Research & Evaluation | , ,

New report highlights effective ways to reduce youth homelessness

ORS Impact outlines insights and guidance from an assessment of youth homelessness strategies.
  |  May 28, 2024

As of 2018, researchers have estimated that over 700,000 adolescent minors, or 1 in 30 of the population of 13- to 17-year-olds, have experienced homelessness. These numbers are even more alarming when looking at young adults ages 18-25, of whom approximately 3.5 million, or 1 in 10, have experienced homelessness. 

Furthermore, these rates are even higher for LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC youth, who have a 2.2 times and 1.8 times greater risk of experiencing homelessness compared to all other youth, respectively.

Community Solutions and Built for Zero currently support more than 30 U.S. communities working on youth homelessness efforts. To elevate effective practices and approaches across the broader homeless response sector, we engaged ORS Impact, a strategy and evaluation consulting firm, to conduct a current state assessment of youth homelessness. 

The Current State of Youth Homelessness Approaches report outlines interventions, practices, and broader strategies to prevent, reduce, and end youth homelessness. 

The final product details ORS Impact’s approach to the project, select insights and recommendations from their assessment, and detailed appendices with further information.


Key insights and recommendations from the report include:

  • A lack of a single definition creates challenges.
  • Narrow definitions create challenges for youth who do not meet the criteria. 
  • Broader definitions are not yet actionable.
  • Personalized care, trust-building, consistency, and youth-empowered decision-making are crucial.
  • Diversion programs can empower youth “at the door.”
  • Client-directed wraparound services like counseling, job training, and treatment help stabilize youth.
  • Silos must be broken down between foster care, youth justice, education, and health care systems.
  • Organizations must lay the foundation for sharing data, information, and resources to build a coordinated service response.
  • There is a need for safe and affirming spaces.
  • Services should also be provided for young parents.
  • BIPOC youth must be centered.
  • Infrastructure needs to be developed for sustainable work.
  • Voices of clients served should be centered. 
  • Organizations must integrate a focus on prevention.
  • There needs to be a shift from general to tailored approaches.
  • The focus should be on trauma-informed care and cultural competency.
  • Systems should align around data. 
  • More training and research is crucial. 
  • More flexible funding is needed.

Acknowledgments

We are immensely grateful to the youth with lived experience, community leaders, and organizational leaders who participated in the interviews and focus groups to inform this report. Their willingness to participate, insightful perspectives, and compelling testimonies were paramount in creating this content.

We also want to thank the funders of this work, whose financial support and ongoing input enabled the collection and analysis of data from a wide diversity of sources. The generosity shown by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, Raikes Foundation, Schultz Family Foundation, and The Annie E. Casey Foundation has been critical in ensuring that this work could take place and that the content generated could be disseminated broadly for the field.

The findings and recommendations presented in this report are those of the authors alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the funders.

Defining youth homelessness

As communities make progress in reducing youth homelessness, we developed a functional zero definition for this population.

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