Counting the Homeless: Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons

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Counting the Homeless: Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons Catherine Troisi, Ph. D U Texas School of Public Health Ritalinda Lee, Ph.D. Claris Technical Services Gary M. Grier, JD Coalition For The Homeless of Houston/Harris County Stephen Williams, MEd, MPA Houston Department of Health and Human Services 30 October 2012

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Counting the Homeless: Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons. Catherine Troisi, Ph. D U Texas School of Public Health Ritalinda Lee, Ph.D. Claris Technical Services Gary M. Grier, JD Coalition For The Homeless of Houston/Harris County Stephen Williams, MEd, MPA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Counting the Homeless: Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons

Page 1: Counting the Homeless:   Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons

Counting the Homeless: Enhanced methods for enumeration of homeless persons

Catherine Troisi, Ph. DU Texas School of Public Health

Ritalinda Lee, Ph.D.Claris Technical Services

Gary M. Grier, JDCoalition For The Homeless of Houston/Harris County

Stephen Williams, MEd, MPAHouston Department of Health and Human Services30 October 2012

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Presenter Disclosures

The following personal financial relationships with commercial interests relevant to this presentation existed during the past 12 months:

Catherine L. Troisi, Ph.D.

No relationships to disclose

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Learning ObjectivesDescribe the Incident Command System (ICS)Discuss how ICS and other methods can be used to

build collaboration among community members, academics, health dept personnel, and providers of services to the homeless community

Explain how ICS can be applied to the enumeration of homeless persons

Discuss other methods for improving the PIT count of persons experiencing homelessness

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Enumeration Federally mandated count of homeless taking place

during last 10 days of January Street Count and Sheltered Count Also must enumerate HUD-defined subpopulations Canvass all of Houston/Harris County/Fort Bend

County Previous enumerations were not thought to be

optimal New/enhanced methodologies employed in 2011,

tweaked in 2012

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Cities that Fit into Houston & ETJ Comparison

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From: Knudson,LP www.knudsonlp.com

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New/Enhanced Methodologies Employed Joint effort between academia and communityCommunity engagement Incident Command StructureSpecialized Outreach TeamsPractice count and two PIT countsMore staging areasJust-in-Time trainingMulti-disciplinary surface teamsFrequent check-in on night of the CountPlant and Capture methodSWAT teamsGIS mapping systems

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Joint Effort

Enumerator – UTSPH Incident Commanders – CFTH and UTSPHSection Chiefs – HDHHS and CFTH Incident Command Center– HDHHSTeam Captains – service providersSpecialized Outreach Teams – service providersSurface teams – service providers, homeless or

formerly homeless, community members, studentsNext day surveys – students, service providers

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Community EngagementContinuum of Care housing providersService ProvidersConsumers, CAC, and CorpsSchoolsFaith based communitySpecialized outreach teams Special sub-populationsCitizen CorpsStudent groupsPublic officialsCitizen groups and organizationsCitizen’s Net

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Community Engagement

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Stand up and be Counted CorpsPilot project funded by United Way for 201225 homeless or formerly homeless personsDevelop training methodology on how to

determine who is homeless and engage appropriately

Map and strategize on homeless hot spotsGuide the community on homeless issuesHomeless Guides with Surface and Specialized

teamsConsumer Advisory Council

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Stand Up and Be Counted Corps

Community Engagement

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Incident Command Structure

Incident Command Structure (ICS) for PIT observational/ hard count

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Surface teams• 9 staging areas – Houston/Harris Co/Ft. Bend

Co/Baytown• 29 study areas subdivided• 80 teams• Each car had:

• Driver• Navigator• Homeless or formerly homeless person• Recorder

• GPS application to record geo-coordinates &zip code mapping

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Outreach specialists16 teams made up of service providersSub-population specialistsUtilized Corps members and peer interviewsOff surface surveillance (encampments, under

bridges, etc) Interviews and engagement

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SWAT Teams

Experienced Health Workers familiar with area

Teams in the “bullpen” at ICS Headquarters

Team captains could request their help, if needed

Assured all areas were covered

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Plant and CaptureMethod of determining undercountHomeless or formerly homeless veterans sent

out as “plants” for duration of countDistinguishing item given – blinker; glow in the

dark hatAssigned to areas based on prevalence of

homelessness in that areaEnumeration teams recorded when they

observed a plant (“capture”)Good in theory; still working out kinks in

practice

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2,600 square miles of Houston Harris County/Fort Bend County

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Shelter Count and HMIS dataHousing inventory countUtilize expanded CoC including faith based

programsSelf report HIC plus HMIS cross referenceCollect data on multiple nightsSubpopulation data acquiredSite visitConfirmation

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Subpopulation dataHUD mandates enumeration of

veterans, chronically homeless, and chronically homeless families (sheltered and street)

HIV +, domestic violence, severe mental illness, chronic substance abuse, unaccompanied children (shelter only)

Sheltered HMIS

Street count Specialized outreach teams Next day surveys

Day shelters Food service providers

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http://www.homelesshouston.org/hh/Community_Resources.asp

(PIT executive summary and needs assessment documents can be found here)

Or contact :

Catherine Troisi, Ph.D. University of Texas School of Public Health

1200 Herman Pressler Dr, Ste 909Houston, Texas 77030

(713) [email protected]

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