Interagency Council on Homelessness
Interagency Council on Homelessness
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Members
Secretary
Shaun Donovan

Department of Housing and Urban Development

Chairperson
Secretary Hilda Solis
Department of Labor

Vice Chairperson
Secretary Tom Vilsack
Department of Agriculture
Secretary Gary Locke
Department of Commerce
Secretary
Robert M. Gates

Department of Defense
Secretary Arne Duncan
Department of Education
Secretary
Dr. Steven Chu

Department of Energy
Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius

Department of Health and Human Services
Secretary
Janet Napolitano

Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Ken Salazar
Department of Interior
Attorney General
Eric Holder

Department of Justice
Commissioner
Michael J. Astrue

Social Security Administration
Secretary
Ray H. LaHood

Department of Transportation
Secretary
Eric K. Shinseki

Department of Veterans Affairs
Chief
Executive Officer
Patrick Corvington

Corporation for National and Community Service

Administrator
Martha N. Johnson
General Services Administration

Director Peter Orszag
Office of Management and Budget
Postmaster General
John E. Potter

United States Postal Service
Executive Director
Joshua DuBois

White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships
Barbara Poppe
Executive Director
Mission

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U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness Steps Up Efforts to Coordinate Response to Homelessness

On December 5, a day that saw much of the Washington area paralyzed by an early winter storm, senior government officials gathered at the White House Conference Center to push forward collaborative efforts that will reduce the number of homeless people on the streets of America and strengthen homeless prevention efforts. The members of the newly revitalized Interagency Council on Homelessness reported on the intra-agency, interagency and inter- governmental collaborations that are taking place on an unprecedented scale to help those who are homeless and those who are at-risk of homelessness.

"These collaborations respond to a new standard of expectation. Our efforts are being guided by the latest research on homelessness. We expect to see visible, measurable and quantifiable changes on the streets of our communities and in the number and circumstances of homeless people."
- Philip Mangano, Executive Director of the Interagency Council on Homelessness

Among the collaborative efforts presented at the Council meeting:

  • A $35 million joint funding effort by the Departments of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Health and Human Services (HHS) and Veterans Administration (VA) to provide permanent housing and services for chronically homeless persons to be announced shortly in the Federal Register.
  • A Foster Care-Job Corps initiative involving the Departments of Labor and Health and Human Services with the intent to establish a direct referral process for young people aging out of the foster care system to receive housing and job training assistance through the Job Corps.
  • A joint initiative between the Departments of Labor and Veterans Administration to help incarcerated veterans transition back into the community. VA Secretary Principi also noted the Veterans Administration was awarding $12 million to support nearly 1400 transitional housing units for homeless veterans over the next three years.
  • Officials from every state will have the opportunity to participate in one of four regionally based Policy Academies, jointly sponsored by the Departments of Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development and the Veterans Administration, to learn how to better access and coordinate the availability of mainstream resources to help those experiencing chronic homelessness.
  • Ten regional Interagency Council coordinators to replicate the federal model of collaboration at the state and local level.
  • An update on the Re-Entry Initiative announced at the first Council meeting in July. Seven federal agencies led by the Department of Justice have pooled $100 million in funding to improve community safety by reducing the recidivism rate among persons being released from prison through more effective discharge planning. Research has shown that many persons leaving prisons are homeless immediately upon release.
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Council members agreed that the continued development of collaborative initiatives is one of seven underlying principles, including eliminating chronic homelessness, prevention, intervention, research, innovation based on performance outcomes and accessing available mainstream resources, that will form the framework for a more effective federal response to homelessness.

The Bush Administration's call to end chronic homelessness received support from three guests at the Council meeting: Nan Roman, President of the National Alliance to End Homelessness who offered her organization's support for the President's initiative; Carla Javits, President of the Corporation for Supportive Housing, who announced a Compact initiative among housing developers to develop 150,000 units of supported housing; and Dr. Sam Tsemberis, Executive Director of Pathways to Housing, who described the successful "housing first" model through which those experiencing chronic homelessness are being moved directly off the streets and placed into permanent housing.

"We come together today to witness an unprecedented partnership being formed between the federal government, the advocacy community and non profit housing developers with the objective of ending chronic homelessness. Our shared goal is to address the most chronic homeless needs so that we can better serve homeless individuals and families who find themselves without a home to call their own."
- HUD Secretary Mel Martinez, Chairperson of the Interagency Council.

Also announced at the meeting was the immediate release of $140 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funding for the Emergency Food and Shelter Program. The funding is distributed through the United Way as secretariat for the EFS National Board to local homeless shelters and food pantries for food, shelter and utility assistance.

"The timing of the release of the $140 million is critical to helping communities across the country fight homelessness", indicated Philip Mangano. "Providing these funds now will ensure that local shelters and food pantries have the needed resources during the winter months when demand is greatest to help those already homeless and to prevent the loss of housing by families at risk of homelessness."

In administrative matters, Council members elected HHS Secretary Thompson and VA Secretary Principi to be chairperson and vice-chairperson of the Council for a one-year term beginning March 2003. The USA Freedom Corps and the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives were added as affiliate members.

 
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Last Updated:
December 18, 2002

The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness
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Phone (202) 708-4663 | Fax (202) 708-1216