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Room for Everyone

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... Act amended in 1996 to declare that the federal government 'cannot... someone working full time at minimum wage afford an average one-bedroom apartment. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Room for Everyone


1
Room for Everyone
  • Realizing the Human Right to Housing

2
The Prescription for Homelessness is Housing
3
Basis for a Right to Housing
  • The right to adequate housing is founded and
    recognized under international law.  Enunciated
    under article 25(1) of the Universal Declaration
    of Human Rights, the right to adequate housing
    has been codified in other major international
    human rights treaties. 
  • Article 11(1) of the ICESCR provides that "States
    Parties to the present Covenant recognize the
    right of everyone to an adequate standard of
    living for himself and his family, including
    adequate . . . housing, and to the continuous
    improvement of living conditions." 

4
Basis for a Right to Housing
  • In 1996, the U.N. conference on human
    settlements, Habitat II, focused on the human
    right to housing.
  • The U.S. participated in the conference and
    signed the conference documents the Habitat
    Agenda and Istanbul Declaration. While not
    treaties, and thus not binding, these documents
    outline commitments made by the signatory
    nations, and include sections focusing not just
    on housing but also specifically on homelessness.

5
Basis for a Right to Housing
  • Human rights law defines the right to housing as
    consisting of seven elements
  • legal security of tenure
  • availability of services, resources and
    infrastructure
  • affordability
  • habitability
  • accessibility
  • location and
  • cultural adequacy.

6
Basis for a Right to Housing
  • When a nation recognizes the right to housing, it
    takes on a four-fold obligation
  • to respect,
  • protect,
  • promote and
  • fulfill the right.

7
Practical, Cost Benefit Reasons for Right to
Housing
  • For those living in inadequate housing conditions
    they include, at a minimum, the multiple health
    and safety problems that arise from lead
    poisoning, rat bites, fires, asphyxiation (from
    poorly ventilated heating systems), communicable
    diseases, asthma (Rosenstreich et al. 1997),
    other forms of sickness.

8
Moral Reasons for a Right to Housing
  • Homeless persons are three to four times more
    likely to die prematurely than those who are
    housed. (Jim OConnell, NHCHC, 2005)

9
What is the U.S. Housing Policy?
  • Congress in its preamble to the 1949 Housing Act
    promulgated the National Housing Goal of the
    implementation as soon as feasible of a decent
    home and suitable living environment for every
    American family.
  • That goal was reiterated in the 1968 Housing Act
    and, in slightly different versions, in the 1974
    and 1990 Housing Acts.

10
U.S. Housing Policy
  • U.S. Housing Act amended in 1996 to declare that
    the federal government "cannot provide for the
    housing of every American citizen, or even a
    majority of its citizens

11
The U.S. Reality
  • In no county in the U.S. can someone working
    full time at minimum wage afford an average
    one-bedroom apartment. (National Low Income
    Housing Coalition 2006)
  • 800,000 to 1 Million Americans are homeless on
    any given night.

12
Bringing America Home Act (BAHA)
  • Housing Security Provisions Include
  • Establishing a National goal of ending
    homelessness by fulfilling the human need of
    housing
  • A National Housing Trust Fund
  • 1,500,000 Section 8 vouchers for low-income
    families over ten years
  • Increased authorization levels of Housing and
    Urban Development (HUD), United States Department
    of Agriculture (USDA), and Veterans'
    Administration (VA) Housing Programs

13
NHCHC Housing Recommendations
  • Reauthorize and appropriate 1.8 billion for
    McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance programs
    within the Department of Housing and Urban
    Development (HUD).
  • Expand the HUD definition of homelessness to
    include people sharing the housing of others due
    to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a
    similar reason, and people living in motels due
    to lack of adequate alternatives.
  • Establish a National Housing Trust Fund to build,
    preserve, and rehabilitate 1.5 million units of
    housing affordable to low-income people over the
    next ten years.
  • Preserve and increase current publicly assisted
    housing. Fund all Section 8 housing vouchers
    currently in use, and provide additional funding
    for a minimum of 150,000 new vouchers.
  • Restore the requirement for a one-to-one
    replacement of low-income housing units to
    increase the availability of affordable housing.

14
NHCHC Housing Recommendations
  • Establish housing first policies to replace
    housing readiness policies that keep thousands
    of our most vulnerable neighbors from appropriate
    housing resources and supportive services.
  • Fund renewals of the Shelter Plus Care and
    Supportive Housing Programs from HUDs Housing
    Certificate Fund.
  • Enact the Bringing America Home Act,
    comprehensive legislation combating the housing,
    health, and economic issues that create and
    sustain homelessness.
  • Support public and private initiatives that keep
    people from becoming homeless.
  • Assure that targeted services funded by HUD are
    maintained as HUD support is withdrawn.

15
Housing First Approach
  • Housing First
  • Immediate access to permanent housing
  • Treatment and sobriety is not a prerequisite
  • Assertive Community Treatment (ACT)
  • Intensive case management
  • Services delivered in the community
  • Non-traditional approach to engagement

16
Denver Housing First Outcomes
  • 138 Enrolled
  • 107 Active
  • 31 Discharged
  • 25 Female
  • 113 Male

17
Denver Housing First Outcomes
  • Of 107 Active clients - 96 are currently housed
  • 77 of total clients initially housed are still
    housed
  • 80 of clients maintained initial housing for at
    least 6 months
  • Of those in program more than one year, 68 are
    currently housed
  • Of those in program more than one year, 44
    maintained their initial housing for one year or
    more

18
Denver Housing First Outcomes
Comparing
Housing/Homeless Status
Denver
National
19
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