The city of Dallas, Texas, is one of five U.S. cities, plus the state of California, to be part of a federal initiative to reduce homelessness, the White House announced on Thursday.
Domestic Policy Director Susan Rice and Veterans Affairs Director Denis McDonough on Thursday launched the “All INside” plan with a goal of reducing nationwide homelessness by 25 percent by 2025.
Arnold said the city has partnered with public and private organizations, taken steps to standardize the intake process, and focused on collecting and sharing data to make services available and more effective for the homeless population.
Brodsky said the city has emphasized gaining input from those who have experienced homeless “because I think unless you’ve walked a mile in someone’s shoes, you don’t really understand all the barriers and the complexities they face.”
How the Plan Works
The plan was developed through an extensive process of information gathering from the member agencies, dozens of listening sessions with elected officials and advocates, and input from more than 500 who have experienced homelessness. Nearly 650 communities, tribes, and territories were included in the input-gathering process.The six-pillar plan is focused on three foundations—equity, data and evidence, and collaboration—and three solutions—housing and supports, crisis response, and prevention, according to the USICH.
Each targeted community will have one embedded federal official working with local officials to help accelerate strategies that drive system-level changes at the local level.
The official will deploy dedicated teams across the government to identify federal funding opportunities and cultivate altruistic and private-sector partnerships for support and collaboration.
The Department of Health and Human Services will work with communities to leverage Medicaid and other federal programs which provide health insurance to low-income people, coverage for housing-related services, and behavioral health care.
The Social Security Administration (SSA), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and the Department of Veteran Affairs will work to help individuals obtain government-issued identification and other necessary documents.
Other USICH members, including the Departments of Labor, Transportation, Energy, Justice, and Treasury, have also committed their support for the program.
HUD Grants and Vouchers
In April, HUD released a “first-of-its-kind” grant package worth $486 million and 3,300 housing vouchers to assist 62 communities in addressing homelessness.Homelessness Numbers
This year, 4,244 individuals have experienced homelessness at least once in Dallas and neighboring Collin Counties, according to Housing Forward, an organization serving both counties in an effort to end homelessness.Across the counties, homelessness overall is down 4 percent this year over 2022, and chronic homelessness is down 32 percent over the same period, the data shows.
However, veteran homelessness has jumped 22 percent; youth homelessness has increased by 18 percent, and family homelessness is up by 15 percent over 2022.
The data also showed almost 85,000 veterans, or one in every 160 veterans, were housed in a homeless shelter between Oct. 1, 2019, and Sept. 30, 2020. Seventy-one percent of sheltered veterans reported a disability, and 22 percent experienced chronic homelessness.