County, cities pitch homeless planClark County Clark County is the name of twelve counties in the United States of America:
The money, part of the $1.5Êbillion being given to 540 public and private agencies nationwide, is for preventing homelessness or helping homeless people quickly into housing. But private and public officials who worked on the funding have made it clear that they hope communities across the nation also use the grants to focus as much as possible on the economic crisis while improving the way they deliver services. National and local experts on homelessness said the county-led plan appears to deliver on both fronts. ÒIf implemented with determination and creativity, this approach holds promise of preventing a massive increase in homelessness, while at the same time creating a better system for the future,Ó said Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness The National Alliance to End Homelessness is an advocacy group which promotes measures to end homelessness in the United States. External links
The spending plan developed by Clark County, Henderson and North Las Vegas was sent to the federal Housing and Urban Development Department The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is the principal federal agency responsible for programs concerned with housing needs, fair housing opportunities, and improving and developing U.S. communities. on MayÊ18. HUD Hud (h d), a pre-Qur'anic prophet of Islam. Hud unsuccessfully exhorted his South Arabian people, the Ad, to worship the One God. has until JulyÊ2 to approve the proposal and would release the money Oct.Ê1.
The plan Òcould make a huge difference in the community,Ó said Duffy Gold, director of community development for United Way and part of a group that helped draft the plan. She called attention to the parts of it that would use the least amount of money but help create a new system whereby a few agencies would act as hubs for the delivery of services, with up-to-the-minute information on the many programs in the valley and the ability to quickly match clients to the right program. Now, people wander through Òpockets (of services) here and pockets there,Ó Gold said, often leading to a runaround run·a·round n. 1. Informal Deception, usually in the form of evasive excuses. 2. Printing Type set in a column narrower than the body of the text, as on either side of a picture. . The plan says: ÒHistorically, Southern NevadaÕs homeless preventions system has been fragmented frag·ment n. 1. A small part broken off or detached. 2. An incomplete or isolated portion; a bit: overheard fragments of their conversation; extant fragments of an old manuscript. 3. , with upwards of 15 agencies receiving ... funding ... each with its own set of rules. This fragmentation (1) Storing data in non-contiguous areas on disk. As files are updated, new data are stored in available free space, which may not be contiguous. Fragmented files cause extra head movement, slowing disk accesses. A defragger program is used to rewrite and reorder all the files. is inefficient and ineffective.Ó Revamping a computer system that those agencies currently use to cut down on fragmentation would take $314,000 of the $4.1Êmillion. ThereÕs also a pitch for using part of the money to develop better data on available affordable housing and to work more closely with landlords on getting people into housing. Roman said her organization has pushed for some time to make communities with federal funding for helping the homeless manage their data better, to ensure that services are delivered more effectively and to make it possible to research who needs help and what is working to help them. She said the stimulus money offers the opportunity to make those changes. Shannon West, who is paid by area municipalities to be the regional homeless service coordinator, said a more coordinated, better-run system Òshould have been in place before.Ó But when local municipalities and agencies that help the homeless began discussing how to use the stimulus money, which will be very closely monitored, Òit forced the conversation about how to do things better.Ó Finally, most of the money will be used to prevent homelessness through straightforward programs like help with past-due rent or utility bills, or with rent or utility bills for up to 18 months, or even security deposits or moving vans. West said local municipalities and agencies had begun talking about how to shore up the local system for preventing homelessness last fall, even before the stimulus was announced. Rising unemployment rates, now at 10.4Êpercent in the valley, will likely push more families closer to the brink of homelessness, Roman said, so it is wise to aim as much of the stimulus as possible at prevention. ÒIf you can help stabilize stabilize See peg. a family of four before they wind up on the street, youÕve saved the community an innumerable amount of money,Ó Gold said. The county-led plan is missing one major local player — Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States. . The city sent in a separate plan for spending $2.1Êmillion that focused mainly on helping dozens of people in one tent city The term tent city covers a wide variety of usually temporary housing made of tents. Tent cities may originate spontaneously or be planned. Tents may or may be not comfortable but usually lack plumbing and sanitary facilities which tend to be communal. downtown. But West said Las Vegas not participating ÒdoesnÕt affect the planÕs chance of succeeding,Ó and the city could tap into the improved system after it is in place. Timothy Pratt can be reached at 259-8828 or at timothy
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