Take Kisha*, a young
single mother, with two boys, aged two and three, who was staying at Dallas Life.
With the help of her City of Dallas
case manager, Mirka, she found an apartment, and enrolled in a program,
that would pay her rent and even her deposit. The apartment complex required
two types of fees, before she could move in, an administrative fee and an
application fee, totaling $95. Now, you might assume that if the City of Dallas is paying for her
rent and her deposit, which are much greater sums, they could pay these fees
for her. Not so. The rules of the grant that funds the City of Dallas program, does not allow it to pay
these types of fees. Kisha would have been happy to pay the $95 herself, but
her only income, child support, had not arrived on time. So, Kisha and her
boys were stuck.
Or take Sarah and her
daughter Carol, who were staying at Family Gateway. With the help of Marsha,
their case manager, Sarah had obtained a housing voucher, and had found an
apartment complex that would take it. Sarah was excited to have a place to call
home, and it would be much easier to care for Carol, who has a disability, in
an apartment of their own. However, the apartment complex required payment of an
administrative fee of $149, before they could move in. With their only
income being inconsistent child support, and SSI (Supplemental Security
Income), there was no way they could afford this. Sarah and Carol too were
stuck.Marsha, of Family Gateway, an Unsung Hero |
Or take Laura, an Austin Street Center guest.
Working with her case manager, Niki, she too had received a voucher and
found an apartment. Unlike Kisha or Sarah, Laura had only herself to worry
about. Therefore, with her SSI and Social Security benefits, though it would be
“tight”, she would be able to pay her portion of the rent and even her
application fee. However, the apartment complex needed her to put down a $200
deposit, and that she could not afford. I think you can see the pattern
here already. Laura too, you guessed it, was stuck.
Prior to September 2015, Kisha and her boys’ story, Sarah and Carol’s story
and Laura’s story, would all have ended there. They would have been stuck, and
unable to move on. They would have remained homeless because of $95, $149,
and $200, respectively. And these three cases are just examples of
countless others.
So, what happened in
September 2015? With the help of United Way of Metropolitan
Dallas, MDHA launched the MDHA Flex Fund. It was designed as a
fund of last resort, to pay for minor, but impactful expenditures, that can
help folks, just like Kisha, Sarah and Laura, end their homelessness.
Now, we have all filled out
forms for various things in life, only to then have to wait, and wait and wait.
That is not how Shavon operates. In each case, she carefully reviews
each form, and if everything is in order she quickly approves the request. She
then has Wayne, our CFO, cut a check to the vendor (in these cases the
apartment complex), and notifies the case manager that the check is ready. The
case manager swings by MDHA to pick the check up, and delivers it to the
apartment complex. This whole process usually takes only 24-48 hours.
One of the most
attractive aspects of the program is how it empowers the unsung heroes of our
homeless response system, case managers. It gives them a powerful and readily accessible tool, with which
they can end a client’s homelessness quickly and permanently. Since
September 2015, using this tool, case managers like Mirka, Marsha and
Niki have helped hundreds of clients, just like Kisha, Sarah and Laura,
rebuild their lives. And you really can’t put a price on that…
*All client names have been
changed to protect their privacy.
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