive financial aid. Instead, a case manager tried to help them resolve their crisis without funds. But Rountree found those who did receive financial aid were much less likely to end up homeless a year later.
“If people are truly in crisis and they're meeting the eligibility criteria for prevention, they will have better outcomes if they receive short-term financial assistance,” Rountree said.
RESEARCHERS LOOK AT WHAT’S WORKING
Researchers who have studied other cities’ programs say targeting financial aid to the right people at the right moment makes a real difference.
“Providing emergency financial assistance does, in fact, reduce homelessness,” said Notre Dame economist James Sullivan.
For a study published in 2016, Sullivan and his colleagues examined outcomes from Chicago’s call center. They found that people who called when funding was available were 76% less likely to become homeless. Those findings held true even a year later.
For most recipients, emergency financial aid didn’t simply delay a spell of homelessness. It helped people overcome a crisis and stay in their homes long-term.
“That was one of the things we worried about,” Sullivan said. “Maybe this kind of assistance just postpones the inevitable. What our research showed was that's not the case.”
Successful prevention can also save money over the long-term. Giving someone a couple thousand dollars to avoid eviction can end up being much cheaper than putting them up in a city-funded shelter for months.
“New York shelters are quite expensive,” said Columbia University economist Dan O'Flaherty, who co-authored a 2016 study looking at prevention outcomes in New York City.
New York’s program, called Homebase, has 23 locations across the city tasked with helping people avoid homelessness through emergency funding, landlord mediation and other services.
O'Flaherty and his colleagues found that Homebase reduced shelter entries by 5 to 11% during the program’s first four years. They wrote that savings for the city’s shelter system were likely larger than what it cost to run Homebase.
“It does help, and it doesn't cost a lot of money,” O'Flaherty said.
Notre Dame economist James Sullivan stops short of saying that Chicago’s program saves the city money. But he said when the cost of homelessness to individuals — including shortened life expectancy — is factored in, the benefits of prevention clearly outweigh the costs.
“It's a good social investment, even if it's not going to directly improve the bottom line for the city of Chicago,” Sullivan said.
THE LIMITS OF PREVENTION
Experts say the biggest problem in homelessness prevention is figuring out who actually needs help. They call this a “targeting” challenge.
For instance, an estimated 600,000 people in L.A. County are spending 90% or more of their income on rent. Yet most of them manage to avoid homelessness.
How can service providers identify who among the very poor and precariously housed would actually become homeless without an infusion of financial aid?
Sullivan argues prevention becomes more cost-effective when targeted to the lowest income recipients.
Maura McCauley, who directs homeless prevention policy for Chicago’s Department of Family and Support Services, said the call center’s screening process helps the city identify people who actually stand to benefit from one-time financial assistance.
Clients need to have a qualifying financial crisis, like job loss or a medical emergency. And they must show that they can become self-sufficient after receiving financial aid.
“You have to demonstrate that the crisis can be resolved,” McCauley said. “Our work to really target the resources in the right way at the right time is so critical.”
Beefing up prevention would not solve all of California’s problems. Nearly 130,000 people across the state are already homeless, past the point of being helped through prevention. And experts say one-time financial aid probably isn’t the right approach for people at risk of homelessness due to severe mental health or addiction issues.
Prevention may not work for everyone. But back in Chicago, social worker Katie Tapert Mercado said for her clients, a month or two of rent relief is often all it takes to avert a spell of homelessness.
“They're able to become stable and keep their apartment and everything they've earned,” she said.
Chicago prevention funding recipient Cedric Moore said if he didn’t get help covering his back rent, he and his daughters may have ended up in a taxpayer-funded shelter.
“If you don't want to help now, you're going to end up helping a lot more later on,” Moore said.
It’s a lesson California has been learning the hard way.
The California Dream series is a statewide media collaboration of CALmatters, KPBS, KPCC, KQED and Capital Public Radio with support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the James Irvine Foundation.
- Written by: Adia White
Firefighters and first responders are more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty. North Bay Paramedic, Susan Farren, wants this to change. That’s why she founded a training program, called First Responder Resilience Incorporated. KRCB’s Adia White talked with Farren about why she believes mental health awareness and training is imperative to saving first responders' lives.
California’s fire season is becoming longer and more devastating. This is taking a toll on firefighters' health. In part two of this story, KRCB’s Adia White looks at possible solutions.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness North Bay suicide prevention hotline is 855-587-6373. That's 855-587-6373.
(Image: Susan Farren, Founder and CEO of First Responder Resilience Incorporated. Courtesy of the subject.)
- Written by: Adia White
- Written by: Steve Mencher
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- Coffey Strong Organizes; Santa Rosa Tackles Rebuilding and Building, Too
- Recology, Your New Trash Company, Aims to Respect Workers and Reduce Waste
- Sonoma County Clerk-Recorder-Assessor Reminds Residents Displaced by Fires to Update Address Info
- Setting Small Fires to Avoid Larger Ones; First Signs of Life at Burned Sonoma County Lake
- Crowds Gather in North Bay for Women's Rights on Anniversary of Historic March
- Outbeat Radio News for Monday, January 22, 2018
- Report of Upcoming ICE Raids Puts Local Immigrant Community on Edge
- Insurance Issues Aired at Fire Town Hall
- Tryouts Continue at Santa Rosa Symphony; Jenkins Pleases Crowd with Bartok
- Town Hall Brings Elected Representatives, Agency Officials and Fire Survivors Together
- With Cannabis Rules Set to Go Into Effect, Santa Rosa Fine Tunes Policies
- Death Be Not Proud: Let's Talk About It at a 'Death Cafe'
- State's Attorney General and Top Emergency Manager Warn Of Price Gouging
- WORKSHOP: Financial Decision-Making for Wildfire Survivors
- Outbeat Radio News for Monday, January 15, 2018
- Rep. Huffman: Rebuilding and Recovery Town Hall Presents Forum for Citizen Input
- Housing Recovery in Sonoma County Will Be Slowed by Lack of Workers, Materials
- Local Governments Will Also Scramble for Workers to Support Rebuilding
- Rains Bring Relief, Worry
- Federal Government Threatens to Derail Local Cannabis Laws
- Sonoma County Recovery & Rebuilding Town Hall Saturday January 13th
- Outbeat Radio News for Monday, January 8, 2018
- Retiring NPR Host Robert Siegel Talks About His Heroes and His Future
- First Responder Recognition Event - Tuesday January 9th
- Supervisor Lynda Hopkins Fears Disruption of Sonoma Cannabis Market Following Edict
- DHS Secretary: After Fires, We Will 'Make Sure Californians Have What They Need'
- Insurance Workshop for Partial Loss Survivors - January 17th
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Debris Removal Information Line
- City of Santa Rosa Water Bill Relief for Additional Water Used for Fire Protection
- USACE Awards Additional Contracts for Wildfire Debris Removal
- Santa Rosa Disaster Recovery Center to Become SBA Disaster Loan Outreach Center
- Mighty Oaks Will Follow Little Acorns at Fire-Scarred Mendocino Vineyard
- Disaster Recovery Centers now permanently CLOSED
- Federal Income Tax Bill Prompts Questions About Pre-Paying Property Taxes
- The History of Illegal Cannabis in California May Be Lost in the Post-Prohibition Era
- Spending Christmas in a FEMA Trailer
- Insurance regulator steps in to help hundreds of wildfire survivors with claims
- Map Identifies Areas at Risk of Flooding, Mudflows In Aftermath of Wildfires
- Addressing Inequality: Assemblymember Proposes Wages Tied to Housing
- Outbeat Radio News for Monday, December 25, 2017
- Fire Debris: Where Most of Those Trucks You've Been Following Are Headed
- Assemblymember Marc Levine on the Year in Sacramento
- Christmas in Coffey Park; Free Counseling for Fire Survivors
- Price Gouging After the Wildfire Disaster
- In Wake of Fires, Assemblyman Marc Levine Talks About Improving Phone Alerts
- Outbeat Radio News for Monday, December 18, 2017
- Local ISP Sonic Protests End of Net Neutrality
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Firefighters and first responders are more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty. North Bay Paramedic, Susan Farren, wants this to change. That’s why she founded a training program, called