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Crain: “We found out a lot of things that were broken ... and figured out how to fix them.”
Crain: “We found out a lot of things that were broken ... and figured out how to fix them.”

Cindy Crain is determined to learn the name of every homeless veteran in Fort Worth within the next 100 days. And the executive director of the Tarrant County Homeless Coalition (TCHC) wants representatives from 34 veterans’ and homeless advocacy organizations to do the same.

Getting to know the area’s homeless veterans is just one part of a coordinated push by TCHC and its nonprofit and government partners to end veteran homelessness here by December 2015. Crain has gotten her hands on some federal dollars to deal with that issue.

But the TCHC isn’t stopping with veterans. The nonprofit has just become the funding hub for a state program that aims to end chronic homelessness in Tarrant County by that same date.

City Roofing Rectangle

The homeless coalition recently received more than $500,000 from the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs to distribute to local nonprofits. The TCHC is the local arm of Continuum of Care, a program funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and aimed at coordinating the efforts of the many nonprofit homeless-service providers and city and county governments.

The state housing agency had previously distributed the grant money, but it tended to fund the same programs year in and year out, without much regard for the changing needs of the community, Crain said. Now the state has redirected those funds to the TCHC as part of a pilot program to see if the money will have more impact in the hands of a local organization.

“The state doesn’t have the staff to evaluate everything all year-round,” she said. I am closer to the ground. I can monitor their performance and make sure we’re getting the outcomes we want.”

Crain said her priorities in doling out the money are ending violence against homeless women, expanding programs that serve the segment of the homeless population that isn’t going to shelters, and doing what she calls rapid rehousing — finding housing for those who have recently become homeless, before they descend into the chronic homeless culture.

After a lengthy process, she selected four programs to share the money: Catholic Charities in Fort Worth, YWCA of Fort Worth and Tarrant County, Presbyterian Night Shelter, and the Salvation Army.

“We were able to stop funding the same projects year after year, which is what Austin did, and create some new projects that address very specific needs in our community,” she said.

The only organization to lose funding from that grant was Safe Haven of Tarrant County. The agency, which helps battered women and rape victims, made up for the loss with additional, separate funds from the state, so it won’t have to eliminate programs.

Homeless advocates were due for some good news. It’s been tough sledding lately for many of the nonprofits that look out for the interest of area homeless people.

Last month, the Fort Worth Transit Authority announced it was cutting a program that gives free bus passes to 144 nonprofit organizations annually through a grant program called Fare Aid. The T handed out more than $300,000 worth of passes last year and sold a significant number of additional passes at half-price.

That news couldn’t have come at a worse time for area homeless advocates, who are losing faith in the city’s commitment to its 10-year plan to end homelessness. The Directions Home Plan, launched six years ago, has found homes for 1,200 residents and decreased homelessness in Fort Worth by 20 percent.

Despite that modest success, however, the city’s homeless population grew last year, and there are still roughly 2,000 homeless people in town. Last winter, for the first time, the shelters on East Lancaster Avenue ran out of emergency beds during the winter storms. And owners of homes and businesses near the East Lancaster corridor are growing more vocal in their opposition to the expansion of homeless-service agencies there.

The TCHC’s successes aren’t just a stroke of luck. In March Crain announced the coalition’s two-year plan to end chronic homelessness in this area. It focuses on outreach and creating new job-placement programs, among other initiatives. The sudden infusion of state and federal cash are some of the early fruits of that plan.

Nine charities applied for the state money. Each of the four selected programs will receive between $85,000 and $147,000.

Catholic Charities’ share of the money will allow it to expand its Street Outreach Service program to nights. The program seeks out homeless people who don’t go to shelters and provides them with supplies such as bug spray, blankets, bottled water, and hygiene and first aid kits. It also helps them with all-important paperwork: documents dealing with housing-placement, letters confirming that the individuals indeed are homeless and therefore eligible for services, and other critical records such as a birth certificates and photo IDs.

Jay Semple, the organization’s Street Outreach Service program manager, said Catholic Charities will work with Texas Christian University social work professor Dr. James Petrovich, who will bring in students to assist in the nighttime outreach.

“We’re missing a lot of the folks in the daytime because they are working, they leave their camp during the day, and they go walk around, they’re all over the place,” Semple said.

Carol Klocek, executive director and CEO for the YWCA, said her nonprofit will now be able to provide emergency housing for the families of women who have suffered physical or sexual abuse.

“We have been providing services for single women since the inception of our organization, but we haven’t had the capacity until now to provide … housing assistance for families with children,” she said.

Klocek said the 2012 Homeless Women’s Victimization study by the University of North Texas Health and Science Center had a dramatic effect on her organization. The study found an alarming number of homeless women had experienced abuse at the East Lancaster shelters.

“The shelters there are doing good work, but the reality is there is a lot of danger in that life, and women responded by saying yes, they had experienced physical abuse; yes, they had experienced sexual assault, and it was a common experience,” she said. “When we realized the degree of violence women were experiencing on a regular basis, the YWCA decided we needed to expand our emergency shelter from three to 13 beds –– and now we have 29.”

The Salvation Army will use the grant money to provide short-term rental assistance for up to 65 people through a subsidy that will decrease each month, until the recipients are paying their own way entirely. And the Presbyterian Night Shelter will use its share of the money to add 11 homes to its “Rapid Rehousing” program, which moves families to permanent homes more quickly than traditional transitional housing programs.

Crain said she wants to see dramatic reductions in the average length of stay in emergency shelters and in the ranks of chronically homeless.

On Tuesday — Veterans Day — at the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall on White Settlement Road, the TCHC announced the first part of its campaign to find housing for the 125 homeless veterans in Tarrant County. In addition to having advocates learn the name of every homeless veteran in town, the plan for the first 100 days requires the agencies involved to triple the number of bus passes available, make sure the veterans have their important documents in order, and create veteran-to-veteran mentoring programs. Funding for the plan comes from Opening Doors, a $600 million national program of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

Crain said TCHC needs to provide housing for an average of 16 veterans a month in order to get all of them out of the shelters and off the streets by December 2015.

Last week Crain hosted what she called a boot camp to coordinate the plans of the organizations involved, which includes the VA and the American G.I. Forum.

Crain said the stakeholders will meet twice a week over the next 100 days.

“A lot of these people didn’t really know each other,” she said. “We found out a lot of things that were broken in our system and figured out how to fix them.”

6 COMMENTS

  1. I just have one question.

    Why is it the tiny, obviously underfunded Fort Worth Weekly continues to kick the shit out of the Fort Worth Startled-WhiteMan-O-Gram on a daily basis?

    Are all McClatchy publications so hopelessly bereft of research, rationality, impartiality and ‘concern for the average joe?’

    I can’t believe a modern city like Fort Worth is saddled with such a pathetic, parochial, right wing bullshit paper. Please tell me all newspapers in Texas are not so hopeless, poorly written, bigoted and lame?

    • The Star-Telegram caters to old people, conservative white guys with money, and advertisers. The paper’s stories reflect their readership. Used to be that mainstream dailies were more independent in mind and spirit, but the corporatization of the news media is ruining those kind of papers. Little rags like FW Weekly don’t have to bow as much to those pressures and can freely lop off the heads of sacred cows when needed. The alt-newsweeklies are slowly becoming the best source of information about a city and it’s no different in Fort Worth.

      • Fort Worth Weekly actually, pre 2006ish I think, went out of their way to get the good stuff out there for us. Calling city leaders when they put on the dog and pony shows, writing about our low downed dirty politicians at the state capitol, as well. They used to encourage and invite readers to write many of the best truths printed for us in the city. Where ever that Weekly went, needs to make a comeback. Start making these crooks get nervous instead of more arrogant…. the list is long but it’s needed. In the whole state! We are never given the whole story and the facts. You have to seek those yourselves it seems and Americans are lazy to look.

  2. Sadly, those of us in Fort Worth education learned long ago that the Startlegram was a waste of time. RIP Betty Brink. For years she was our only light at the end of the tunnel. She was a true investigative reporter. Thank you Weekly for carrying the torch. There is utter chaos in FWISD. The corruption is simply out of control – but also kept out of the public eye. Without the Weekly and the new Concerned Citizens Blog, the public would still be in the dark. HUGE story brewing over Bond issue and real estate deals. Please keep reporting Gail. http://ciafwisd.blogspot.com/

  3. Well, I am elated to read that others find the Startle-Gram so utterly inadequate and I would like to take a distinctly less vile and vituperative approach herein.

    I primarily object to the Telegram’s pandering and dependence on white conservatives, but I am too aware that white conservatives run Texas…usually to advance and give advantage to white conservatives…so it is to be expected that the Telegram monkey dances to the grinder of their Republican master. Texas is their good ole boy’s club so they get to make the rules, but dear Lord, the Telegram’s Bob Ray Sanders is routinely beaten and battered for simply presenting a ‘black viewpoint’ and Bud Kennedy is marginalized to insignificance unless he ‘plays nice’ and sticks to talking about the latest Tex-Mex restaurant.

    All said and done, I enjoy the Weekly’s viewpoints and choice of topics, but it is still distressing to see how this ‘news’ milieu squelches all dissent, all alternative views…all thought…simply by defaulting to the ‘we don’t cotton to that kind of thinking around here’ mentality.

    So Weekly, keep reporting…I’ll keep supporting. Maybe I will even cut back on the ding dang cussing.

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