Header: About The Partnership to End Long Term Homelessness


Permanent Housing, Productive Lives

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Residents from Deborah's Place in Chicago

 

Client taking advantage of job training
Client takes advantage of job training

 

Residents relax on the front porch of Cedar Hill supportive housing
Residents relax on the front porch of Cedar Hill supportive housing

 

Resident from Mary Seymour supportive housing
Resident from Mary Seymour supportive housing

 

Why now? For the future.
Why now? For the future.

 

Supportive housing client in new home
Supportive housing client in new home

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Funding Principles for Ending Homelessness

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A NATIONAL FUNDERS MOVEMENT
TO END HOMELESSNESS

Homelessness in America is unacceptable, and it is solvable.
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Funders are helping end homelessness across the country.
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We need your involvement to ensure it continues.

Communities across America have made great strides in ending homelessness. Denver, Colorado has reduced chronic homelessness by 36% in just two years; Portland, Oregon by 70% in the same amount of time and Chicago by 12%. We are beginning to see the numbers go down in community after community.

The fact is that we know how to end homelessness in America. We know that adequate, affordable and accessible housing is the solution. We know that quality housing with supportive services can get our most vulnerable homeless families and individuals out of shelters and off the streets and change their lives.

Philanthropy has played a key role in helping to make that happen. Local and national funders have supported a range of efforts to help eliminate what had threatened to become a permanent feature of America’s social landscape. Rather than contribute to the seemingly endless cycle of homelessness, these funders joined together to invest in innovative research and programs that end that cycle. In the process, they have reshaped the way in which we think about and respond to homelessness.

The result is a growing philanthropic movement to end homelessness in America. This movement is supporting changes in charitable organizations and government agencies at every level to assure the smart, efficient and humane use of our grant and tax dollars and to help people move from homelessness to self sufficiency.

If you aren’t already a part of this movement, please read the following principles and strategies. If you agree with them, we welcome your involvement and support. To find out more, please read on:

Funding Principles for Ending Homelessness

  1. Promote housing-based solutions with access to appropriate services, that are integrated into our communities, as the primary investment for ending homelessness.

  2. Initiate and collaborate through strategic partnerships among funders, local policymakers, business leaders, and government, as well as advocacy, housing and service providers.

  3. Support effective prevention programs and strategies, such as effective discharge planning, employment training, substance abuse counseling, and family reunification efforts.

  4. Raise awareness of homelessness and existing local ten year plans to end homelessness, while building public will for long-term strategies locally and nationally.

  5. Encourage and support research, demonstration projects, and data collection to identify and confirm effective, evidenced-based approaches for serving the homeless population.

  6. Promote needed systems change, including increased coordination across government departments and agencies and efforts to transition providers from shelter-based to housing first models. 

  7. Work actively to leverage national policy and financial support for these efforts.

We, the undersigned, commit to these Funding Principles for Ending Homelessness, pledge to fund activities that promote the Principles, and announce our intention to work in partnership within and across our communities to end homelessness in the United States.

Download Printable 2-Page Version of Funding Principles:

 


Thank you for your commitment to these Funding Principles for Ending Homelessness. Please complete the simple form below to adopt these principles on behalf of your organization. Upon submitting the form you will receive an email response confirming your signature. Fields noted with a * are required.

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Please provide suggestions for ways that the Partnership may use and promote these Principles:


Please let us know if you have an example of an initiative or strategy you have used which reflect one or more of the Funding Principles:
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No - not at this time



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FUNDING PRINCIPLES FOR ENDING HOMELESSNESS: LIST OF ENDORSERS

Steven Melville, Chairman and G. Robert Hohler, Executive Director, Melville Charitable Trust

Emmett D. Carson, CEO and President, Silicon Valley Community Foundation

Steve Hilton, President and Chief Executive Officer, Conrad Hilton Foundation

Thomas D. Nurmi, Board Member and Chairman, Homelessness Committee, William S. Abell Foundation

Richard Vincent, President and CEO, Osteopathic Heritage Foundations

San Diego Grantmakers Homelessness Working Group

BACKGROUND READING: A RESEARCH AGENDA FOR ENDING HOMELESSNESS

This document, published by the Homelessness Research Institute, the research and education arm of the National Alliance to End Homelessness, prioritize key questions for funders and their research collaborators.