USICH appreciated all of the thoughtful comments and ideas. Please visit www.usich.gov to read Opening Doors: The Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness.

USICH wants to hear the best ideas that its stakeholders have to offer on ending homelessness. Explore each of the forums below and submit your own ideas to ensure that no one should experience homelessness - no one should be without a safe, stable place to call home.(click for site instructions)
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About USICH/Frequently Asked Questions

This discussion forum, powered by a tool called UserVoice, allows people to come together, share ideas in response to a question, discuss those ideas, and vote the best ones to the top for consideration by the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. In this case, we are using the tool to get your ideas on the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. Stakeholders from across the country will weigh in -- make sure your voice is heard!


What is the mission of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness?

The mission of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness is "to coordinate the federal response to homelessness and to create a national partnership at every level of government and with the private sector to reduce and end homelessness in the nation while maximizing the effectiveness of the Federal Government in contributing to the end of homelessness."

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What is the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness?

The President and Congress charged the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) via the HEARTH Act to develop and submit the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness to Congress by May 20. The Plan will serve as a roadmap for joint action by Council agencies to guide the development of programs and budget proposals towards a set of measurable targets. The Plan will reflect interagency agreement on a set of priorities and strategies the agencies will pursue over a five year period.

USICH is centering its plan on the belief – the moral foundation – "no one should experience homelessness – no one should be without a safe, stable place to call home." The Council has charged the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness' planning process to align federal resources effectively and appropriately toward four key objectives: 1) finish the job of ending chronic homelessness; 2) prevent and end homelessness among Veterans; 3) prevent and end family homelessness; and 4) set a path to ending all types of homelessness.

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Were there public meetings to discuss the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness?

The process to create this plan is designed to be transparent and provide multiple opportunities for input, feedback and collaboration. More than 400 people participated in regional stakeholders meetings held in February with several more meetings to take place during the first week of March. They were intended to engage leaders of regional and state interagency councils, as well as stakeholders from throughout the multi-state regions. These meetings have been a great opportunity for USICH to hear directly from external and Federal Government stakeholders regarding challenges, priorities and different perspectives on how to prevent and end homelessness in the United States. The input from these sessions is incredibly valuable and will be incorporated into the development of the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness.

For more information, please see http://www.usich.gov/images_uservoice/FSP_Overview_Summary.pdf

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What will the outcome be from the stakeholder and electronic input for the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness?

USICH will jointly create -
a set of targeted, solutions-driven goals and collaborative strategies

  • a roadmap for joint action to guide the development of programs and budget proposals toward a set of measurable targets
  • a set of priorities the agencies will pursue over the five year period – FY 2010 through FY 2014
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    How are you expecting people to engage with the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness?

    Each of the six key questions for the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness has its own forum that participants can submit their best ideas to and engage in. Through this UserVoice site, USICH is able to:

    • Engage stakeholders in an open and transparent process to ensure every stakeholder has a voice in the creation of the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
    • Collect innovative input and perspectives on key goals and strategies that have worked in communities across the United States

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    What kind of feedback are you looking for?

    The UserVoice application will allow all stakeholders to:

    • Submit ideas related to the six key questions of the Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness
    • Rate and comment on the ideas of fellow stakeholders

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    How does voting work?

    When you visit the site, you will automatically be sent to the first of the six areas on this site, a discussion of how local communities can contribute to the vision of preventing and ending homelessness? As a new user, you will have 30 votes in each of the six areas to express your support for others' ideas, or for your own. You can give any idea 1, 2, or 3 votes, depending on how strongly you support it. As you allocate votes, you will see the number of votes you have left, which is displayed on the right-hand sidebar, decrease. Votes are not permanent; you can reallocate votes away from one idea and towards another at any time, as many times as you like. To do this, simply click the vote display next to an idea you've voted for, and choose 0, 1, 2, or 3 from the vote selection menu that pops up.

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    Why do I only have 30 votes in each forum?

    This site's voting system is based on the idea that, when people have a finite number of votes to "spend", they tend to think more carefully about what they really support and how much they support it. You should use your votes to support the ideas you think are most important, so that the overall best ideas and top priorities emerge!

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    How can I add my own idea to what's already here?

    To add an idea, make sure you are in the right forum and simply begin typing the "title" of your idea - a brief (5-10 word) summary of the idea - into the big search box in the middle of the page. As you begin to type, the system will automatically search for similar ideas that have already been created. If something comes up that is similar to what you're suggesting, you may want to simply vote for that idea instead of creating your own. If you determine that your idea is not a duplicate, click the "Create New Idea" button, and elaborate briefly on your idea in the "Description" box that appears. Assign 1, 2 or 3 votes to your idea, as you deem appropriate, and click "Suggest it!" Your idea will be posted immediately, along with your username.

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    How can I learn more about an idea?

    In order to save space and make the site usable, the front page of each discussion area only lists the titles of ideas, part of their descriptions, the number of comments they have received, and their overall score. To see more in-depth information, including the actual comment thread as well as a list of who has voted for the idea, simply click on any idea's title.

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    What's that orange symbol I see around the site?

    You mean this: That's a link to an RSS feed of all the "action" in a particular area of the site, including ideas and comments, etc. To learn more about what RSS is and how you can use it, check out this helpful video.

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    I suggest ...

    Fix the Federal Minimum Wage by Linking it to the Local Cost of Housing Across the U.S.

    This will ensure that anyone working 40 hours in a week will be able to afford basic food, clothing, and shelter (including utilities) wherever that work is done throughout the United States. This will end homelessness for over 1,000,000 minimum wage workers and prevent economic homelessness for all 10.1 million minimum wage workers. www.UniversalLivingWage.org

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      Richard R. TroxellRichard R. Troxell shared this idea  ·   ·  Flag idea as inappropriate…  ·  Admin →

      10 comments

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        • AnthonyAnthony commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          As a formerly homeless man I think this plan is the best way to prevent homelessness among America's working poor.

        •  Mishi Mishi commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          I am from Croatia, in eastern Europe. Homelessness is on the rise there, as well as in other European countries. Yes, the lack of "living" wage is contributing greatly to an inability of many to get a small apartment even. Of course, the wage issue depends on the available jobs. No jobs? No wage. No house!
          Right now, everybody is affected by the no jobs 'beast'. This situation wil change, probably, both in Europe and the U.S., but the decent wage issue should be handled as an independent factor. I mean by this, that a livable wage should be granted regardless of the abundance of , or the lack of jobs. A political stabilization of the wage factor could only help with the other elements of the homelessness problem: like, drug addiction, lack of education, lack of skills etc. Allowing people to have a modest roof over their heads removes the stress of homeless shelters and soup kitchens, and gives people more time to deal with life's other betterment issues.

        • Francis MeagherFrancis Meagher commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          I have experienced the Homelessness side of life myself, and know for a fact that without a payscale or a wage that lets you save enough money to rent a room or apartment in the community, you are stuck in a an economic pit which leads to hopelessness and despair. Yeah, that sounds like histrionics, but it is a drama that exists now in cities like Austin. Too may good people, with and without education and skills, are stuck in a living situation where the American dream is unreachable, day after day, after day. It is so basic: Compensate a good job with the correct wage,

        • Hugh SimonichHugh Simonich commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          It's shameful that a great part of full-time working adults don't make enough to afford safe housing, food and clothing in many parts of this country - including Austin. We need to stand up for what's right.

        • DAVE GOODWINDAVE GOODWIN commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          We need to change our trade policies, so that we are not encouraging corporations to send American jobs overseas, where environmental and human rights policies allow them to exploit others as well as destroying our middle class here at home. We must fight the transnational corps. They have bought and paid for our government.

        • Kevin MeagherKevin Meagher commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          We nned this measure--at a minimum--to to ensure that ALL citizens, and workers can enjoy the basic attributes of this American life, including affordable food and affordable housing

        • Brock HaussamenBrock Haussamen commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          A good suggestion. A single adult who works full time should be able to afford a small place to live. Two adults working one and one-half jobs should be able to afford a home for themselves and one child. Achieving this goal depends on greater availability of reasonably priced housing as well as a linked minimum wage, though.

        • Jo Ann KoepkeJo Ann Koepke commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          Jo Ann Koepke, I strongly support Richard Troxell's idea of having the minimum wage
          liked to the cost of housing in each community. Even in Austin, TX it takes nearly 2
          times the current minimum wage to get a one bedroom apartment. We need to support this idea otherwise we simply won't be able to end homelessness for all the people who work at jobs that are so essential to our communities. Jo Ann Koepke

        • Richard R. TroxellRichard R. Troxell commented  ·   ·  Flag as inappropriate

          The current approach of one wage amount that fits all is antiquated and inappropriate. We are a nation of thousands of economies and just like the military pay system our minimum wage system should reflect this reality. Furthermore, the current approach of raising the Federal Minimum Wage, by some amount that always takes us less than the distance to get to the Federal Poverty Guideline, only ensures poverty forever.

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