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McKinney-Vento 101: The Education of Homeless Children and Youth Program Patricia A. Popp, Ph.D. State Coordinator Project HOPE – Virginia The College of William & Mary Presented by Arnecia Moody

Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

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The reauthorization of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Program offers homeless youth providers a greater opportunity to access housing support. Changes in statutory language also allow greater flexibility to design housing programs that meet the needs of homeless youth. This session will focus on how the HEARTH Act benefits homeless youth.

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Page 1: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

McKinney-Vento 101:The Education of Homeless

Children and Youth Program

Patricia A. Popp, Ph.D.

State Coordinator

Project HOPE – Virginia

The College of William & Mary

Presented by Arnecia Moody

Page 2: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Goals• Highlight key McKinney-Vento Homeless

Education Act requirements

• Virginia’s M-V implementation

• Your questions

Page 3: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)
Page 4: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

McKinney-Vento Homeless Education Assistance Act

 Title X, Part C2001 Reauthorization of the Elementary

and Secondary Education Act

Page 5: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

The child’s classroom may be the only place where the child can experience

quiet, interact with children his/her age, and experience success…

School is the most normal activity that most children experience collectively…For homeless children it is much more

than a learning environment. It is a place of safety, personal space, friendships, and

support.Oakley & King, 2000

Page 6: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Who is homeless?• An individual who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate

nighttime residence, including children and youth :

– sharing housing due to loss of housing or economic hardship

– living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to lack of alternative adequate housing

– living in emergency or

transitional housing

Page 7: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Who is homeless? (cont’d)Including children and youth : abandoned in hospitals awaiting foster care having a primary nighttime residence that is a public

or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations

living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or train stations

migratory students meeting the description unaccompanied youth meeting the

description

Page 8: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

McKinney-Vento Act

• Reauthorizes the Stewart B. McKinney Act, originally enacted in 1987

• Provides states with funding to support local grants and statewide initiatives

• Requires educational access, attendance, and success for homeless children and youth

• Outlines responsibilities for local liaisons

Page 9: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

McKinney-Vento EHCY Requirements

• Appoint a local homeless education liaison in every LEA• Provide outreach and coordination to identify students• Enroll students immediately in local school OR• Maintain student enrollment in the school of origin when

feasible and in the student’s best interest– Includes transportation

– Even across school division lines

Get the student enrolled and

keep the student enrolled!

Page 10: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Ensuring Access to Educational Services

• Free and reduced price breakfast and lunch programs

• Title I

• Special education• Gifted programs

• Transportation

• After school and summer programs

• Head Start and (Even Start), VPI

Page 11: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

McKinney-Vento EHCY

• National 2008 & 09 Allocation: $64 million– Virginia: $1,059,872 (2009: $1,015,099)

• National ARRA Allocation: $70 million– Virginia: $1,100,421

• 32 LEAs received funding– 15/38 eligible nonsubgrants

– 17/30 current subgrants

Page 12: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Numbers• 2 million people experience homelessness annually• Approximately half are children• USED 2008-09 data (NCHE) : 956,914 students

experiencing homelessness enrolled (41% increase over 2 years)

• Virginia 2008-09• PreK-12 – 12,768 (29% increase since 2006-07)• PreK – 408• Elementary – 6,998• Middle – 2,646• High –2,716

Page 13: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Young Children Experiencing Homelessness

• 45% of children living in homeless shelters in Virginia are under the age of five.

• 2500 children under five were reported by VDHCD in emergency, domestic violence and transitional programs for FY 2008

Page 14: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Initial Primary Nighttime Residence Category

Children and youth living in abandoned buildings, campgrounds and vehicles, space not meant for habitation, trailers or FEMA trailers, cars, bus and train stations, and abandoned in the hospital. Substandard or inadequate housing does not easily fit into any category as it is not governed by a specific definition and is judged on a case-by-case basis. An inadequate dwelling may shelter but it is not adequate housing.

Unsheltered

Children and youth living in shelters and transitional housing programs (homeless and domestic violence programs). Children and youth awaiting foster care placement.

Shelter

Children and youth (including runaway youth or unaccompanied youth) who live with relatives or friends due to being homeless.

Doubled-Up

Children and youth living in hotels/motels due to a lack of alternative adequate accommodations.

Hotel/Motel

New for 2009-10 in VA: Unaccompanied Homeless Youth Flag

Page 15: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Primary Nighttime Residence Virginia 2008-09

Page 16: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Thanks for all you do!

• HMSE_PICS.mpg

Page 17: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Resources• NAEHCY – www.naehcy.org

• NCHE - www.serve.org/nche

• NLCHP - www.nlchp.org

• NLIHC – www.nlihc.org

• Project HOPE-VA: www.wm.edu/hope

• USDE - www.ed.gov/programs/homeless/index.html

Page 18: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Contact Information

Project HOPE-VirginiaThe College of William & Mary

P. O. Box 8795Williamsburg, VA 23187

757-221-7776 877-455-3412 (toll free)757-221-5300 (fax)[email protected]

www.wm.edu/hope

Page 19: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Context

• Poverty Tour VIDEO_TS.IFO– http://www.usccb.org/cchd/povertyusa/tour.htm

• National Low Income Housing Coalition– http://www.nlihc.org

• VDSS Self Sufficiency Standards– http://www.dss.state.va.us/geninfo/reports/

agency_wide/self_sufficiency.cgi

Page 20: Pre-Conference Session: HEARTH Implications for Youth (Moody)

Causes and Impact of Homelessness• Causes

– Poverty– Substance Abuse– Domestic Violence– Mental Illness– Affordable Housing– Physical Illness– Economic crises

• Impact Absenteeism is greater Developmental delays occur

at 4 times the rate reported for other children

Learning disabilities identified at double the rate

Twice as likely to repeat a grade