Prove It: Using Performance Measurement Systems to Show Success Tom Albanese, L.S.W. Community...
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Transcript of Prove It: Using Performance Measurement Systems to Show Success Tom Albanese, L.S.W. Community...
Prove It: Using Performance Measurement Systems to Show Success
Tom Albanese, L.S.W.Community Shelter Boardwww.csb.org
Presented at The National Conference on Ending Family HomelessnessFebruary 9, 2007Washington, DCSponsored by the National Alliance to Ends Homelessness
Overview
CSB Overview Family System HMIS Performance Measurement Reporting & Evaluation Impact of Performance Measurement
Systems
Community Shelter Board
The Community Shelter Board was created in 1986 to respond to the growing needs of homelessness in Franklin County.
Non-profit intermediary Funder – shelter, supportive housing, and related services Planning – Continuum of Care, system, funder collaborative Coordination of services
"It is unacceptable for anyone in our community to go without food or shelter for even one night."
Mel Schottenstein, CSB Founder
System Framework
Prevention Diversion Minimize shelter stay Move to appropriate housing quickly
Create permanent supportive housing
Measures results and manage for outcomes
System Design Characteristics
Extensive housing partnerships, including subsidized housing
Access to short-term rental assistance Highly collaborative
Regular system meetingsMOA’s among agenciesShared resources
System Design Characteristics (cont.)
High accountability among shelters due to transparency Shared HMIS Daily bedlistQuarterly indicatorsAnnual program evaluations
Franklin County Family System
First contact between
YWCA Family Center and
family:
Triage Referral Assessment Services Guidance
Permanent housing, usually with Transition assistance (CSB)
Referral to direct housing:Family Housing Collaborative
(Salvation Army, CSB)
Diversion: Helping families stay in the housing they’re in, with support from community
programs, social service agencies, family and friends, and other community agencies.
Welc
om
e to
the F
am
ily
Cen
ter
Referral to Tier II shelter(Homeless Families Foundation, Volunteers of
America)
Referral to transitional housing (Amethyst)
Referral to permanent supportive housing
(2 years - permanent)(Community Housing Network, Amethyst,
Volunteers of America)
Perm
an
en
t hou
sin
g
Treatment programs for severe issues
(ADAMH agencies)
Front Door Shelter
Single point of entry to family system – toll free number; 24/7 access.
Supply of shelter beds expands to meet demand – no family turned away due to lack of space. 50 family capacity at center Overflow capacity as needed
Triage before intake – call or walk in clients Housing First philosophy – assertive and quick housing
placement Coordinated with Tier II shelters, direct housing,
supportive housing, subsidized housing and other housing resources
CSB HMIS
Since 1990, CSB has collected data on persons accessing shelter – characteristics and utilization
Current: 16 agencies, 47 programs Coverage: 95% of all shelter beds; All supportive housing
developed in last 6 years 33 required data elements: varies by program type
2006-07 HMIS expansion to include all HUD funded homeless programs
2007-08 HMIS upgrade
HMIS Data Quality Assurance
Program data required to meet QA standards: Timeliness
All required data elements by 4th working day of month Completeness
95% of all clients for each required data element (<5% not reported/null) Accuracy
Congruent with program type, population served, capacity, etc. Matches agency client record (e.g. entry/exit dates match)
Consistency Consistent with past program performance/outcomes
Performance Measures
Benchmarks set by CSB Board of Trustees Annual Program Outcomes Plan (POP)
Negotiated with agencies during annual RFP process for each funded program
Attached to annual contract Includes quarterly, semi-annual, annual goals
Performance MeasuresPrevention Outreach Emergency
ShelterResource
SpecialistsDirect Housing Permanent
Supportive Housing
Number Served
Successful Housing Outcomes
Average Length of Stay
Average Length of Participation
Recidivism
Successful Income Outcomes (Tier II only)
(Long-term DH
only)
Direct Client Assistance Utilization
Occupancy (Tier II only)
Housing Stability
Housing Retention
Outcome Measure Methodology: Example
Successful Housing Outcome: Tier 1 Family Shelter
Purpose: Indicates program’s success in linking household to appropriate next step housing which includes Tier 2 shelter, transitional and permanent housing.
Definition: The number of distinct households that exit (i.e., latest exit for clients with multiple stays during period) to successful housing as defined in Table 1 and the percentage this represents of total distinct households served.
Goal-setting methodology: Meet or exceed CSB Board Ends Policy or prior performance. Number of outcomes equals rate times number of exits.
Reporting methodology: Calculate the total number of exits and the total number of destinations that are considered successful housing outcomes. Divide the number of successful housing outcomes by the number of total exits.
Program Outcomes Plan: Example
Tier I Family ShelterMeasure
Semi-Annual Goal: 7/1/06-12/31/06
Households Served - # 400
Average Length of Stay per Household 20 days
Successful Housing Outcomes # 245
Successful Housing Outcomes % 70%
Recidivism - % <10%
Access to resources to avoid shelter admission and stabilize housing
Pass certification
Basic needs met in secure, decent environment Pass certification
Ongoing engagement with the neighborhood Pass certification
Efficient use of a pool of community resources CSB costs per household
consistent with CSB budget
Reporting and Evaluation
Daily shelter utilization monitoring Quarterly performance monitoring Annual performance evaluation Strategic planning Community Reports
Quarterly System & Program Indicator Reports Key performance measures: system &
program Issued to CSB Board of Trustees &
Continuum of Care Steering Committee Posted to www.csb.org
Annual Program Evaluation Completed based on first half of FY for use in
following FY funding determination Program outcomes compared to planned outcomes Data mostly derived from HMIS Programs are scored as:
High: no less than one not achieved Medium: half or more achieved Low: less than half achieved
Long-standing, unresolved issues could also lower rating
Issued to CSB Board of Trustees, funders Posted to www.csb.org
Strategic Planning
Example: Rebuilding Lives Initiative 1997 Community “charge” to assess homeless services
for single men impacted by downtown economic development
Data sources Analysis of CSB MIS data Comprehensive Community Needs Assessment Analysis of best practices Review of national model programs
Rebuilding Lives Updated Strategy
Community Reports
CSB Annual Report Rebuilding Lives Updates Annual Community Report on
HomelessnessAnnual and trend dataPoint-in-time count data
Impact of Performance Measurement System Communicates more accurate description of
population (vs. individual, anecdotal needs) Creates higher level of understanding of community
problem (builds community support) Informs resource allocation (annual funding) Informs program development/improvement (CQI) Informs policy options (more shelter vs. housing)
Tom Albanese, L.S.W.Director of Programs & Planning
Community Shelter Board
115 West Main Street, LL
Columbus, Ohio 43215
P 614.221.9195
F 614.221.9199
www.csb.org