Title: SSVF Temporary Financial Assistance
1SSVF Temporary Financial Assistance
2Temporary Financial Assistance Types
- Rental assistance
- Utility-fee payment assistance
- Utility deposits
- Security Deposits
- Moving costs
- Emergency supplies
- Child care
- Transportation
- All funds are to be issued to a 3rd party
3Unallowable Financial Assistance
- See SSVF Program Guide (p. 56)!
- Cash assistance
- Credit Card bills
- Extensive Car repairs (gt 1,000)
- Car Payments for participants
- Medical Supplies
- Food
- Mortgage costs
- Travel costs (bus passes for work are eligible)
- Home furnishings
- Telephone
- Entertainment Cost (inc. cable, satellite TV,
etc.) - Internet Services
- Pet care
4Habitability Standards
- Grantees are encouraged to assure that
participants housing is safe and sanitary by
conducting a Habitability Inspection. - See SSVF Program Guide Exhibit B, p. 68-69 for
detailed Habitability Standards
5Financial Assistance Participant Plans
- If the participant receives temporary financial
assistance to pay rent, utilities, or child care,
grantees must help the household develop a
reasonable plan to address their future ability
to pay - Grantees must assist participants to implement
the plan by providing any necessary assistance or
helping the participant to obtain any necessary
public or private benefits or services.
6The Plan
- The plan is based upon income vs. expenses
increase/stabilize income and/or reduce expenses. - What is a reasonable plan?
- A plan that has a reasonable chance of success
AND - The best plan that can be developed under current
circumstances. - What is unreasonable?
- ltMost of the timegt A plan that assumes the
participant will no longer be very low-income
AND/OR - ltMost of the timegt A plan that assumes the
participant will quickly and significantly change
a long-term lifestyle.
7The Plan affects re-housing/ relocation housing
choices
- Consider likely income when deciding where to
re-house or relocate a household - Dont select a unit that likely cannot be
retained once rental assistance ends - Look for the cheapest housing that is safe
- The household can upgrade their housing as their
income improves
8Example The Larssons
- The Veteran family (the Larsson family) has two
parents and 3 children under 6. They have been
staying in a homeless shelter because the father
was in an accident, couldnt work for a month and
lost his 11/hour job. The mother has been
staying at home to care for the children. - You are assisting the Larssons to move into
housing. - What are your reasonable assumptions?
- How should these assumptions affect the
households choice of housing?
9What are your assumptions for this household?
- INCOME ASSUMPTION?
- Mr. Larsson will find a full-time job that pays
11/hour? 13/hour? 9/hour? - The family will find affordable daycare and Ms.
Larsson will get a part-time or full-time job? - RENT BURDEN ASSUMPTION?
- The household can pay 30 of their income on
rent? 50? 75?
10Analyze your assumptions!
Highest income XXXXX Medium income XXXXX Low income XXXXX
Highest Rent Burden (X) Rent ___ Rent ___ Rent ___
Medium Rent Burden (X) Rent ___ Rent ___ Rent ___
Lowest Rent Burden (X) Rent ___ Rent ___ Rent ___
11The Larssons Assuming 1 wage-earner
Highest possible income 11/hour FTE 22,880 Medium income 9/hour FTE 18,720 Lowest expected income 8/hr, 0.5 FTE 8,320
Highest Rent Burden (65-80) Rent 1235-1525 Rent 1015-1250 Rent 450-555
Medium Rent Burden (50-64) Rent 950-1220 Rent 780-1000 Rent 350-445
Lowest Rent Burden (30-49) Rent 575-934 Rent 470-765 Rent 208-340
12Plan for Larsson Family
- Reasonable Assumption
- 9/hour (Medium Income)
- 50 Rent Burden
- Rent 800
- In your community, it is possible to find a
decent 1-BR apartment for 800/month. Family has
3 children under 6. - Reasonable Plan Second job or higher pay/hour?
OR Higher rent burden? OR Less desirable
neighborhood so HH can afford apartment with 2
BRs? OR Children sleep in BR parents sleep on
sofa-bed in living room?
13Financial Assistance Participant Plans
- If the participant receives financial assistance
for security or utility deposit or moving costs,
the grantee must help the participant develop a
reasonable plan to address the households future
housing stability. - Grantees must assist participants to implement
the plan by providing any necessary assistance or
helping the participant to obtain any necessary
public or private benefits or services.
14Financial Assistance Participant Plans
- The plan is based upon addressing (not assuring)
the participants ability to remain housed. - What is a reasonable plan?
- A plan that has a reasonable chance of success
AND - The best plan that can be developed under current
circumstances. - What is unreasonable?
- ltMost of the timegt A plan that requires the
participant to quickly and significantly increase
income and/or change a long-term lifestyle. - ltMost of the timegt A plan that presumes the
household will have no future financial crises,
will not move to different housing, and will
exhibit a high level of skill in all aspects of
housing.
15What is necessary for housing stability?
- Ability to pay the rent
- Ability to comply with the lease
- Ability to care for the unit (or at least not
damage it!) - Ability to get along with the landlord and other
tenants (or at least not escalate into open
conflict)
16Ability to pay the rent
- Income vs. Rent. Ideally, rent should not be
more than 60 of income, but this will not always
be possible. - Emergency reserves. Ideally, a household should
have enough savings to cover emergencies without
sacrificing rent, but this will not always be
possible. - Budgeting. Reduce discretionary expenses,
increase use of in-kind assistance. - Last resort Representative payee or vendor-paid
benefits for rent.
17Ability to comply with the lease
- Understand landlord-tenant rights and
responsibilities - Translate important lease language
- Identify patterns of past non-compliance and plan
to prevent recurrence - Illegal drugsbuying, selling, using
18Ability to care for the unit (or at least not
damage it)
- Fire-safety
- Sanitation
- Plumbing!
- Soft expectations for housekeeping
- Knowledge of cleaning methods and products
- Avoid do-it-yourself
19Ability to get along.
- Soft expectations/norms for noise, odor,
interactions, childrens behavior - Ability to respond appropriately to complaints
- Ability to make appropriate complaints
- Ability to talk to landlord and negotiate for
rent extension, guests, etc. - Boundaries for friends/family who visit
20When does a participant need more than SSVF can
offer?
- Look at your targeting, screening and assessment.
Are you screening out too many households? Are
your participants failing immediately after
services end (participants may experience another
crisis in the future)? - Does a participant need longer-term or more
intensive assistance than you can offer? Is that
assistance available and acceptable to the
household? If not, you may be their only hope. - May need to refer participants to other services.
Know what is available !
21How much and what kind of financial assistance?
- Just enough for participant to get or keep
housing - If household isnt expected to be able to sustain
costs of current housing once financial
assistance ends, just enough to relocate to less
expensive housing - Does not exceed the SSVF time/frequency limits
for each category of financial assistance - Within your programs budget cap for total
temporary financial assistance spending (30 of
grant)
22Financial Assistance Requirements and Limitations
- Third party payments only
- No assistance if the participant is already
receiving another form of Federal/state or local
assistance for the same time period and cost type
(e.g. LIHEAP and SSVF utility assistance) - Costs must be reasonable and documented
23Rental Assistance
- Maximum of 8 months over a 3-year period, or 5
months over a 12-month period (months of arrears
assistance are included in these totals!) - Includes the payment of rent, penalties or fees
to help a participant remain in or obtain
permanent housing - Legal lease or written occupancy agreement must
be in place - Rents must comply with HUDs rent
reasonableness standard FMRs do not apply
24 Rental AssistanceConsiderations
- How can you design a subsidy that is extremely
short-term? Avoid the cliff effect. - How much does the household pay (vs. SSVF) toward
rent? - Can the amount of rental subsidy be designed so
the family can use some of their income to build
emergency reserves for future crises? - How can you increase income, reduce expenses
and/or re-house or relocate the household ASAP
before rental assistance ends? - Can you bargain for a rent reduction?
25Utility Assistance
- Maximum of 4 months over a 3-year period or 2
months in a 12-month period - Months do not need to be consecutive or
concurrent with rental assistance - Includes arrears
- Eligible utilities heat, electricity, water,
sewer and garbage collection - Ineligible telephone, cable, others
26Utility AssistanceConsiderations
- Can you help the household quickly obtain another
longer-term source of utility assistance? - Can you assist the household to reduce utility
expenses significantly through an energy audit? - Can the household obtain housing where utilities
are included in the rent? Is that option a fair
trade-off of expenses? - Can the household sign up for a budget plan
billing that allows the same monthly heating
payment year round? (This is not necessarily
tied to incomeany household can choose this
billing method and it makes monthly budgeting
easier.)
27Utility Security Deposits
- Maximum of one payment of each deposit over a
3-year time period - Does not count towards utility or rental
assistance limitations - Utility security deposits covering the same
period of time in which assistance is provided
through other housing subsidies are eligible.
28Deposit Payment Considerations
- When the participant owes substantial utility
arrears and thus cannot get utilities connected
in another apartment, consider renting a unit
where the landlord is responsible for utilities
it may be less expensive than paying all arrears. - Security deposits MAY be negotiableup or down
(sometimes a higher deposit is the only way to
obtain housing for a tenant with a very poor
rental history, criminal history, etc.) -
29Moving Costs
- Includes moving company expenses, and short-term
storage feesall are limited to one time in a
3-year period. - Storage Maximum of three months or until the
participant is in permanent housing (whichever
comes first) - Transportation costs for participants related to
a move (e.g., bus, train) are not eligible - Grantees are responsible for determining
reasonable costs and any limits that apply.
This will be monitored. - If a grantee decides to help a client relocate to
another geographic area, the grantee still
retains responsibility for ensuring all program
requirements are met.
30Transportation Assistance
- No limit on amount of public transportation
assistance (within program budget) - No time limit on public transportation assistance
- Maximum of 1,000 car repairs/maintenance over a
3-year period - Eligible only if such assistance will help
enhance housing stability - E.g. Local bus pass so a participant can travel
to her new job while she relocates to a closer
apartment.
31Child Care Assistance
- Maximum of 4 months over a 3-year period, per
household (even if household includes multiple
children) - Payment must be made to an eligible child care
provider - A provider of child care services for
compensation, including a provider of care for a
school-age child during non-school hours, that
(1) is licensed, regulated, registered, or
otherwise legally operating, under state and
local law, and (2) satisfies the state and local
requirements, applicable to the child care
services the provider provides.
32Child Care Assistance Considerations
- Is the need for child care temporary? Until a
relative can help or a parent recovers from an
illness/injury or a couple can find jobs on
different shifts? - Know the waiting lists for affordable child
careis a 4-month subsidy long enough to bridge
the time until the household is accepted?
33Emergency Supplies
- Maximum of 500 over a 3-year period
- Includes supplies that the grantee deems
necessary for the participants life or safety - Examples food, medical supplies, baby formula or
diapers, etc. - These supplies are only eligible when the
participant is in an emergency situation
34Associated Costs
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- Costs associated with processing and implementing
financial assistance are eligible costs within
the 90 of grant funds that must be spent to
provide or coordinate supportive services (not an
administrative cost). Examples - Time spent cutting checks to landlords
- Habitability inspections
35Adequate Source Documentation
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- Evidence that costs were
- Incurred during grant period
- Actually paid (or properly accrued)
- Expended on allowable items for eligible
participants - Approved by responsible official (within your
agency) prior to expenditure
36Adequate Source Documentation
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- Examples
- Rental Assistance
- Lease confirming participant and landlords
names, rental unit address, term (length) of
lease, utility inclusion (if any), a bill or paid
invoice, and official recommendation and approval
by agency for payment - Moving Costs
- Invoice or payment request from the moving
company to the participant
37Common Errors
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- Missing or insufficient documentation for
expenses paid - No comparison to determine that costs were
reasonable - No rent reasonableness for units assisted
- No comparison costs reviewed for moving, and
storage expenses - Ineligible expenditures
- Paid more than is allowable
- E.g. Rental assistance for 6 months within 1 year
38Final Considerations
- Just enough Provide only the assistance that
is needed to assure the household can get and
keep housing. - Stretch your financial assistance e.g. limiting
participants rent contributions at 30 of their
income will reduce funds available to assist
others. - You mayand probably should charge co-pays.
- Prioritize who you will serve and what needs you
must address. - You are encouraged to target households who, but
for this assistance, would become or remain
homeless.
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