West Meadowbrook Neighborhood Association

Mayor's Advise Comm on Homeless

Posted in: W Meadowbrook
Two, recent examples of the work of the Mayor's Advisory Commission on Homelessness:

?˜The Tarrant County District Attorney?’s Office has promulgated a revised protocol for law enforcement personnel on criminal trespassing (CT). Under the new system a property owner may give a neighboring owner or an incorporated neighborhood association written permission to act as agent and, further, neither the property owner nor the agent need be present for an officer to make an arrest. FWPD Captain Read and PD Legal Advisor Karen Anderson along with the Neighborhood Impact and Public Safety Workgroup will be publicizing the final form of this protocol to officers and the public in the coming weeks.

?˜This week, City legislative personnel are working to introduce a bill (hopefully today with the sponsorship of Representative Marc Veasey) that would prohibit the sale of alcohol in a 1,000?’ zone around homeless shelters. In conjunction with the revised CT protocol and liquor license protest, Fort Worth can become a less desirable place to be an addict?—and a safe place to get sober and back into the community.

This said, I will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Chief Mendoza and insist that law enforcement is neither responsible for nor best suited to address the manifold causes and consequences of homelessness. While we are fortunate to have a PD that works with the community and takes order maintenance seriously we will not arrest our way out of homelessness. (Remember, 30% of Tarrant County ?’s homeless are children.) Thus, the Mayor's Advisory Commission on Homelessness is also working to develop services and housing that link accountability with opportunity to facilitate transitions out of homelessness. Here?’s how you can help:

Nationally, it costs more to leave homeless people on the street or in emergency shelters than it does to put them in housing and give them a case manager. (I highly recommend a review of the Denver study referenced in the pdf attachment: they achieved tax-payer savings working with individuals who were chronically homeless, on average, nearly 8 years.) Let the City?’s Taskforce on Quality, Affordable Housing know that Supportive and Transitional Housing saves tax dollars and gets folks off the streets; advocate for the City?’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund generally and the development of permanent supportive housing for the chronically homeless in particular.

We are working to develop a compendium of evidenced-based Prevention and Supportive Services so that we can best leverage programs that work. You can participate here: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?u=580623067855 Support agencies that help keep folks OUT of homelessness in the first place with your money and time like Guardianship Services (http://www.guardianshipservices.org/) the Northside Inter-Church Agency (http://www.nicaagency.org/) or Big Brothers/ Big Sisters (http://www.bbbs.org/site/c.esJQK5PFJnH/b.1621293/k.BE24/Home.htm).

Although modest, Tarrant County has recorded the first decrease in our homeless population in the more than fifteen years data has been collected. The Fort Worth / Arlington / Tarrant Area Continuum of Care (the entity through which Federal funding flows to our community) continues its successful development of sorely needed supportive and transitional housing.



By Otis Thornton M.A.C.H.
Mayor's Advisory (cont.)

Fort Worth / Arlington / Tarrant Area Continuum of Care

Point-in-Time Count of the Homeless: January 25, 2007
Unsheltered
2006 350
2007 203

Emergency Shelter
2006 1,635
2007 1,049

Transitional Housing
2006 1,179
2007 1,626

Permanent Supportive
Housing
2006 1,044
2007 1,164

TOTALS
2006 4,208
2007 4,042

These important programs need your support and assistance; they receive no monies through the city?’s general fund?—none. Some have called for a tithe (a ten percent set-aside) of unrestricted Barnet Shale revenues for investment (in projects and in trust) in the poorest of the city?’s poor. Again, it costs tax payers more (JPS, MedStar, 911, Police, Code Compliance, Environmental Cleanup, etc.?—not to mention lost economic development opportunities) to leave chronically homeless folks on the streets or in a shelter than it does to provide tastefully designed, quality-built, professionally managed, affordable housing and case management. Tax-payers, however, demand (as we should!) that our public monies be spent prudently on strategies that produce the results we desire. And so, plan we must.

The Mayor's Advisory Commission on Homelessness is working to draft a blueprint for City investment in services and housing that link accountability with opportunity to facilitate transitions out of homelessness. In the same way that years of discussion came to fruition with the recent inauguration of Fort Worth?’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, we hope to move our 10-year Homelessness Plan through the (painfully slow) planning phase and into implementation. And yes, (YES!) of course, the plan will be thoroughly vetted in focus groups and public forums.

Efforts to improve our data collection and HMIS (Homeless Management Information System) are on-going as are all of our planning efforts, including work related to the concept development for a central resource facility and a financing plan to produce additional units of transitional and supportive housing. These labors are open to the public and meeting information is posted on the City?’s website: http://www.fortworthgov.org/homelessness. (An announcement for our next Neighborhood Impact and Public Safety workgroup meeting is also attached, FYI.) I encourage your watchfulness and participation in these and concurrent efforts in Arlington and at the Tarrant County Homeless Coalition: together we are making a difference and we can do more.

I look forward to working with you to address these important issues.

M. Otis Thornton
Homelessness Coordinator
Mayor?’s Advisory Commission on Homelessness
City of Fort Worth, Texas
http://www.fortworthgov.org/homelessness



By Otis Thornton Homelessness Coord
thought

Where do you live? I am guessing it is no where near the zillion of homeless shelters and agencies that deal with this issue. While I applaud the effort to assist the homeless, where is it written where the homeless have a ''pass'' on following our laws and ordinances? I know homelessness is not a crime but if I break the law, I face consequences, a homeless person should do the same.
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