Young People to the Front
About JBAY and the Guests * What JBAY does as an advocacy organization (not direct service) * JBAY's work on state policy and budget investments for youth homelessness * How both Simone and Brandon started in direct service before moving to advocacy What is HHAP? * Flexible local aid administered by California Department of Housing and Community Development * Funding goes to 58 counties, 14 largest cities, and 44 homeless Continuums of Care (CoCs) * The "secret sauce": 10% youth set-aside policy requiring minimum funding for youth services * Why young people don't get served without designated funding requirements The Major Success: 24% Reduction in Youth Homelessness * Youth homelessness dropped from 13,000 to 9,900 (2019-2024) * Unsheltered youth homelessness dropped even more sharply by 42% * Over 50,000 young people served by HHAP to date * This happened while overall CA homelessness increased 24% and national youth homelessness increased 11% How Different Communities Used HHAP * LA invested heavily in rapid rehousing (one-third of statewide spending) * Santa Clara County adjusted allocations year-to-year based on community needs * 27% of grantees invested MORE than the required 10% in youth services * Rural communities built youth homelessness infrastructure from nothing * Importance of COCs, cities, and counties coordinating services The Current Funding Crisis * HHAP absent from 2025-26 state budget for first time since 2019 * 2026-27 budget promises $500 million (half of previous $1 billion) * Youth funding would drop from $80 million to $40 million annually * Federal cuts compound the problem (HUD capping permanent housing at 30%, YHDP renewals now competitive) * Unknown priorities of next California governor Why Young People Are Vulnerable * Coordinated entry systems prioritize chronic homelessness and comorbid conditions * Youth who bounce between housing situations don't get prioritized * Youth homelessness is less visible than adult homelessness * Without set-aside policies, youth generally won't be served when funding is tight Path to Functional Zero * What functional zero means: homelessness is rare, brief, and non-recurring * California is trending toward functional zero for youth * Need sustained funding to maintain progress * Risk of reversing the 24% reduction without HHAP Data and Challenges * Point-in-Time (PIT) counts are undercounts but useful for year-to-year comparisons * COVID-era data limited because PIT count wasn't required * Need more sophisticated tracking of recidivism and long-term outcomes * Communities should track whether people maintain stable housing Local and Philanthropic Options * LA's Measure A could supplement HHAP if it includes youth set-aside * Communities should advocate for youth-specified funding locally * Philanthropy can help during rough patches but isn't sustainable long-term * Government's role to sustain homelessness response system How to Take Action * Join JBAY's advocacy coalition for sustained HHAP investment * Write letters and meet with state senators and assembly members * Attend Sacramento hearings and provide public comment * Advocate on social media and talk to media * Contact federal representatives about cuts * Advocate for youth set-aside policies in local investments * Ensure advocacy comes from across California, not just major cities Key statistics * 24% reduction in youth homelessness in California (2019-2024) * 42% reduction in unsheltered youth homelessness * Over 50,000 youth served by HHAP to date * 27% of grantees exceeded the 10% youth funding requirement * Youth funding at risk of dropping from $80 million to $40 million annually Website: jbay.org [jbay.org] Report: "Investing in Impact: How State Investment Reduced Youth Homelessness in California" [https://jbay.org/resources/investing-in-impact-2025/]
54 episodios
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