It’s part of a national program called Built for Zero that uses a data-based approach to help officials figure out exactly who needs what services.
BFZ accelerates its work in 50 more cities.
Image: GoranH/Pixabay/LunaPic
In late February 2019, the city of Abilene, Texas, made an announcement:
It had ended local veteran homelessness.
It was the first community in the state and the ninth in the country to reach that goal, as part of a national program called Built for Zero. Now, through the same program, Abilene is working to end chronic homelessness. While homelessness might often be seen as an intractable problem because of its complexity–or one that costs more to solve than communities can afford–the program is proving that is not the case.
“By ending homelessness, we mean getting to a place where it’s rare, brief,
and it gets solved correctly and quickly when it does happen,” says Rosanne Haggerty, president of Community Solutions, the nonprofit that leads the Built for Zero program. “That’s a completely achievable end state, we now see.” The nonprofit, which calls this goal “functional zero,” announced that it is accelerating its work in 50 communities.
Here's how they did it.
Article by ADELE PETERS' 'WORLD CHANGING IDEAS'
via FAST COMPANY
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