The
City of Santa Monica was recently selected as one of 10 communities
nationwide to receive a federal grant to help combat long-term
homelessness.
Officials from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) will present the grant to city leaders on Tuesday, September 13,
2005, at the beginning of the City Council meeting, 6:45 p.m., in the
Council Chamber at Santa Monica City Hall, 1685 Main St.
The
federal agency announced that Santa Monica will receive over $700,000
for rental subsidies and other costs over two years to provide permanent
housing with supportive services to house 30 persons who are chronically
homeless and addicted to alcohol. The focus of the grant is Santa
Monica’s long-term homeless individuals who are living on the streets
and who are addicted to alcohol. These individuals tend to have the
highest utilization of public resources and services such as police,
paramedics and hospital emergency rooms.
The
federal grant will provide the rental costs, and the City and homeless
providers will provide a match for the supportive services needed to get
them into housing and keep them off the streets. The City of Santa
Monica and its partner agencies--CLARE Foundation, OPCC, New Directions,
St. Joseph’s Center, Step Up on Second, Venice Family Clinic, LA County
Department of Mental Health, local hospitals and others--will provide
supportive services during a six-month period of stabilization before
placing individuals in permanent housing and will continue the services
after they are housed.
The
approach to service delivery will be an expansion of the City’s Chronic
Homeless Program, which began in July 2004. This model uses a
multi-disciplinary team to strategically assess the needs of chronically
homeless individuals and focus resources on interventions.
To
date, the chronic pilot project has served 25 individuals, who have had
an average time of homelessness of 12 years. Of these individuals, 10
are now permanently housed; 3 are in temporary housing with placements
pending; 1 is on the street with placement pending; 8 are homeless and
in the process of engagement; 2 are in jail or in the hospital; and 1
passed away.
The
other communities selected for the grant were Chicago, Chattanooga,
Contra Costa County, Denver, Jacksonville, New York, San Francisco, San
Jose, and Santa Cruz.
The
grant was supported by several community organizations and civic
leaders, including:
-
The Honorable Henry A. Waxman, Member of Congress, 30th District
-
The Honorable Bernard J. Kamins, Judge, Superior Court
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CLARE Foundation
-
Chrysalis
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Common Ground – Westside HIV Community Center
-
Hand to Hand
-
Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health
-
Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority
-
New Directions, Inc.
-
OPCC
-
St. Joseph Center
-
St. John's Health
Center
-
Santa Monica – UCLA Medical Center
-
Side by Side
-
Step Up on Second
-
Venice Family Clinic