Skip to main content
 
File #: 25-0080    Version: 1 Name: Continuum of Care Planning Project Grant FY2025
Type: Resolution-Budget Status: Passed
File created: 2/24/2025 In control: City Council Legislative Session
On agenda: 3/12/2025 Final action: 3/12/2025
Title: Resolution to Amend the Fiscal Year 2025 Council Approved Budget to Accept and Appropriate Continuum of Care Planning Project Grant Awarded by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Indexes: ,
Attachments: 1. CORRECTED CoC Overview CY25, 2. Grant Routing Form CoC Planning Project FY25.pdf, 3. Grant Proposal Overview - CoC Planning Project FY25.pdf, 4. Award Letter - CoC Planning Grant FY2025.pdf, 5. Grant Agreement - CoC Planning Grant FY2025.pdf
Title
Resolution to Amend the Fiscal Year 2025 Council Approved Budget to Accept and Appropriate Continuum of Care Planning Project Grant Awarded by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Purpose
PURPOSE/BACKGROUND:

The Greater Virginia Peninsula Homelessness Consortium (GVPHC) serves as the local Continuum of Care (CoC) and as such has the ability to apply for Federal and State grants. Grant funding is received for the Greater Virginia Peninsula region. This region includes the cities of Hampton(Lead Agency), Newport News, Williamsburg, Poquoson and the counties of York and James City. The region is labeled as VA505. Grants are used for the sole purpose of ending homelessness in the region. This specific grant is designed by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for regional planning activities and data collection that supports the reduction of homelessness.

Discussion:

Through grant funding from Federal and State governments and from localities, the regional body known as the GVPHC/VA505 has reduced chronic homelessness by 44% over the past 10 years in Virginia.

This grant impacts the Federal Strategic Plan to reduce/end homelessness and is also directly related to the regional ten year plan to end homelessness. The regional CoC has adopted the vision that homelessness will be rare, brief, and non-recurring. This planning grant allows the GVPHC to gather data and provides guidance in determining how to proceed as a system to meet the above-stated goals. The most recent data gathered (GVPHC 2023 Point Time Count) shows an increase in chronically homeless individuals from 56 to 69 since 2022 and a decrease in veterans homelessness from 44 to 39 since 2022.

The GVPHC's System Performance Measures over the past 5 years (2017 - 2021) shows: the average length of time persons remain homeless has decreased from 922 to 136 days; the number of homeless individuals has decreased from 512 to 311, and the ...

Click here for full text