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Emergency Shelter Inventory Columbus and Franklin County, Ohio
RLUS Steering Committee Presentation
December 5, 2006
2
Prepared for the
Rebuilding Lives Updated Strategy Steering Committee
Prepared by
the Center for Urban Community Services
3
Goals of the Inventory
Understand system change from ’98 to ‘06 Total inventory and beds targeted to specific
populations Distribution by zip code Total investments by public and private
funding sources (2/07) Average daily cost per unit (2/07)
4
Data Sources
HUD Shelter Inventories from 1998 to 2006
CSB partner agency contracts and budgets
Agency funding reports
5
Key Findings – Comparison of ’98 to ‘06
Capacity remained relatively stable – Increase in total units of 7%.
Growth in units serving families (14%) and single women (63%) outpaced growth in the system as a whole.
Bed distribution by gender shifted over time: Beds designated for women increased from 14%
of total singles beds to19%. Beds designated for men decreased from 84% of
total singles beds to 78%.
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Key Findings – Comparison of ’98 to ‘06
Capacity to serve public inebriates more than doubled from ’98 (n=24) to ’06 (n=50).
Units were more evenly distributed across zip codes in ’06:
66% of units were located in zip code 43215 in ’98. 29% of units were located in zip code 43215 in ’06.
7
Total System Overview – ’98 to ‘06
12 emergency shelter programs with capacity to serve 619 households in ’98.
Peak capacity occurred in ’02 at 746 households (increase 21% from ’98).
13 programs with capacity to serve 663 households (increase 7% from ’98, decrease 11% from ’02).
6 shelters closed and 7 opened
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Capacity Total SystemChart #1: Capacity: Singles/Families Combined for All
Years
508 514 514 517
625 617
536 536 536
111 118 118 118
121114
117 117 127
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Year
Un
its
Singles Families
Families 111 118 118 118 121 114 117 117 127
Singles 508 514 514 517 625 617 536 536 536
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
619632 632 635
746731
653 653663
82%
18% 19% 19%
81% 81%
19%
81%
16%
84%
16%
84%
18% 18%
82% 82%
19%
81%
9
Family System Overview
5 programs with capacity to serve 111 families in ‘98.
Family capacity peaked in 2006 when 4 programs had 127 family units (increase 14% from ’98)
10
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Targeted Sub-populations
The number of domestic violence units has remained steady at 34 units.
The number of units for public inebriates has more than doubled.
Youth beds increased by 33% - from12 to 16 units.
12
Unit Distribution by Zip Code
CHART #5B: TOTAL - CAPACITY BY ZIP CODE - 2006
43201 , 111, 17%
43205 , 177, 26%
43206 , 13, 2%
43207 , 50, 8%
43215 , 198, 29%
43219 , 50, 8%
43223 , 40, 6%
43228 , 24, 4%
43201 43205 43206 43207 43215 43219 43223 43228
Key: Zip Code, Units, Percentage
CHART #5A: TOTAL - CAPACITY BY ZIP CODE - 1998
43205 , 169, 27%
43206 , 8, 1%
43207 , 0, 0%
43215 , 403, 66%
43228 , 0, 0%
43223 , 0, 0%
43225, 27, 4%
43219 , 0, 0%
43201 , 12, 2%
43201 43205 43206 43207 43215 43219 43223 43225 43228
Key: Zip Code, Units, Percentage
DATA UPDATED SINCE 11/27/06 DRAFT REPORT
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14
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Next Steps
Analysis of resources invested over time
Development of average cost per shelter unit for adults and families
Using client data, review outcomes of specific programs
16
Questions or Comments?
Contact:
Lauren Bholai-Pareti
CUCS Housing Resource Center
120 Wall Street, 25th Floor
New York, NY 10005
www.cucs.org
Tel: (212) 801-3355
Fax: (212) 801-3325
Email: [email protected]