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.

Identify All Youth At-Risk of Experiencing Homelessness

Preventing homelessness among youth begins with being able to identify all youth at risk of experiencing homelessness before they become unhoused. Identifying those at risk requires the development of specific monitoring tools, implementing school-based, school-partnered strategies to identify and engage youth early on, and training a diverse range of providers who interact with youth to better identify risk. Early identification and intervention is an effective strategy to prevent youth homelessness (39).

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Fostering Permanent Connections

Fostering permanent connections refers to strategies such as facilitating and encouraging long-term connections with youth and their family members (if safe to do so), chosen family(ies), and other positive, supportive adult figures and mentors. Interventions that aim to reunify, strengthen, and stabilize families by providing training and financial support to caregivers can be an effective tool in the diversion process (41). Special attention should be directed towards youth who are or feel isolated.

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Implementing Diversion Strategies

Implementing diversion strategies means administering interventions that aim to route youth experiencing homelessness away from emergency shelter beds in favor of alternatives such as non-emergency community housing programs and fostering financial security so that youth at risk of homelessness have increased access to rental housing (41). Diversion strategies are an effective method of preventing homelessness among youth, easing demand for emergency shelter, and connecting youth at risk of homelessness with services and financial resources (42).

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Identifying all Youth at risk of Experiencing Homelessness

Identifying all youth experiencing homelessness refers to implementing school-based and community-based strategies that allow
service providers who interact with youth (e.g., teachers, outreach staff, service providers in multiple programs, etc.) to recognize
specific signs that could indicate youth are struggling and might be experiencing homelessness (14). However, there is evidence that
the methods currently used (e.g., Point-in-Time Count) are underestimating the number of youth experiencing homelessness (44).
Multiple and/or innovative methodologies should...

What Can Outreach & Early Intervention Look Like?

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,...

Provider Training and Support

Training and supporting service providers, both working inside or outside the homelessness response system, is necessary for the
effective implementation of outreach and early intervention strategies. Training can help staff better understand the context of
youth experiencing homelessness, reduce stigma, develop empathy, learn about resources available for youth, better understand
the youth homelessness response system, and help them develop or strengthen skills based on evidence-based approaches such as
youth-positive development, trauma-informed care, and...

Increasing Access to Information and Resources for Youth

Increasing access to information and resources for youth refers to implementing programs and strategies that aim to bring
resources and information closer to youth experiencing homelessness. It includes community awareness campaigns, coordinating
effective online communication strategies, ensuring consistent and centralized information so that every provider is sharing the same
or similar information with youth, using local peer networks and advertising through youth-friendly venues, holding magnet events,
and training staff about resources available to youth....

Implementing Outreach Strategies

In the context of youth homelessness, outreach is defined as, “a set of activities in which service providers send staff or volunteers
directly into the community to engage youth who might not otherwise access supports and services” (45). The aim is to provide youth
with basic resources, immediately cover their basic needs, share information with them, connect them with resources, and help
them find shelter or housing as quickly as possible and begin to establish a relationship between youth and service providers (45).
Few impact evaluations have been conducted...

Implementing and Expanding Early Intervention Strategies

Early interventions strategies aim to help youth obtain the supports needed to rapidly access appropriate housing. They meet
youths’ specific needs in terms of health and material, interpersonal, social, and educational resources (14). These strategies include
a variety of approaches such as youth-specific access points and drop-in centers, youth-specific Coordinated Entry Systems, low or
no-barrier emergency shelters and crisis housing for youth, and individualized case management.

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What Should Housing Models for Youth Look Like?

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
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