HHAP Grantee Assessment Tool

Overarching Principles: Our overarching principles are principles that should be implemented in every program, intervention, and strategy designed to prevent, address, and/or end youth homelessness. These principles are evidence-based approaches or frameworks that increase the positive impact and effectiveness of programs and strategies for youth at-risk or experiencing homelessness.

PreventionIn Structural Prevention of Youth Homelessness prevention of youth homelessness is defined as, “policies, practices, and interventions that either... reduce the likelihood that a young person will experience homelessness, or... provide youth experiencing homelessness with the necessary support to stabilize their housing, improve their wellbeing, connect with the community, and avoid re-entry into homelessness” (36). Implementing prevention strategies is a crucial component of a multi-faceted approach to reducing youth homelessness (37). Preventing homelessness among youth can even serve to prevent homelessness among adults, as evidence shows that experiencing homelessness as a youth increases the risk of homelessness later in life (38).

Outreach and Early Intervention: Outreach & Early Intervention is identified by the Homeless Hub as a critical preventive activity. Early intervention is defined as “providing crisis intervention to those who have recently experienced homelessness. Examples include: effective outreach, coordinated intake and assessment, case management, and shelter diversion” (14). The aim of this intervention is to help youth obtain the support needed to rapidly access appropriate housing. It also focuses on meeting the specific health-related needs of youth, as well as material, interpersonal, social, and educational resources (14). 

Beginning Stabilization: In Structural Prevention of Youth Homelessness housing stabilization for youth is defined as a form of tertiary prevention that “involves assisting young people who have already experienced homelessness and housing precarity to exit that situation as quickly as possible, with the necessary supports in place to ensure they do not cycle back into homelessness again” (46). Simply housing young people is not enough for a healthy transition to adulthood. Instead, youth also need to be supported and accompanied to gain the necessary skills, experiences, and psychosocial tools and resources to undertake the transition to independence (46). Beginning housing stabilization fulfills those needs by including strategies related to housing support, health and wellbeing, access to income and education, complementary support, and social inclusion (46).

Housing Models for Youth and Housing Stabilization: Housing models can be categorized into short-term and long-term housing, Housing models should “combine rental or housing assistance with individualized, flexible, and voluntary support services” (48). According to the Homeless Hub, the goal of all housing options under housing first for youth (HF4Y) is to provide housing stability, support youth holistically, and achieve a healthy transition to adulthood (49). Access to services and supports depends on the specific needs and desires of the youth (49). Core principles of the HF4Y approach are youth choice, youth voice, and self-determinations; youth should be able to have a say on the kind of housing they want to receive, where it is located, and what services and supports they want to access (49). The ultimate outcome is independent living (49). Importantly, housing models and support designed for adults but implemented to support youth are not considered HF4Y (49).

Cross-Systems Collaboration and System-Level Strategies: This section refers to cross-system collaboration and system-level strategies that can and should be taken into consideration when planning a youth-responsive homelessness system. Cross system-collaboration and system-level strategies focus on the collective impact and the shared responsibility the different systems (e.g., education system, child welfare system, juvenile justice system, healthcare system) have in addressing and ending youth homelessness. These two strategies are fundamental to ensure that youth are not falling through the cracks of the system(s), especially in rural and/or scarce-resource communities.

i.7. Youth Leadership

Youth should be considered experts on their own lives. Their unique and innovative contributions should be part of the program implementation cycle. Programs should be designed and led by youth and youth must have decision-making power in all youth homelessness decision-making bodies. Additionally, youth must be compensated with a livable wage for their work. Thus, a plan to achieve this must be created as of the first phases of program design. To ensure youth are successful in their leadership positions, mentoring and leadership workshops and trainings should be available to youth....

What is Beginning Stabilization?

In Structural Prevention of Youth Homelessness housing stabilization for youth is defined as a form of tertiary prevention that “involves assisting young people who have already experienced homelessness and housing precarity to exit that situation as quickly as possible, with the necessary supports in place to ensure they do not cycle back into homelessness again” (46). Simply housing young people is not enough for a healthy transition to adulthood. Instead, youth also need to be supported and accompanied to gain the necessary skills, experiences, and psychosocial...

Ensuring a Rapid Exit from Emergency Shelters

Beginning stabilization among youth begins with ensuring a rapid exit from emergency shelters. Although youth-specific emergency shelters are a key strategy for addressing youth homelessness, they are a temporary solution. The long-term goal is to create youth-specific pathways out of homelessness (47). Ensuring a rapid exit from emergency shelters is the first step to achieving this. The implementation of diversion programs, training case managers to help youth obtain housing, and implementing flexible financial support for youth are key strategies to ensure youth can...

Implementing Supportive and Stabilization Services for Youth

Providing housing, as a standalone intervention, is not sufficient to ensure a successful pathway from homelessness to permanent housing. Organizations implementing temporary housing programs need to accompany these programs with supportive services and access to resources for youth so that they can transition to independence (46). Examples of supportive strategies are Direct Cash Transfers, case management, and wrap-around services.

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Implementing Positive Youth Development Strategies

Positive youth development is an approach that engages youth within their communities and furnishes the support youth need to build on their strengths, skills, and resources. The goal is to identify, strengthen, and develop individual youth ́s assets, while building protective factors and resiliency (16). Strategies include welcoming and celebrating youth, affirming youths’ identities, supporting opportunities to build permanent connections, facilitating youths’ development of life and other skills, and centering youth voices (17). Positive youth development is an evidence...

Providers Training and Support

Service providers and case managers are key to the success of beginning stabilization strategies. Youth-specific trainings prepare service providers to work more effectively with youth experiencing homelessness by using a youth-focused and individualized approach. Each program will have to implement pieces of training specific to their service providers. However, we have identified some key trainings and strategies that all organizations should consider when implementing a youth-specific strategy to address and end youth homelessness.

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Equitable Youth Participation and Youth Development

Programs that equitably and meaningfully involve youth from the start and throughout the whole process are more responsive to
the distinct needs of youth experiencing homelessness and, thus, are more effective at achieving program goals (30). Youth have
unique perspectives and they are the experts on their experiences, needs, and interactions with organizations and systems (30).
Youth should be compensated for their work, leadership, and involvement.

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Support Youth Transitioning Out of Systems

Supporting youth transition out of systems (to avoid homelessness) refers to assisting youth in their transition out of systems such as the juvenile justice system and the foster care system, among others. The focus is on helping youth regain self-autonomy and avoiding homelessness. Evidence suggests that transition-age youth (TAY) from the child welfare and juvenile justice systems are at risk for homelessness, but that programs such as supportive housing programs and other transition services can reduce the risk of housing instability while helping youth develop...

Increasing Access to Services, Supports, and Resources for Youth

As the title suggests, the strategy of increasing access to services, supports, and resources for youth is a means of ensuring that the programs and resources that are available to youth at risk of homelessness are equitable, easy for youth to navigate, well-coordinated, and in communication with each other (43).

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What is Prevention?

In Structural Prevention of Youth Homelessness prevention of youth homelessness is defined as, “policies, practices, and interventions that either... reduce the likelihood that a young person will experience homelessness, or... provide youth experiencing homelessness with the necessary support to stabilize their housing, improve their wellbeing, connect with the community, and avoid re-entry into homelessness” (36). Implementing prevention strategies is a crucial component of a multi-faceted approach to reducing youth homelessness (37). Preventing homelessness among youth can even serve to prevent homelessness among adults, as evidence shows that experiencing homelessness as a youth increases the risk of homelessness later in life (38)