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Metropolitan Homelessness Commission

Metropolitan Homelessness Commission. Goal To increase access to permanent supportive housing for people experiencing long-term homelessness in Davidson County To end chronic homelessness in Nashville. Metropolitan Homelessness Commission. Purpose and Values

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Metropolitan Homelessness Commission

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  1. Metropolitan Homelessness Commission Goal To increase access to permanent supportive housing for people experiencing long-term homelessness in Davidson County To end chronic homelessness in Nashville

  2. Metropolitan Homelessness Commission Purpose and Values Planning and coordination: fostering collaboration among stakeholders to improve our local system (increase housing placement rate and helping people stay in housing) Homelessness is lethal; if we don’t change our practices, people will continue to die on the streets Homelessness can be solved if we: • work together • target the resources we already have • monitor our progress and become more data-driven • search for more resources using data

  3. 100,000 Homes Model in Nashville • Build Nashville campaign team • Clarify demand • Line up supply • Move people into housing • Help people stay housed

  4. 1. Build Nashville campaign team • Registry Week Planning team weekly meetings • Housing Workgroup monthly meetings • Outreach Workgroup weekly meetings • Landlord Meetings • Data & Cost Savings Workgroup (in development)

  5. 2. Clarify Demand for Housing • Registry Week scheduled for May 28-May 31 • Community Brief Back – June 4, 10:30 a.m. Downtown Library • Working on collecting data through: • Registry Week – Vulnerability Index • Monthly Housing Reports (HMIS, Service Providers, etc) • Know most vulnerable by name and face • Work towards housing 2.5% each month

  6. 3. Line Up Resources Housing: • Kirby Davis and Commission engaging private rental market • asking landlords to set aside 1% of housing stock (vacant units) • lining up units for after Registry Week • 18 apartments donated since April 11th • MDHA collaboration to target Housing Choice Vouchers • MDHA staff proposing to create vulnerability preference • Up to 18 housing vouchers each month targeted to most vulnerable as budget allows Supportive services: • Homelessness Commission RFP ($405k) due May 14th • Streamline connection to TennCare-funded case management

  7. 4. Move People Into Housing Create an intentional process for people moving from the streets to housing – reduce time from street to lease (Housing and Outreach workgroups) In mid-May, we are attending Rapid Results Acceleration conference in Chicago with other stakeholders In weekly meetings match people to housing, services, and funds for move-in costs (Outreach Workgroup) Track progress each month

  8. 4. Move People Into Housing (cont.) Baseline Estimate = 1094 people (chronic and vulnerable) 2.5% Goal = 27 people each month

  9. 5. Help People Stay Housed Match people to available supportive services if needed – map out various pathways to services (Outreach & Support Services Workgroup) Metro-funded and TennCare-funded case management services Housing/Outreach Specialist to engage landlords and facilitate housing placement and retention

  10. 100,000 Homes Model in Nashville • Build Nashville campaign team • Clarify demand • Line up supply • Move people into housing • Help people stay housed

  11. Previous 4-month plan

  12. Next Steps: 4-month plan

  13. How’s Nashville is a community-wide campaign, aligned with the national 100,000 Homes Campaign. It is driven by community partners who collaborate to end chronic homelessness in Nashville. The Homelessness Commission serves as the backbone organization of the How’s Nashville campaign.

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