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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

July 2010: 

Rural Homelessness: 

Better Collaboration by HHS and HUD Could Improve Delivery of Services 
in Rural Areas: 

GAO-10-724: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-724, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing 
(HEARTH) Act of 2009 directed GAO to conduct a broad study of 
homelessness in rural areas. In this report, we provide information 
about rural homelessness issues, based in significant part on our work 
in rural areas within six selected states. Specifically, the report 
addresses the following questions: (1) What are the characteristics of 
homelessness in rural areas? (2) What assistance is available to 
individuals or families experiencing homelessness and what amount of 
funding have the federal departments and agencies awarded to 
organizations that assist persons experiencing homelessness in rural 
areas? (3) What barriers do persons experiencing homelessness and 
homeless service providers encounter when seeking assistance or 
funding to provide assistance? To address these issues, GAO reviewed 
relevant literature, conducted site visits, and interviewed agency 
officials. 

What GAO Found: 

Rural homelessness involves a range of living situations but comparing 
the extent of homelessness in rural and nonrural areas is difficult 
primarily due to data limitations. Based on GAO visits to six states, 
persons experiencing homelessness in rural areas could be living in 
one of a limited number of shelters, in extremely overcrowded 
situations, in severely substandard housing, or outdoors. While HUD 
and other agencies collect some data on homeless populations, several 
challenges exist in using these data to compare the extent of 
homelessness in rural and nonrural areas. They include difficulties in 
counting transient populations, limited reporting by service providers 
in federal data systems, inconsistent reporting across programs, and 
focusing on the segments of the homeless population that the agency 
serves. Definitional differences also make comparisons difficult. For 
instance, the three most common federal definitions of rural use 
differing criteria such as population or proximity to urban areas. 
Even within one measure such as population, different agencies can use 
different parameters and therefore identify different areas as rural. 

A number of federal programs exist to support those experiencing 
homelessness in rural areas. Targeted and nontargeted programs fund 
permanent and emergency housing and supportive services such as mental 
health services, case management, and job training. However, federal 
agencies maintain limited data on the amount of homeless assistance 
awarded to rural areas, making comparisons with assistance awarded to 
nonrural areas difficult. For instance, HUD maintains some data on the 
amount of homeless assistance awarded to rural areas through its 
targeted programs, but the data are based on providers’ identification 
of locations as rural or not. Nontargeted programs can serve persons 
experiencing homelessness but do not track how much funding is used 
for homeless assistance. As a result of data limitations such as 
these, comparisons of funding levels offer limited insight into the 
relationship between the size of the homeless population in an area 
and the amount of funding received. 

Barriers to accessing and providing homeless services in rural areas 
include limited access to services, large service areas, dispersed 
populations, and a lack of transportation and affordable housing 
according to state and local officials and persons experiencing 
homelessness in the states we visited. For instance, many rural areas 
have few shelters or shelters with few beds serving very large areas. 
A program in which HUD provides housing vouchers to homeless veterans 
and the Department of Veterans Affairs provides clinical and case 
management services to these same veterans is one of a limited number 
of examples of formal collaboration and leveraging of federal 
resources that link housing and supportive services. The effects of 
limited collaboration may be particularly acute in rural areas because 
of the barriers cited above. Without a more formal linking of housing 
and supportive services by HUD and HHS, two of the key agencies for 
funding these activities, the effectiveness of federal efforts to 
address homelessness may be diminished. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Departments of Housing and Urban Development 
(HUD) and Health and Human Services (HHS) explore further 
opportunities to strengthen formal collaboration on linking housing 
and supportive services to address homelessness, with specific 
consideration for how such collaboration can minimize barriers to 
service provision in rural areas. HHS and HUD generally agreed with 
the recommendation. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-724] or key 
components. For more information, contact Alicia Cackley at (202) 512-
8678 or cackleya@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Health and Human Services: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Typology of Definitions of "Homelessness" among Federal 
Agencies with Targeted Homeless Assistance Programs, as of July 2010: 

Table 2: Rural Funding within HUD's CoC Programs, Based on Grant 
Applicant Reporting as Rural or Not: 

Table 3: Urban and Rural Fiscal Year Funding for VA's Capital Grant 
Awards for the Grant and Per Diem Program Based on Grant Applicant 
Reporting as Rural or Not: 

Table 4: Possible Needs of the Homeless Population and Potential 
Corresponding Barriers in Rural Areas: 

Table 5: Examples of Supportive Services That Federal Agencies, 
Excluding HUD, Can Provide to Persons Experiencing Homelessness: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Federal Programs That May Benefit Persons Experiencing 
Homelessness in Rural Areas: 

Figure 2: Percent of Total Federal Funding Targeting Homelessness by 
Agency for Fiscal Year 2009: 

Figure 3: HUD's CoC Housing and Supportive Services Distribution: 

Abbreviations: 

AHAR: Annual Homeless Assessment Report: 

BIA: Bureau of Indian Affairs: 

CDBG: Community Development Block Grant: 

CHALENG: Community Homelessness Assessment Local Education and 
Networking Groups: 

CoC: Continuum of Care: 

CICH: Collaborative Initiative to Help End Chronic Homelessness: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

Education: Department of Education: 

ESG: Emergency Shelter Grant: 

ESEA: Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965: 

HEARTH: Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing 
Act of 2009: 

HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: 

HMIS: Homelessness Management Information System: 

HUD: Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

Labor: Department of Labor: 

NAHASDA: Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act: 

PATH: Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness: 

PIT: Point-in-Time: 

RHYMIS: Runaway and Homeless Youth Management Information System: 

USDA: Department of Agriculture: 

VA: Department of Veterans Affairs: 

VASHVA: Supportive Housing: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 20, 2010: 

Congressional Committees: 

Homelessness has sometimes been characterized as the "extreme end of 
poverty."[Footnote 1] In rural areas of the United States, 
homelessness has not attracted the same level of attention as in urban 
areas, although research has shown that the highest poverty rates 
occur in rural areas as well as center cities. Although some studies 
have examined the issue of homelessness in rural areas, little 
comprehensive data exist on the extent of homelessness in these areas 
or the extent to which various federal programs meet the needs of 
those experiencing homelessness in rural areas or support providers 
that serve this population. The Homeless Emergency Assistance and 
Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH) Act of 2009 created the Rural 
Housing Stability Grant Program.[Footnote 2] This grant program is 
seen as to allow rural areas more flexibility to identify and address 
the needs of persons experiencing homelessness or those in the worst 
housing situations and reserves Department of Housing and Urban 
Development (HUD) funding for which rural communities may apply 
separately. 

The HEARTH Act also directed GAO to conduct a broad study of 
homelessness in rural areas, including tribal lands and colonias. 
[Footnote 3] In this report, we provide information about rural 
homelessness issues, based in significant part on our work in rural 
areas within six states. Specifically, the report addresses the 
following questions: 

1. What are the characteristics of homelessness in rural areas? 

2. What assistance is available to individuals or families 
experiencing homelessness and what amount of funding have the federal 
departments and agencies awarded to organizations that assist persons 
experiencing homelessness in rural areas? 

3. What barriers do persons experiencing homelessness and homeless 
service providers encounter when seeking assistance or funding to 
provide assistance? 

To address these questions, we conducted a review of relevant reports, 
studies, and our prior research. We also conducted site visits in 
Arizona, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, New Mexico, and Texas. During 
these visits, we interviewed federal, state, and local housing and 
homelessness officials and nonprofit homelessness organizations, and 
toured rural areas in which homelessness was present. We selected the 
site visit locations based on several factors, including (1) 
discussions with knowledgeable individuals in the field of 
homelessness, (2) a review of studies and reports on local and state 
efforts to serve the homeless in rural areas, (3) the presence of 
tribal lands and colonias, and (4) geographical diversity. We also 
reviewed relevant laws, regulations, and program documentation and 
interviewed officials from various federal agencies as well as 
national stakeholder organizations. For purposes of this report, we 
did not limit ourselves to any one federal definition of homelessness 
and did not specify a specific definition when speaking with 
researchers, providers, and relevant government officials, but they 
did clarify on how they defined homelessness in the context of their 
comments. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2009 to July 2010 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

Several federal programs--mainstream and targeted--may be available to 
assist those experiencing homelessness in rural and nonrural areas. 
Mainstream programs--such as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, 
public housing, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, 
Medicaid, and the Workforce Investment Act--provide a wide range of 
assistance, such as cash assistance, housing, food, health care, and 
job training, for low-income people including those experiencing 
homelessness. Targeted programs--such as the Emergency Shelter Grant 
and Runaway and Homeless Youth programs--also provide a range of 
services but are designed specifically for individuals or families 
experiencing homelessness.[Footnote 4] 

The McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (McKinney-Vento) is the 
principal federal legislation designed to provide funding for shelter 
and services to persons experiencing homelessness.[Footnote 5] 
McKinney-Vento originally consisted of 15 programs providing, among 
other things, resources for emergency shelter, transitional housing, 
job training, primary health care, education, and permanent housing. 
The current act has been amended several times and was most recently 
reauthorized by the HEARTH Act. For the most part, these amendments 
have expanded the scope and strengthened the provisions of the 
original legislation by expanding eligible activities and creating new 
programs. This legislation continues to represent the primary source 
of funding for targeted programs serving persons experiencing 
homelessness. HUD administers both competitive and formula-based 
McKinney-Vento programs that fund activities to address homelessness 
in rural and nonrural areas. HUD's competitively awarded homeless 
programs comprise the "Continuum of Care" (CoC) system. According to 
HUD, the program is based on the understanding that homelessness is 
not caused solely by a lack of shelter, but also involves other 
physical, social, and economic needs. Through the CoC system HUD 
allocates homeless assistance grants to organizations that participate 
in homeless assistance program planning networks. The planning network 
or CoC refers to a group of providers and key stakeholders in a 
geographical area--a city, a county, a metropolitan area, or an entire 
state--that join to plan for the homeless housing and service system 
within that geographic area and apply for HUD's competitive homeless 
program funding.[Footnote 6] Rural areas typically organize into 
regional or balance-of-state (areas in the state not already covered 
by other continuums) CoC systems which may include a mixture of rural 
and nonrural areas. Areas in 37 states or territories are organized as 
balance-of-state CoCs, while other states such as Minnesota and 
Nebraska have organized into regional CoC systems. Several other 
federal agencies also have programs targeting homelessness that 
primarily provide supportive services--including the Departments of 
Education (Education), Homeland Security (DHS), Labor (Labor), Justice 
(DOJ), Health and Human Services (HHS), and Veterans Affairs (VA). 
[Footnote 7] 

McKinney-Vento also authorized the creation of the U.S. Interagency 
Council on Homelessness (Interagency Council), which currently 
includes 19 member agencies.[Footnote 8] McKinney-Vento mandated that 
the Interagency Council identify duplication in federal programs and 
provide assistance to states, local governments, and other public and 
private nonprofit organizations to enable them to serve those 
experiencing homelessness more effectively. The HEARTH Act revises the 
Interagency Council's mission to coordinate the federal response to 
homelessness and create a national partnership at every level of 
government and with the private sector to reduce and end homelessness. 
[Footnote 9] HEARTH also mandates that the Interagency Council develop 
and annually update a national strategic plan to end homelessness. The 
Interagency Council's plan, which was released in June 2010, aims to 
align federal resources effectively and appropriately with four key 
goals: (1) prevent and end homelessness for families, youth, and 
children; (2) prevent and end homelessness among veterans; (3) end 
chronic homelessness; and (4) "set a path" to end all types of 
homelessness. 

As described in our June 2010 report, federal programs define 
homelessness differently. HUD administers programs under McKinney- 
Vento that specifically target persons experiencing "literal" 
homelessness (that is, living in shelters or in places not meant for 
human habitation, but not in precarious housing situations).[Footnote 
10] According to HUD officials, Congress directs federal agencies as 
to which definition of homelessness shall be used within each program; 
furthermore, as HUD's housing resources are not an entitlement, 
funding must be targeted to those most in need.[Footnote 11] The 
statutory definition of homelessness for Education, DOJ, and some HHS 
targeted programs is broader than that for HUD programs. For example, 
under McKinney-Vento, the Education for Homeless Children and Youth 
program's definition of homelessness includes children and youth who 
are living in substandard housing, while the Healthcare for the 
Homeless program's definition includes those who are "doubled up," or 
living temporarily with another household because they cannot afford 
housing of their own.[Footnote 12] Table 1 categorizes definitions of 
homelessness across federal agencies with targeted homeless assistance 
programs. In our June 2010 report, we recommended that Education, HHS, 
and HUD develop a common vocabulary for homelessness and determine if 
the benefits of collecting data on housing status in targeted and 
mainstream programs would exceed the costs. 

Table 1: Typology of Definitions of "Homelessness" among Federal 
Agencies with Targeted Homeless Assistance Programs, as of July 2010: 

Federal agency: Education; 
Homelessness definition: McKinney-Vento children and youth[B]. 

Federal agency: DHS; 
Homelessness definition: McKinney-Vento individual[A]. 

Federal agency: Labor; 
Homelessness definition: McKinney-Vento individual[A. 

Federal agency: DOJ; 
Homelessness definition: Other[C]. 

Federal agency: HHS; 
Homelessness definition: Other[C]. 

Federal agency: HUD; 
Homelessness definition: McKinney-Vento individual[A]. 

Federal agency: VA[D]; 
Homelessness definition: McKinney-Vento individual[A]; 
Homelessness definition: Other[C]. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] Someone who lacked a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime 
residence or has a nighttime residence that is a supervised shelter 
designed to provide temporary accommodations; an institution providing 
a temporary residence for individuals awaiting institutionalization; 
or a place not designed for, nor ordinarily used as, a regular 
sleeping accommodation. 

[B] Children and youths who meet the McKinney-Vento individual 
definition or those who are sharing the housing of other persons due 
to loss of housing, economic hardship, or similar reasons (doubled 
up); living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due 
to the lack of alternative adequate accommodations; awaiting foster 
care placement; or living in substandard housing. 

[C] Definitions of homelessness other than McKinney-Vento individuals 
or children and youth definitions. For example, HHS' Runaway and Youth 
Act's Transitional Living program defines a homeless youth as being 
generally from the ages of 16 to 22, unable to live in a safe 
environment with a relative, and lacking any safe alternative living 
arrangements. 

[D] VA definitions depend on the program. 

[End of table] 

The HEARTH Act broadens the McKinney-Vento definition of "homeless 
individual," and also defined the terms "homeless," "homeless person," 
and "homeless individual with a disability."[Footnote 13] 

Federal agencies also do not employ a single definition of "rural" and 
the definitions generally are not comparable across agencies. In a 
prior GAO report, we discussed the three most common federal 
definitions of rural--from the Bureau of the Census, the Department of 
Agriculture's (USDA) Economic Research Service, and the Office of 
Management and Budget--which have differing criteria, such as 
population threshold or proximity to urban areas.[Footnote 14] 
However, even within one measure such as population threshold, 
different agencies can use different parameters and therefore identify 
different areas as rural. 

The mandate for this report in the HEARTH Act identifies two distinct 
communities to be included in this review of homelessness in rural 
areas--tribal lands and colonias. Because the federal government has a 
unique legal and political relationship with Native American tribes 
and Alaska Native entities, the administration of housing, homeless 
assistance, and supportive service programs on tribal lands differs. 
Federal agencies that have distinct roles and responsibilities to 
these groups include the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), HUD, and HHS. 
BIA-administered programs include social services, economic 
development, housing improvement, and disaster relief. HUD's Office of 
Native American Programs is responsible for the implementation and 
administration of programs, such as housing and community development, 
that are specific to Native Americans and Alaska Natives. The Indian 
Health Service within HHS is responsible for providing federal health 
services to Native Americans and Alaska Natives. 

Unlike Native Americans and Alaska Natives, the federal government 
does not have a unique legal and political relationship with colonias. 
However, the Cranston-Gonzalez Act of 1990 recognized colonias within 
U.S. borders as distressed communities and designated set-aside 
funding to advance opportunities for homeownership and economic self- 
sufficiency in these areas.[Footnote 15] Individuals and families in 
colonias may lack safe, sanitary, and sound housing and be without 
basic services such as potable water, adequate sewage systems, 
utilities, and paved roads. 

Forms of Rural Homelessness Encompass Situations Ranging from the More 
Visible, Such as Living in Shelters, to the Less Visible, Such as 
Living in Overcrowded Housing or Outdoors: 

The characteristics or forms of homelessness in the rural areas we 
visited ranged from the more visible, such as living in shelters, to 
the less visible, such as living in overcrowded or substandard 
housing. The range of living situations of persons experiencing 
homelessness in rural areas may overlap with the living situations of 
those experiencing homelessness in nonrural areas. Some persons 
experiencing homelessness lived in shelters or transitional housing. 
Shelters, where they existed, provided one of the visible entry points 
to receiving both housing assistance and supportive services. Some 
shelters we visited conduct initial assessments of individuals and 
families experiencing homelessness to determine their needs. The 
shelters may provide case management or mental health services or 
provide referrals to services within the area. We also observed 
various shelter types--some served specific groups, such as domestic 
violence victims or youth, while others were multipurpose. Some 
shelters were traditional, small communal shelters; some organizations 
used scattered site housing as shelters; and some shelters had no 
fixed location. For example, some service providers issued hotel 
vouchers, while others had moving shelters in which churches or other 
organizations would offer space. The shelter would be located in one 
organization's donated space for a set period of time before moving to 
another organization. Services available to clients also varied 
greatly among shelters. Some shelters offered a full range of on-site 
services such as mental health services, substance abuse treatment, 
case management, and job training. Other shelters offered limited 
services or lacked the funding to pay for 24-hour staff. Some areas 
without shelters relied on volunteers for homeless services because of 
limited or nonexistent funding. 

Other forms of homelessness we observed or heard about in rural areas 
we visited included persons who owned or rented substandard housing or 
had established temporary alternative living arrangements such as 
doubling-up (short stays with persons who offer space). In some rural 
areas, infrastructure challenges contributed to substandard housing. 
For example, we observed some houses built in floodplains in colonias 
we visited in Texas. Additionally, building codes may not exist or may 
not be enforced in some rural areas. We also observed houses with 
boarded-up windows, caved-in floors or ceilings, and dangerous 
alternative heating sources in rural areas in several states. Persons 
living in similar housing in urban areas may more easily be identified 
as literally homeless as such structures could be condemned. Some 
individuals and families in rural areas lived in overcrowded homes, 
sometimes with multiple generations living together. In some places we 
visited, we heard that doubling-up or multigenerational living was a 
cultural norm or an accepted practice because people "take care of 
their own." Some people had very few options. For example, on tribal 
lands many families have lived for long periods in overcrowded housing 
because waiting lists for housing are extremely long and private 
financing is rare due to legal issues with land ownership. Tribal 
officials from the Pueblo of Acoma reservation recently conducted a 
housing inventory and found approximately 155 overcrowded units on the 
reservation out of approximately 700 occupied units.[Footnote 16] 
Providers told us that severely overcrowded situations often were 
associated with domestic violence and child abuse. Providers said 
youth experiencing homelessness often "couch surfed," trading goods or 
services such as drugs, sex, money, or child care for a temporary stay 
in someone's home. Not all federal programs include such living 
conditions in their definitions of homelessness, and persons living in 
these situations may not be eligible for some federal assistance. 

Finally, some individuals and families experiencing homelessness in 
the rural areas we visited were sleeping in areas not meant for human 
habitation, including outdoor locations, vehicles, and abandoned 
buildings. For example: 

* On tribal lands in Arizona, we heard of persons living in dry river 
beds or in outbuildings such as barns or backyard sheds. 

* In Maine, we were informed of year-round encampments in the woods. 
In one case, the local fire department inspected and sanctioned a 
large fire pit for an encampment with the intent of minimizing the 
number of smaller pits. 

* In Minnesota, we observed abandoned buses and ice houses that were 
used by persons without regular shelter and heard from a previously 
homeless woman about how she built a structure using a pallet, a large 
cardboard box, and a tarp to keep out the rain. She told us that she 
placed the structure in an old mining pit to avoid detection. 

These individuals meet both the existing McKinney-Vento and HEARTH Act 
definitions of homeless and could be eligible for federal assistance. 
However with a limited number of shelters or other outreach, they may 
not be accessing services. Providers and persons experiencing 
homelessness emphasized that some persons experiencing homelessness 
wanted to remain hidden as they often were sought by abusive partners, 
parents, creditors, or the police. In the case of some families, 
parents were afraid that their children would be taken from them by 
social services. 

Challenges in Collecting Comprehensive Data Make Understanding the 
Extent of Homelessness in Rural and Nonrural Areas Difficult: 

Due to limited comprehensive data and challenges in combining data 
from different federal sources, understanding the extent of 
homelessness in rural and nonrural areas is difficult. Several 
agencies are required to collect data on segments of the homeless 
population, but as described in our June 2010 report, these data have 
shortcomings and do not fully describe the incidence and prevalence of 
homelessness in rural or nonrural areas.[Footnote 17] HUD developed 
two sources of data--the Homelessness Management Information System 
(HMIS) and the biennial Point-in-Time (PIT) count--for understanding 
the extent of homelessness. These data are reported to Congress 
annually for the Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) on the 
extent and nature of homelessness in the United States. Under the 
direction of Congress, HUD created a set of technical data collection 
standards for local HMIS, instructed programs receiving HUD McKinney-
Vento funding to report to those local systems, and encouraged all 
programs for homeless people, regardless of their funding source, to 
report data to HMIS.[Footnote 18] HMIS records and stores client-level 
information on the characteristics (on an ongoing basis throughout the 
year) and service needs of homeless persons and the data are used to 
produce counts of the sheltered homeless population over a full year. 
In addition to HMIS, the PIT counts of both sheltered and unsheltered 
homeless populations are based on the number of persons experiencing 
homelessness on a single night during the last week in January (every 
other year), and the data are included as part of the CoC 
applications, which are submitted to HUD annually.[Footnote 19] CoCs 
conduct a PIT count every other year with 452 CoCs completing a count 
in 2009. PIT counts include the "street counts" that estimate the 
number of unsheltered homeless people in each community, as well as 
estimates of sheltered homeless people based on a census of shelter 
and transitional housing occupants on a particular night. 

Although other programs are encouraged to report data to HMIS, 
agencies such as HHS, Education, and VA have their own systems for 
collecting data. For example, HHS's Runaway and Homeless Youth 
Management Information System (RHYMIS) collects demographic and 
service data on runaway and homeless youth being served by HHS's 
Family and Youth Services Bureau's programs. To demonstrate compliance 
with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA), as 
amended, Education collects data on homeless children and youth served 
by ESEA programs and the Education of Homeless Children and Youth 
program through the Consolidated State Performance Report. The 
McKinney-Vento Act requires local school districts to have 
Homelessness Liaisons, provide appropriate services and support, and 
collect and report data to Education annually. Additionally, through 
VA's Northeast Program Evaluation Center, VA collects data on each 
individual veteran that enters one of VA's specialized homeless 
veterans programs. And, through the Community Homelessness Assessment 
Local Education and Networking Groups (CHALENG) process, VA collects 
population-based data by conducting local community group surveys with 
VA staff and community participants. CHALENG data is nationally 
compiled in an annual report to provide prevalence estimates of 
veteran homelessness and to assess the needs of the population as well 
as gaps in local services. Lastly, the Census Bureau's decennial 
population and housing census collects data on places in which the 
homeless population receive services as well as targeted nonshelter 
outdoor locations. While the Census makes an effort to count all 
residents, including those experiencing homelessness, the 2010 Census 
does not plan to report a separate count of the population 
experiencing homelessness or a count of the population who use 
homelessness services, and the Census Bureau advises against using its 
data on homelessness from the 2000 Census. 

Because of different statutory requirements for each federal agency-- 
including data collection requirements and differences in definitions--
these data do not reflect the full extent of homelessness in rural or 
nonrural areas. Each agency focuses on the segments of the homeless 
population that the agency serves, resulting in incompatible data for 
comparison and analysis. For example, HHS's Runaway and Homeless Youth 
Program, for which data is collected in RHYMIS, focuses on the runaway 
and homeless youth being served by the Basic Center Program, the 
Transitional Living Program for Older Homeless Youth, and contacts 
made by the Street Outreach Program grantees. HHS provides homeless 
assistance to adult individuals and families through programs such as 
Health Care for the Homeless, Projects for Assistance in Transition 
from Homelessness (PATH), Grants for the Benefits of Homeless 
Individuals, and Service in Supportive Housing. All of these programs 
collect data on their relevant populations based on statutory 
requirements.[Footnote 20] VA collects data on homeless veterans as 
part of its annual CHALENG survey, in accordance with different 
statutory requirements.[Footnote 21] However, in December 2009, HHS 
established an agreement with HUD for PATH providers to move towards 
reporting under the HMIS. Also, according to HUD officials, there has 
been an initial evaluation of aligning some of VA's homelessness data 
with HUD's homelessness data. 

The varying definitions of "homelessness" and "rural"--as well as the 
extent to which "rural" is reported--also limit the ability to 
understand the incidence and prevalence of homelessness in rural 
areas. For example, according to officials, doubled-up persons are 
included in some VA and HHS program definitions but excluded from 
HUD's definition. Thus, data on homelessness are captured differently 
across federal agencies. Similarly, although our work did not focus on 
potential reasons for the different definitions, these differences 
across federal programs make comparing the extent of homelessness in 
rural and nonrural areas difficult. For instance, HUD's AHAR formally 
classifies locations into two groups--principal cities and suburban or 
rural areas. Specifically, HUD estimates that about 1.56 million 
people were homeless in emergency shelters or transitional housing at 
some point during fiscal year 2009. More than two-thirds (or about 1.1 
million) of them were located in principal cities, while one-third (or 
about 0.5 million) were in suburban or rural jurisdictions. HHS's 
RHYMIS and VA's CHALENG do not break out the counts of homelessness 
between rural and nonrural areas. 

HUD's PIT count is the only data collection effort designed to obtain 
a national count of those experiencing homelessness, and while a more 
in-depth discussion of the difficulties associated with collecting the 
data can be found in our June 2010 report, there are some additional 
challenges particular to rural areas. 

* Persons experiencing homelessness are inherently difficult to count. 
They are mobile, can seek shelter in secluded areas, and may not wish 
to attract the notice of local government officials. Moreover, rural 
areas are often large and have widely dispersed populations and 
difficult-to-reach locations, exacerbating the difficulties of finding 
and counting persons experiencing homelessness, including those who do 
not necessarily want to be found. 

* Count methodologies vary by CoCs and might not be well implemented. 
Service providers who conduct the PIT counts are meeting their 
mandated requirements under McKinney-Vento. However, with no funding 
to pay for the count, service providers often rely on volunteers to 
meet an unfunded mandate. Particularly in areas of the United States 
where average temperatures are below freezing in January, finding 
unsheltered persons and recruiting volunteers to count them becomes 
difficult. Although HUD officials told us that the benefit of a 
January count relates to the increased demand for shelters at the 
coldest time of year, homeless shelters and services are limited in 
rural areas, and in some counties, nonexistent. In a few of the states 
we visited, commitments from state and local officials and advocates 
have enhanced the process, resulting in an ability to recruit 
volunteers and local organizations who have built a trusting 
relationship with homeless populations. 

According to officials and service providers in the states we visited, 
HUD's PIT count likely has undercounted the rural homeless population, 
but to what extent is unknown. While HUD officials acknowledge the 
shortcomings of their counts, they believe significant progress has 
been made in recent years in collecting homelessness data, 
particularly their estimate annually since 2005 of the extent of 
homelessness and their efforts to ensure data quality through 
providing technical assistance.[Footnote 22] 

Another factor associated with the completeness of federal agency data 
is the lack of migration data. According to federal agency officials 
and service providers, very little is known about the migration 
between rural and nonrural areas of those experiencing homelessness 
because there is no requirement or formal system for tracking 
migration patterns. Although no federal programs formally track or are 
required to track migration information, some local service providers 
maintain that information for their own purposes. For example, the 
Kentucky Housing Corporation, beginning in 2009, included 
questionnaires to track migration within and across states. Those 
experiencing homelessness may migrate to and from nonrural areas for 
many reasons. For example, service providers told us that persons 
experiencing homelessness in rural areas have migrated to nonrural 
areas following a job loss, to reconnect with families, and to obtain 
supportive services. Conversely, people have migrated from nonrural 
areas to rural areas to connect with families and, in the case of 
tribal lands, to receive services. Furthermore, because persons 
experiencing homelessness are more mobile, and formal migration data 
do not exist, the potential exists for duplicated counts--complicating 
any comparison of the extent of homelessness between rural and 
nonrural areas. 

Several Federal Agencies Fund Programs through State Intermediaries or 
Local Homeless Providers That Assist Persons Experiencing Homelessness 
in Rural Areas: 

Several federal agencies fund programs, through state intermediaries 
or local homeless providers, which are targeted to the homelessness 
population or which assist low income persons and families including 
those experiencing homelessness. Some federal programs specifically 
target homelessness, while others assist low income persons and 
families, including those experiencing homelessness, or include 
assistance for persons experiencing homelessness among eligible uses. 
In total, these programs fund permanent and short term housing and a 
variety of supportive services such as mental health services, 
substance abuse treatment, case management, and job training. Targeted 
homeless funding is often further targeted to segments of the 
population such as youth or veterans. See figure 1 for examples of 
targeted and mainstream or nontargeted programs that may benefit 
persons experiencing homelessness and the types of assistance 
available under each program. 

Figure 1: Federal Programs That May Benefit Persons Experiencing 
Homelessness in Rural Areas: 

[Refer to PDF for image: table] 

Federal programs: HUD; Single Room Occupancy; [Program targeted at 
homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Shelter Plus Care[E]; [Program targeted at 
homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Supportive Housing Program; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HUD; HUD-VA Supportive Housing[F]; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Emergency Shelter Grant; [Program targeted at 
homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Native American Housing Assistance and Self 
Determination Act; [Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Self-help Homeownership Opportunity Program; 
[Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; HOME Investment Partnerships; [Mainstream or 
nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Community Development Block Grant; [Mainstream 
or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8); [Mainstream 
or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HUD; Public Housing; [Mainstream or nontargeted 
program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Runaway and Homeless Youth; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Projects for Assistance in Transition from 
Homelessness; [Program targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Health Care for the Homeless; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Federal Surplus Real Property[G]; [Program 
targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Grants for the Benefits of Homeless 
Individuals; [Program targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Services in Supportive Housing; [Program 
targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Medicaid; [Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Temporary Assistance for Needy Families; 
[Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: HHS; Headstart; [Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: VA; Grant & Per Diem; [Program targeted at 
homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: VA; Health Care for Homeless Veterans; [Program 
targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: VA; Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans; [Program 
targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: VA; HUD-VA Supportive Housing[H]; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: VA; Medical Centers; [Mainstream or nontargeted 
program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: VA; Disability Compensation; [Mainstream or 
nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: Labor; Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program; 
[Program targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: Labor; Workforce Investment Act; [Mainstream or 
nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: Education; Education for Homeless Children and 
Youth; [Program targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: DOJ; Transitional Housing Assistance for Child 
Victims of Domestic Violence, Stalking, or Sexual Assault; [Program 
targeted at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: DHS; Emergency Food and Shelter; [Program targeted 
at homelessness] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: BIA; Human services programs such as Welfare 
Assistance, Housing Improvement and others; [Mainstream or nontargeted 
program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Federal programs: USDA; Housing programs such as Single-Family Housing 
and Multi-family housing; [Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: USDA; Community Facilities Loan; [Mainstream or 
nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: USDA; Food programs such as Supplemental Nutrition 
Assistance Program; Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, 
Infants, and Children; school meals; Commodity Supplemental Food 
Program; and others; [Mainstream or nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Check]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: IRS; Low Income Housing Tax Credit; [Mainstream or 
nontargeted program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Check]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Empty]. 

Federal programs: SSA; SSI, SSI-Disability; [Mainstream or nontargeted 
program] 
Category of services: Housing: Permanent[A]: [Empty]; 
Category of services: Housing: Short term[B]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Food: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Health[C]: [Empty]; 
Supportive services: Other[D]: [Check]. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] Permanent refers to permanent supportive or affordable housing: 

[B] Short term refers to emergency or short-term shelters. Examples 
include homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, transitional 
housing, and hotel vouchers. 

[C] Examples include mental health services, physical health services, 
substance abuse treatment, residential treatment, and case management. 

[D] Examples include general or cash assistance, job training, 
employment assistance, education, child care and development, and 
transportation assistance. 

[E] Although the Shelter Plus Care program does not pay for supportive 
services, recipients must match each dollar of funding for housing 
with a dollar of funding for supportive services. 

[F] HUD-VA Supportive Housing is a joint program in which HUD funds 
the housing and VA funds the supportive services. 

[G] The Federal Surplus Real Property program, established by title V 
of McKinney-Vento, provides surplus land or buildings in support of 
persons experiencing homelessness. These properties can be used for 
housing and a wide range of supportive services but the program 
provides no monetary support for any activity. See 42 U.S.C. § 11411. 

[End of figure] 

HUD funds programs targeted to the homeless populations through state 
or local entities for the Emergency Shelter Grant (ESG) program and to 
providers who participate in CoCs. The ESG program is dispersed by 
formula, while three grant programs--the Single Room Occupancy, 
Shelter Plus Care, and Supportive Housing programs--are awarded 
competitively through the CoC process.[Footnote 23] HUD receives a 
single appropriation for its targeted programs and administratively 
determines the amount of funding for the ESG program.[Footnote 24] ESG 
funding is awarded based on the Community Development Block Grant 
(CDBG) formula, which designates that 70 percent of funding is awarded 
directly to entitlement cities and counties and 30 percent is awarded 
to state entities that determine the dispersion of funding for the 
more rural parts of the state.[Footnote 25] Organizations located in 
areas or municipalities not receiving direct ESG allocations compete 
for funding through the state entity. For example in 2009 in Maine, 
only Portland received its own allocation of about $94,000, while 
organizations from all other areas or municipalities within the state 
competed for about $770,000. 

HUD's three competitive homeless assistance grants are awarded through 
the CoC process using a scoring system where HUD scores the planning 
document submitted by the CoCs as part of the application.[Footnote 
26] Programs that have previously received funding, referred to as 
renewals, receive a higher funding priority and are funded before new 
programs are considered for funding. In 2008, 86 percent of the 
competitive homeless assistance grants were renewals. Although CoC 
funding is awarded competitively, HUD determines a need factor called 
the pro rata need (also based on the CDBG formula) for each CoC. 
According to a HUD official, in calculating the preliminary pro rata 
need, HUD allocates 75 percent of funding to entitlement cities and 
counties that qualify for direct ESG allocations and 25 percent of 
funding to all other areas.[Footnote 27] All CoCs have an identified 
need factor, but CoCs may not have funded programs as new funding is 
awarded in order of CoC score, which is based on multiple factors. 

HHS and other federal agencies--including Education, Labor, VA, DHS, 
and DOJ--largely operate their targeted programs through state 
entities or by directly funding community-based public or nonprofit 
entities. HHS provides funding for a number of programs, including 
Runaway and Homeless Youth, Health Care for the Homeless, and PATH. 
Funding for Health Care for the Homeless is distributed competitively, 
while PATH funding is distributed to states, Washington, D.C. and U.S. 
territories that distribute the funding. The PATH formula, which has 
remained unchanged since 1990, primarily considers the urban 
population of the state or territory and designates a minimum of 
$300,000 for states and $50,000 for territories. In 2009, 18 states 
and the District of Columbia received the state minimum. DHS, through 
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, funds the Emergency Food and 
Shelter Program, which distributes funding to local entities through 
the United Way of America or similarly functioning organizations. 
Funding is formula-based and considers poverty rate and unemployment. 
Some providers in very small communities told us that they receive 
federal funding only through the Emergency Food and Shelter Program. 

Mainstream federal programs may assist persons experiencing 
homelessness but the level of assistance directed towards homelessness 
is generally unknown as some programs are not required to track if 
participants have been or are experiencing homelessness. Mainstream 
programs provide assistance to individuals and families and include 
HHS' Temporary Assistance for Needy Families; USDA's food programs 
such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and the Special 
Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; HUD's 
housing programs such as public housing and the Housing Choice Voucher 
program; the Social Security Administration's Supplemental Security 
Income and disability insurance programs; and VA's disability 
compensation program. 

Funding in other federal programs also may be used for homeless 
assistance based on the decisions of state, local, or tribal 
governments. Homeless programs are one of many eligible uses for 
funding in programs such as HUD's CDBG program and USDA's Community 
Facilities Loan program. CDBG is formula-based with state entities 
receiving and dispersing the portion of funding intended for rural 
areas, while the Community Facilities Loan program is awarded 
competitively through USDA's state offices. Some programs direct 
funding to areas that are in particular need of housing 
infrastructure. For example, the Cranston-Gonzalez Act requires states 
that share a border with Mexico to set aside CDBG funds for the 
colonias. This funding may be used to expand water and sewer services 
and to provide housing assistance.[Footnote 28] USDA's agency for 
rural development also funds programs to improve infrastructure in the 
colonias. 

Tribes receive funding for housing, health care, and other services 
through HUD's Native American Housing Assistance and Self-
Determination Act (NAHASDA) programs and a variety of programs offered 
through HHS and BIA. These programs, although not specifically 
targeted at homelessness, may assist persons experiencing 
homelessness. They are available to recognized tribes only and funding 
generally is formulaic, based on tribal enrollment. Generally, NAHASDA 
money is distributed to tribal-designated housing entities that use 
money to build or refurbish housing. BIA programs are funded as 
contracts awarded to designated tribal entities to provide a range of 
services. In both cases, tribal governments determine priorities, 
usage, and eligibility. Housing funds are distributed to regional BIA 
offices through a formula process and individuals receive assistance 
based on priority until funds are exhausted. 

Limited Data Are Available on the Amount of Targeted and Nontargeted 
Assistance to Rural Versus Nonrural Areas: 

The amount of federal funding for targeted homeless assistance 
programs in rural areas is uncertain. According to the Congressional 
Research Service, in fiscal year 2009 federal agencies spent more than 
$2.85 billion on programs targeted to address the needs of individuals 
and families experiencing homelessness.[Footnote 29] HUD's targeted 
homeless programs represent the largest funding source for federal 
targeted homeless assistance, which for fiscal year 2009 totaled more 
than $1.7 billion or more than 62 percent of total targeted funding. 
Figure 2 shows the targeted funding by federal agency. We were unable 
to determine the total portion of this funding that went to rural 
areas. 

Figure 2: Percent of Total Federal Funding Targeting Homelessness by 
Agency for Fiscal Year 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

DOJ: 0.6%; 
Labor: 0.9%; 
Education: 2.3%; 
DHS/FEMA: 7.1%; 
HHS: 12.9%; 
VA: 13.7%; 
HUD: 62.3%. 

Source: GAO analysis of Congressional Research Service data. 

Note: Data do not include assistance from mainstream programs which 
may also provide support to persons experiencing homelessness. 

[End of figure] 

Determining what funding went to rural areas is difficult because some 
federal agencies use self-reported data that may not be accurate, do 
not distinguish between rural and nonrural areas, or do not track 
whether funding went to such areas. As discussed earlier in this 
report, federal agencies use multiple definitions of rural, 
complicating any determination of what types of areas received 
funding. For instance, HUD's CoC programs maintain data on the amount 
of assistance for rural areas; however, grant applicants could 
designate (self-identify)--based on a HUD provided definition of rural 
area--whether they were in rural areas or not. Table 2 shows the 
funding based on this designation for fiscal years 2006-2008. In 
fiscal year 2008, according to the HUD data, 9.3 percent of CoC 
funding went to rural areas, which represented about 15 percent of 
total projects. 

Table 2: Rural Funding within HUD's CoC Programs, Based on Grant 
Applicant Reporting as Rural or Not: 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Total funding awarded in billions: $1.40; 
Funding awarded to rural projects in millions (percentage of total): 
$129.9; (9.3%); 
Total projects funded: 6336; 
Rural projects funded (percentage of total): 960; (15.2%). 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Total funding awarded in billions: $1.33; 
Funding awarded to rural projects in millions (percentage of total): 
99.82; (7.5); 
Total projects funded: 5911; 
Rural projects funded (percentage of total): 718; (12.2). 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Total funding awarded in billions: $1.21; 
Funding awarded to rural projects in millions (percentage of total): 
69.82; (5.8); 
Total projects funded: 5288; 
Rural projects funded (percentage of total): 538; (10.2). 

Source: GAO analysis of HUD data. 

[End of table] 

Similarly, VA can determine spending levels in rural areas for its 
grant and per diem program using self-reported data. Table 3 shows 
funding and the number of beds based on this designation for fiscal 
years 2007-2009. In fiscal year 2009, according to VA data, 13.5 
percent of capital grant awards under the Grant and Per Diem program 
funding went to rural areas, which represented 8.5 percent of the 
funded beds. HUD's ESG program targets 30 percent of its funding 
toward nonentitlement cities or counties, which represent more rural 
areas. However, according to HUD, ESG provides discretion to the state 
entity to decide how to allocate ESG funds. A state may limit funds to 
nonentitlement areas and metropolitan cities and urban counties that 
did not receive individual allocations, or may choose to fund 
entitlement cities and counties that received direct allocations from 
HUD. 

Table 3: Urban and Rural Fiscal Year Funding for VA's Capital Grant 
Awards for the Grant and Per Diem Program Based on Grant Applicant 
Reporting as Rural or Not: 

Funding in millions (percentage of total): Urban; 
2009: $11.67; (68.9%); 
2008: $29.14; (82.1%); 
2007: $11.3; (77.1%); 
Total: $52.11. 

Funding in millions (percentage of total): Rural; 
2009: $2.28; (13.5%); 
2008: $4.1; (11.6%); 
2007: $3.35; (22.9%); 
Total: $9.73. 

Funding in millions (percentage of total): Unidentified; 
2009: $3; (17.7%); 
2008: $2.24; (6.3%); 
2007: $0; (0); 
Total: $5.24. 

Funding in millions (percentage of total): Total; 
2009: $16.95; 
2008: $35.48; 
2007: $14.65; 
Total: $67.08. 

Beds (percentage of total): Urban; 
2009: 827; (71.8%); 
2008: 1337; (88.2%); 
2007: 691; (80.1%); 
Total: 2855. 

Beds (percentage of total): Rural; 
2009: 98; (8.5%); 
2008: 127; (8.4%); 
2007: 172; (19.9%); 
Total: 397. 

Beds (percentage of total): Unidentified; 
2009: 227; (19.7%); 
2008: 52; (3.4%); 
2007: 0; (0); 
Total: 279. 

Beds (percentage of total): Total; 
2009: 1152; 
2008: 1516; 
2007: 863; 
Total: 3531. 

Source: VA. 

Note: Percentages may not add to 100 percent due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

Other agencies also maintain limited information on the amount of 
targeted homeless funding that is allocated to rural or nonrural 
areas. Depending on the program, HHS and Education do not track 
whether funding is for providers or projects in rural or nonrural 
areas. Labor has two size categories within its targeted Homeless 
Veterans' Reintegration program, one for urban areas and one for 
nonurban areas, with different dollar amounts available. However, 
Labor officials said their definition of nonurban was an area with 
less than 569,463 persons, which is at least 10 times the population 
limit specified in other agencies' definitions of rural.[Footnote 30] 

Similarly, funding information on the mainstream and other nontargeted 
programs that can provide support to individuals or families 
experiencing homelessness is limited. Individuals and families who 
meet the qualifications for services under mainstream programs are 
eligible regardless of whether they live in rural, tribal, or nonrural 
areas. Some mainstream programs, such as Temporary Assistance for 
Needy Families, that may offer assistance to individuals or families 
experiencing homelessness are not required to track housing status, 
which prevents a determination of how much funding went to persons in 
rural and nonrural areas. For other nontargeted programs, funding for 
homelessness is often difficult to disaggregate from other spending. 
For example, HUD's CDBG funds have many eligible uses as well as usage 
clauses that required a certain percentage of funding to be used for 
projects that benefit low-income persons. The building of shelters and 
transitional housing are among several eligible uses that would assist 
persons experiencing homelessness; however, the total amount of 
assistance to specific types of projects is unknown. A certain 
percentage of CDBG funds for states bordering Mexico are targeted to 
the colonias, but the amount of funding that specifically addresses 
homelessness is unknown. For NAHASDA and other programs that fund 
assistance to tribal entities, individual tribal governments determine 
usage and disaggregating funds used for persons experiencing 
homelessness would need to be done at the tribal level. However, USDA, 
which has nonfood programs that primarily serve rural areas, was able 
to disaggregate funding within its Community Facilities Loan Program. 
Eligible uses under this program include homeless and domestic 
violence shelters, community centers, and fire stations. For fiscal 
years 2004-2009, the program financed a total of 7 homeless shelters 
and 76 domestic violence shelters for a total of about $29.7 million 
of the program's $4.5 billion total for those years. 

We were unable to determine whether the distribution of federal 
funding for supporting persons experiencing homelessness was 
proportional to need in rural and nonrural areas. Such a determination 
would require complete data on the total number of persons 
experiencing homelessness in both rural and nonrural areas, as well as 
reliable information on the funding available in both rural and 
nonrural areas. We found that the counts of homelessness are not 
complete for this purpose, and as stated above, funding levels are 
nondeterminable for a variety of reasons. 

Barriers to the Rural Homeless Population Seeking Assistance Include 
Limited Availability of Services, Lack of Transportation, and Lack of 
Affordable Housing: 

According to state and local officials, as well as individuals 
experiencing homelessness we interviewed in the states we visited, 
limited availability of services, lack of transportation, and lack of 
affordable housing have been some common barriers that the rural 
homeless population encounters when seeking assistance. Factors such 
as geography, population density, and socio-economic conditions also 
can make access to services challenging in rural areas--particularly 
when considered in combination with the barriers cited above. 

Providers we spoke to in the states we visited said homeless shelters 
and transitional housing in rural areas are scarce and serve a wide 
geographical area, and in some instances, counties do not have 
shelters. A shelter we visited in Maine with 63 beds is the only multi-
purpose shelter that serves the entire homeless population in a county 
of nearly 1,000 square miles. In addition, 4 of the 16 counties in 
Maine are without emergency shelters, with 1 of those 4 counties using 
hotels as an alternative in the winter. Some shelters may dedicate 
services to a specific subpopulation such as youth, domestic violence, 
and substance abuse clients, which could narrow the availability of 
assistance for some individuals or populations. Many of the providers 
with whom we spoke have had to turn away individuals and families 
because their shelters were full and backlogged. According to 
officials in Maine, between June and August 2009, shelters across the 
state turned away 500 families, including a total of 200 children. 
Because shelters are one of the visible points of entry to a network 
of services such as health care, alcohol and drug treatment, job 
training, and case managers, those experiencing homelessness in rural 
areas who are without shelters may be more likely to be disconnected 
from caseworkers who can provide referrals to these supportive 
services. However, community action agencies, faith-based 
organizations, and other nongovernmental entities may offer assistance 
to networks of services. Similarly, supportive services, such as 
medical and dental, mental health, food, and job training, are also 
limited in rural areas. For example, one service provider in rural 
Kentucky stated that the closest mental health center was 50 minutes 
away, while another service provider in rural Maine told us that the 
closest psychiatrist was about an hour and a half away. Also in Maine, 
rural service providers told us that there is no funding to support 
job training. Furthermore, officials said that domestic violence is 
associated with homelessness in rural communities and tribal areas, 
and those individuals have limited resources or services. 

According to those we interviewed, the lack of transportation in rural 
areas has hindered the homeless population in accessing services. 
Rural areas can be isolating due to the combination of expansive land 
size and sparse population. Persons experiencing homelessness might be 
geographically cut-off from the limited homeless service providers 
available in their area, and would need to travel long distances to 
receive needed services. Many of the state and local officials, 
service providers, and individuals experiencing homelessness 
interviewed told us that public transportation either was nonexistent 
or limited (i.e., infrequent service and limited coverage areas). If 
homeless individuals missed their appointments, they have to 
reschedule for another appointment at a later time thereby delaying 
services, or their services could be denied according to one service 
provider in Minnesota. Individuals experiencing homelessness in some 
of the areas we visited with no public transportation reported that 
they utilized dial-a-ride services provided by community action 
agencies or relied on friends or caseworkers. The cost of public 
transportation can also be an issue for those with very little income, 
although some local service providers with whom we spoke were able to 
give bus passes to their clients. Alternatively, some local nonprofits 
provided automobiles or buses to connect individuals and families to 
services, but coverage areas also were limited. 

According to many of the people we interviewed, persons experiencing 
homelessness and seeking assistance also may encounter the barrier of 
limited safe and affordable housing in rural areas. Providers in 
certain areas of the states we visited raised concerns about the 
shortage of affordable housing and, in some cases, quality of housing 
available in the areas, noting that they were aware of some properties 
that lacked complete plumbing or heat.[Footnote 31] In some of the 
rural areas we visited, deteriorating housing conditions for private 
market units may be more severe due to the absence of building code 
enforcement. According to a service provider in eastern Kentucky, many 
homes in the areas are heated with wood or coal (a potential fire 
hazard), and others lacked complete plumbing. Moreover, because market 
rents in eastern Kentucky have been so low compared to nonrural areas 
due to high poverty rates, programs, such as the Low-Income Housing 
Tax Credits (LIHTC) are examples of financial incentives to attract 
investors who have shied away from supporting low-income housing 
development in the area.[Footnote 32] Furthermore, according to 
providers we spoke with in Kentucky and Texas, topographic conditions, 
such as limited flat land in eastern Kentucky and flood plains in the 
colonias in Webb and Hidalgo counties in Texas, have discouraged 
investors and developers from investing in these rural areas. 
According to a service provider in Arizona, development on tribal 
lands is restricted by legal issues relating to sovereign land, which 
reduces banks' willingness to finance projects. Resistance in local 
communities also has presented obstacles to building new housing as 
described by those we interviewed. For example, Minnesota state 
officials noted that some local communities have resisted the building 
of shelters and other housing for the homeless or low-income 
populations because they believe that undesirable persons will move to 
their communities. For similar reasons, a local government in Texas 
has not sought funds from state or other sources to fund homeless 
programs, according to a local shelter provider. Compounding the issue 
of lack of affordable housing, service providers in some of the states 
we visited have experienced long waiting lists (about 2 years) for the 
Housing Choice Voucher Program (tenant-based Section 8).[Footnote 33] 
For example, service providers in Maine told us that they have not 
been able to obtain tenant-based Section 8 vouchers since December 
2008. 

Based on those with whom we spoke and relevant research, individual 
barriers such as mental health issues, felony records, and no proof of 
identification have hindered those seeking assistance. According to 
the 1996 National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients, 
two-thirds of the rural homeless population report having a mental 
health or substance abuse problem and may require specialized services 
such as psychiatric referral and treatment.[Footnote 34] Several 
individuals with whom we spoke in a shelter indicated that they felt 
more mentally and emotionally stable after being put on medication 
received under public health care coverage through the help of shelter 
staff. Also, program eligibility and rules may exclude some felons 
from federal housing assistance, including tenant-based and project-
based Section 8 programs. Without federal housing assistance, these 
individuals could remain homeless because the ability to find a job 
that would pay for market rent could also be affected by their 
criminal records.[Footnote 35] Another individual barrier is the lack 
of documentation to prove identity. Without birth certificates, 
driver's licenses, and Social Security cards which, according to some 
providers with whom we spoke, some persons experiencing homelessness 
lack, individuals and families might not be able to apply for and 
obtain services. Table 4 illustrates some examples of barriers for 
persons experiencing homelessness, as discussed above and further 
identified in our interviews with local service providers and homeless 
individuals in the states we visited. 

Table 4: Possible Needs of the Homeless Population and Potential 
Corresponding Barriers in Rural Areas: 

Physical housing: 

Possible needs: Temporary housing; 
Structural barriers: 
* No shelters or shelters are full; 
* Shortage of transitional housing; 
* Communities' resistance to homeless programs; 
Applicant-related barriers: 
* Felons generally do not qualify for federal housing assistance. 

Possible needs: Permanent Housing; 
Structural barriers: 
* Shortage of permanent and permanent supportive housing; 
* Limited number of tenant-based Section 8 vouchers; 
* Substandard housing ineligible for tenant-based Section 8 vouchers; 
* Limited investors for affordable housing development; 
Applicant-related barriers: 
* Limited income to pay the difference between actual rent and amount 
subsidized by tenant-based Section 8 vouchers. 

Possible needs: Adequate income to afford housing: 
Structural barriers: 
* Economic environment has resulted in job losses or lower wages; 
* Lack of public transportation to get to a job; 
Applicant-related barriers: 
* Criminal record may discourage employers from hiring people; 
* Lack of personal identification; 
* Lack of contact information; 
* Low educational attainment rate; 
* Mental health or substance abuse issues not being treated; 
* Lack of child care options. 

Possible needs: Services: 
Structural barriers: 
* Limited health care providers, including dental and vision care; 
* Limited mental health providers; 
* Limited or no substance abuse services; 
* Limited access to providers; 
* Limited case managers; 
* Lack of transportation to get to services; 
Applicant-related barriers: 
* May not qualify for services due to program definitions; 
* Lack of personal identification; 
* Lack of contact information; 
* May not seek services due to pride or privacy; 
* Lack ability to successfully apply for services; 
* Lack knowledge of available assistance. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

Barriers to the Rural Homeless Service Providers Include 
Administrative Burden, Lack of Affordable Housing, and Challenges 
Related to Geography and Population Density: 

According to state and local officials and local service providers in 
the states we visited, administrative burden, lack of affordable 
housing, and challenges related to geography and population density 
were barriers for rural homeless service providers. Some of the local 
service providers with whom we spoke indicated that they operated with 
limited staff and, due to capacity issues, assumed a wide variety of 
responsibilities from providing direct service to clients to applying 
for federal and other grants. In particular, service providers in 
rural areas with whom we spoke have responded to limited resources by 
applying to, and assembling multiple funding sources from both state 
and federal programs. As a result, the time consumed in grant writing 
and meeting the various compliance and review requirements set by 
statute represented an administrative and workload burden, according 
to service providers and state officials with whom we spoke. For 
example, providers in Maine expressed frustration with the duplicative 
review for the Supportive Housing Grant Program and tenant-based 
Section 8 Program, both of which HUD administers but under separate 
authorities. According to some service providers with whom we spoke, 
many grant applications also require data to demonstrate resource 
needs. Especially in rural areas with no shelters or visible points of 
entry for services, counts of the homeless are not documented, and 
without data it is hard to prove that the services are needed. Because 
of the administrative burden and challenges in meeting application 
requirements, some providers with whom we spoke were discouraged from 
applying for funds from certain programs. A coalition we spoke to in 
Maine said that many of its members were discouraged by the 
requirements of programs that received stimulus funds and therefore 
considered not applying for them. Also, as described in our June 2010 
report, issues related to multiple federal definitions of homelessness 
have posed challenges for service providers.[Footnote 36] Moreover, 
according to Minnesota state officials and service providers we spoke 
with, Minnesota's definition of homelessness is different from some 
federal programs, creating another level of complexity in 
understanding the definition and determining client eligibility. 
According to state officials, Minnesota's definition of homelessness 
includes those who, as long as the person or family's situation is not 
stable are doubling up and "couch surfing" for at least a year or four 
separate occasions over a 3 year period. While this is consistent with 
a broader definition of homelessness used by Education under the 
McKinney-Vento Act, it has not been consistent with HUD's definition 
of chronic homelessness. 

State and local officials and rural service providers cited a lack of 
affordable housing as another challenge for service providers when 
addressing homelessness in rural areas. Specifically, some of the 
local service providers with whom we spoke have been unable to move 
people from emergency shelters, homeless shelters, or transitional 
housing programs to permanent housing due to shortages of tenant-based 
Section 8 vouchers and a shortage of affordable housing. According to 
service providers in multiple locations, due to the shortage in tenant-
based Section 8 vouchers, the shelters they work with are full and 
stays at shelters have lengthened. Without financial assistance, those 
experiencing homelessness may find it challenging to move out of short-
term housing. Furthermore, to the extent that tenant-based Section 8 
vouchers have been available, some providers told us in their 
communities that the current housing stock has been deteriorating and 
limited new housing units have been built, so there is nowhere for 
that voucher to be used. According to HUD, between 1995 and 2007, 
LIHTC--the principal federal subsidy mechanism for supporting the 
production of new and rehabilitated rental housing for low-income 
households--were used predominately for new construction. With that 
said, the number of new construction units has declined since 2005. 
[Footnote 37] Moreover, according to HUD regional office officials, 
the lack of affordable housing also is attributable to the significant 
reduction in size of the housing projects being built. As a result, 
some providers told us long waiting lists for tenant-based Section 8 
vouchers exist. According to a rural service provider in Kentucky, the 
tenant-based Section 8 voucher waiting list had 3,000 names on it. 

The persons with whom we spoke also consistently said the size of 
service areas and low population densities in rural areas presented 
obstacles to service provision. The combination of expansive service 
areas and sparse populations require many service providers to drive 
long distances to serve their clients. For example, several rural 
service providers, particularly case workers, described their vehicles 
as their offices because of the amount of time they spent traveling 
between meetings with other service providers and serving clients. 
Furthermore, according to HUD, because funding is limited, many rural 
service providers cannot afford large staffs and often wear many hats. 
In an urban area, separate staff or separate agencies might be 
responsible for assessing different needs such as housing, nutrition, 
education, job-search, mental and physical health, and substance abuse 
needs. However, in a rural area, one individual may be the client's 
primary point of contact and may have to consider the whole range of 
issues. Furthermore, some rural areas do not have broadband services 
and some providers we spoke with said that they are excluded from some 
of the communications and resources available over the Internet. For 
instance, HUD regional office officials acknowledged that some rural 
service providers have been unable to connect to some of their 
technical assistance workshops and learn about application 
preparation, project administration, and management. 

Local officials and service providers have cited other barriers such 
as variability of local commitments and diminishing purchasing power. 
In some of the states we visited, some service providers mentioned 
variability in local and state commitment, which can influence the 
homeless assistance programs. For example, 10 years ago Minnesota 
invested in an intensive case management pilot program which provides 
housing and supportive services to assist people with long histories 
of homelessness. Because of the success of the pilot, the Minnesota 
legislature has continued to appropriate funding to finance supportive 
housing for five long-term homeless projects in areas that include 
approximately 80 percent of Minnesota's population, according to a 
service provider in Minnesota. In contrast, other communities have 
been resistant to supporting homeless programs, such as one community 
organization in Texas described that their local government resisted 
acquiring additional funds in fear of attracting more homeless 
individuals and families to the community. Diminishing purchasing 
power also affects the ability of local service providers to address 
needs in their communities. According to CoC participants, Maine 
receives PATH funds, but the amount has remained steady at $300,000 
per year for the last 17 years. According to officials, the buying 
power of the program has diminished to $158,000 (in real dollars) 
today compared to 17 years ago. Similarly, the per diem rate, funded 
through HUD's ESG program, has diminished from $12.41 in 2008 to 
$11.21 in 2009, nearly a 10 percent decrease, although service 
providers in Maine have increased services such as adding more beds in 
the shelter.[Footnote 38] 

Limited Effective Collaboration among Federal Homelessness Programs 
Has Hindered Opportunities to Integrate Services: 

While a few examples of federal collaboration regarding homelessness 
have demonstrated aspects of effective collaboration, effective 
collaboration has been limited between HUD and HHS, two of the key 
federal agencies funding housing and supportive services that include 
programs for more than one subpopulation. In an October 2005 report, 
we identified key collaborative practices among federal agencies that 
include agreeing on roles and responsibilities, defining and 
articulating a common outcome, establishing mutually reinforcing or 
joint strategies, and identifying and addressing needs by leveraging 
resources.[Footnote 39] Collaboration to link supportive services and 
housing is particularly significant for rural areas because of the 
complex system of barriers in rural areas, such as limited bed 
capacity in shelters, distance to services, and lack of 
transportation. Such linkage can enhance strategies to address 
challenges that limited resources and the other barriers pose. One 
study regarding the linking of affordable housing with supportive 
services--supportive housing--indicated that over the long term, it 
could save public resources by reducing the cycle of homelessness 
through improved housing stability and behavioral health 
outcomes.[Footnote 40] Moreover, some studies indicated that offering 
housing with supportive services resulted in fewer hospital days and 
emergency room visits, which are publicly provided.[Footnote 41] 

Two completed demonstration projects--Collaborative Initiative to Help 
End Chronic Homelessness (CICH) and Ending Chronic Homelessness 
through Employment and Housing--and the existing HUD-VASH program 
demonstrated key collaboration practices identified in our October 
2005 report, such as defining roles and responsibilities and 
leveraging resources. Under the CICH, HUD, HHS, and VA agreed on roles 
and responsibilities and leveraged resources by allotting 3-year 
grants from HHS and VA and up to 5-year grants from HUD to 11 
communities.[Footnote 42] Similarly, Ending Chronic Homelessness 
through Employment and Housing was a partnership between Labor and HUD 
in which, through a cooperative agreement, HUD and Labor defined roles 
and responsibilities and leveraged resources, also consistent with key 
collaboration practices.[Footnote 43] Since 2008, under the HUD VASH 
program, HUD has designated more than 30,000 tenant-based Section 8 
vouchers to public housing authorities for veterans who are homeless 
and VA provided funding for supportive services, including case 
management and clinical services.[Footnote 44] Particularly, VA 
identified a number of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers to participate 
in the program and provide case management resources. While these 
efforts demonstrated practices that enhanced and sustained 
collaboration, particularly linking housing assistance and supportive 
services, HUD-VASH has not demonstrated collaborative strategies that 
could benefit rural areas specifically, according to officials and 
rural service providers in some of the states we visited. Because the 
HUD vouchers must be linked to VA facilities, the recipients of the 
vouchers have been mostly in nonrural areas in which most VA medical 
centers are located. However, according to HUD officials, innovative 
approaches, such as using a mobile clinic, are now being used to serve 
rural areas. Furthermore, according to VA officials, HUD and VA have 
discussed opportunities to improve voucher allocation in rural areas. 
[Footnote 45] 

Additionally, the Interagency Council has developed the first-ever 
Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. The plan, 
which was presented to Congress on June 22, 2010, reflects interagency 
agreements on a set of priorities and strategies agencies will pursue 
over 5 and 10-year timeframes according to population. Also, according 
to HUD and HHS officials, the two departments, as part of the 
President's fiscal year 2011 budget, are proposing two demonstration 
initiatives, one involving 4,000 housing vouchers with health, 
behavioral health, and other supportive services for chronically 
homeless persons, and another involving 6,000 housing vouchers linked 
with mainstream services like job training and income assistance 
through TANF for homeless and at-risk families with children. 
Additionally, according to HUD and HHS officials, the two departments 
established working groups to identify collaboration opportunities 
related to homelessness. However, given that the Council's strategic 
plan has only recently been released and that the proposal in the 
President's fiscal year 2011 budget has yet to be approved, the impact 
of both of these efforts is uncertain. 

According to officials and providers we interviewed, HUD and HHS are 
the key agencies serving the general population of those experiencing 
homeless. For instance, HUD officials noted that the agency was the 
only federal provider of permanent supportive housing for the 
homeless. While several agencies provide supportive services, 
including HUD, the health-related services on which HHS focuses 
correspond to needs often associated with persons experiencing 
homelessness, particularly mental health and substance abuse treatment 
(see table 5).[Footnote 46] Service providers with whom we spoke 
consistently cited HHS as the appropriate agency for supportive 
services. 

Table 5: Examples of Supportive Services That Federal Agencies, 
Excluding HUD, Can Provide to Persons Experiencing Homelessness: 

Health services: 

Types of supportive services: Case management; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: VA and HHS. 

Types of supportive services: Mental health; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: VA and HHS. 

Types of supportive services: Medical; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: VA and HHS. 

Types of supportive services: Substance abuse treatment; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: HHS; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: VA and HHS. 

Nonhealth services: 

Types of supportive services: Education; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: [Empty]; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: Education; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: [Empty]. 

Types of supportive services: Food; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: DHS and USDA; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: DHS, HHS, and USDA; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: DHS and USDA. 

Types of supportive services: Job training; 
Subpopulation: Adult or family: Labor and HHS; 
Subpopulation: Youth: Health services: Labor; 
Subpopulation: Veteran: Health services: Labor and HHS. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

However, according to officials and rural providers we interviewed 
(and nonrural providers interviewed for our June 2010 report), there 
is little evidence that HUD and HHS have formally agreed on their 
respective roles and responsibilities, or identified ways to leverage 
resources to support the delivery of coordinated housing and 
supportive services.[Footnote 47] According to HUD officials, 
beginning in 2002, in response to a requirement in the 2001 HUD 
Appropriations Act, HUD shifted its emphasis towards funding housing 
for persons experiencing homelessness.[Footnote 48] This reduced the 
proportion of the total CoC funding which went to supportive services 
from 50 percent in 2002 to 34 percent in 2008, as illustrated in 
figure 3. In subsequent years, CoCs submitted new and renewal projects 
with mostly housing activities (such as operation and leasing), and 
according to HUD officials, this resulted in more than 40,000 newly 
constructed housing units.[Footnote 49] During this shift towards 
housing assistance, HUD required new and renewal applicants to provide 
information on how those projects planned to coordinate and integrate 
with other mainstream health, social services, and employment 
programs. Even though HUD officials noted that it relied on other 
federal agencies to fill the supportive services gap, providers we 
visited told us they are challenged to secure supportive services 
funding from agencies other than HUD. A requirement that HUD 
applicants provide information on plans to coordinate with other 
agencies does not directly address this concern of these service 
providers. 

Figure 3: HUD's CoC Housing and Supportive Services Distribution: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Year: 2002; 
Housing: 50%; 
Supportive services: 50%. 

Year: 2004; 
Housing: 58%; 
Supportive services: 42%. 

Year: 2006; 
Housing: 60%; 
Supportive services: 40%. 

Year: 2008; 
Housing: 66%; 
Supportive services: 34%. 

Source: HUD. 

[End of figure] 

HUD and HHS, which both have missions to address homelessness, have 
not adopted some of the key practices that could be used to enhance 
collaborative efforts, particularly during the period when HUD shifted 
its resources and responsibilities. HUD officials said that they 
consulted with HHS prior to their shift in resources and 
responsibilities. HHS officials told us that there was no formal 
discussion or agreement between them and HUD about how HHS might fill 
the gap in supportive services created by HUD's shift toward housing. 
We previously have recommended that federal agencies adopt a formal 
approach--including practices such as a memorandum of agreement or 
formal incentives focused on collaboration, signed by senior 
officials--to encourage further collaboration. However, while HUD and 
HHS have not previously done this, they reported that they have 
started discussions as part of their demonstration initiatives for 
fiscal year 2011.[Footnote 50] 

Without formally linking housing and supportive services across 
federal agencies, federal efforts to address homelessness may not be 
as effective as they could be. According to HUD officials, from 2001 
to 2007, HUD and several partners--HHS, VA, Labor, Education, and the 
Interagency Council--held a series of Policy Academies which focused 
on fostering collaboration, enhancing partnerships, and building 
capacity. Additionally, HHS and HUD collaborated to create FirstStep 
to encourage use of mainstream services. However, the impact of this 
collaboration is not clear, as evidenced by numerous rural providers 
who were not aware of the collaboration. In addition, service 
providers with whom we spoke in both rural and nonrural areas 
consistently raised concerns about the lack of coordination between 
HUD and HHS. In spite of HUD's housing emphasis, which encouraged 
local communities to coordinate with other mainstream supportive 
services programs, and HUD's efforts in issuing guidance to rural 
areas on ways to collaborate with other organizations, some service 
providers we spoke with mentioned that they did not observe 
coordination across federal agencies.[Footnote 51] They cited the 
administrative challenges they faced in developing programs for the 
homeless that incorporated both housing and services.[Footnote 52] 
Particular to Kentucky, state officials and service providers told us 
that HHS's PATH program, due to state stipulations, limits resources 
for serving rural clients, many of whom suffer from mental health or 
substance abuse problems. The lack of service dollars also affects 
organizations that could access HHS funding. Officials who administer 
several shelter and transitional housing programs in rural Maine told 
us they sought nongovernmental funding to fill the gaps in services. 
For example, HHS's Transitional Living Program provided $200,000 for 
supportive services over 5 years, but the officials had to seek 
additional supportive services funds through foundations and private 
donors. Development by HUD and HHS of formal efforts to link housing 
and services, which may include their proposed collaboration in the 
President's fiscal year 2011 budget, could enhance the effectiveness 
of federal efforts to address homelessness. 

Conclusions: 

The issue of rural homelessness presents a number of challenges for 
federal agencies, not the least of which is determining its extent. 
Data limitations and the array of federal programs, some of which are 
not specifically targeted toward homelessness and some of which do not 
track if their services or dollars have been expended in rural areas 
or on persons experiencing homelessness, have resulted in multiple 
data sets that do not allow for an overall assessment of the 
characteristics and extent of rural homelessness or a comparison with 
nonrural homelessness. The data issues are enormously challenging, but 
they also highlight the importance of coordinating within existing 
programs to mitigate some of the impact of the information gaps and to 
effectively deliver services. 

As HUD and HHS consider collaborative efforts to address homelessness, 
formal coordination across these agencies that links supportive 
services and housing--a model that has shown to be effective--needs to 
include tangible and accessible opportunities for providers to bridge 
the gap in funding for supportive services that can be joined with 
housing for persons experiencing homelessness. Providers with whom we 
met in rural areas were generally unaware of any collaborative efforts 
between HUD and HHS that would assist them in linking housing and 
supportive services. Particularly during HUD's shift in its resources 
and responsibilities in 2002, HHS and HUD, the primary agencies for 
supportive services and housing, did not implement some of the key 
practices for effective collaboration that could have limited gaps in 
services. More effective collaboration can create incentives and 
opportunities for homeless housing and supportive services to be 
linked, which is considered to be important for the effective delivery 
of assistance to persons experiencing homelessness, and to further 
reduce administrative challenges for local service providers. By more 
formally linking housing and supportive services, HUD and HHS could 
increase their ability and opportunities to address gaps in efforts to 
effectively address homelessness and decrease challenges to service 
providers and persons experiencing homelessness. 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

To strengthen formal collaboration efforts, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the Secretary of Health 
and Human Services direct the appropriate program offices to further 
explore opportunities to more formally link housing and supportive 
services--in the most appropriate forms and combinations of mainstream 
and targeted programs identified by both agencies--with specific 
consideration for how such collaboration could minimize barriers to 
service provision in rural areas. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided draft copies of this report to the Departments of 
Agriculture, Education, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban 
Development, Interior, Labor, and Veterans Affairs and the Executive 
Director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness for their 
review and comment. Both HHS and HUD generally agreed with our 
recommendation and provided technical comments which we incorporated, 
as appropriate. Letters from the Deputy Assistant Secretary for 
Legislation at the Department and Health and Human Services, and the 
Assistant Secretary of Community Planning and Development at the 
Department of Housing and Urban Development, are reprinted in 
appendixes II and III of this report, respectively. The Departments of 
Labor and Veterans Affairs and the staff of the U.S. Interagency 
Council on Homelessness did not provide formal comments but provided 
technical comments which we also incorporated, as appropriate. The 
Departments of Agriculture and Interior did not provide any comments. 

HUD's Assistant Secretary of Community Planning and Development stated 
in written comments that HUD agrees that increased collaboration among 
federal agencies would improve the delivery of services in rural 
areas. In addition, HUD stated that due to statutory requirements, 
federal agencies do not employ a single definition of "rural" and it 
may not be reasonable for all agencies to utilize the same definition 
of rural as the purposes of the programs may be vastly different. We 
do not recommend that agencies utilize a single definition of rural 
but rather recognize that the varying definitions limit the ability to 
understand the incidence and prevalence of homelessness in rural 
areas. HUD also commented that this report presents a limited review 
of HUD's data collection and reporting efforts and does not 
acknowledge the progress that HUD has been making in this area or the 
value of the data currently being collected, or that their Annual 
Homeless Assessment Report is the only national estimate of 
homelessness to use longitudinal data. Since we recently issued a 
report that provides a detailed review of HUD's data collection and 
reporting efforts and discusses the efforts HUD has taken to improve 
the data, we did not provide this same level of detail in this report. 
[Footnote 53] We have added a reference to our June 2010 report for 
additional information on these topics. In addition, as noted in our 
June 2010 report, HUD's data in their Annual Homeless Assessment 
Report are not longitudinal in that they do not follow specific 
individuals over time; rather HUD collects aggregated data that track 
numbers of homeless over time. 

HUD commented that they have undertaken efforts to better align their 
homelessness data with homelessness data from HHS and VA. We 
acknowledged these efforts in the report. HUD also commented that the 
report indicates that effective collaboration hinges predominately on 
the use of a common vocabulary and offered barriers it considers more 
significant to effective collaboration. Discussions of issues related 
to a common vocabulary are not described in this report but are 
included in our June 2010 report.[Footnote 54] Additionally, while HUD 
agrees with our discussion about the proportion of CoC dollars awarded 
for supportive services activities having decreased, they commented 
that the total dollar amount associated with those service remains 
significant. We do not suggest that the total dollar amount of HUD 
funded supportive services is insignificant, but rather that the 
decrease in the proportion of dollars for supportive services has 
contributed to a gap in funding for providers. Further, HUD commented 
that it has worked with HHS to improve access by homeless persons to 
their programs and that federal coordination and collaboration are 
evident in the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness's Federal 
Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. We recognize in our 
report actions that HUD and HHS have taken to collaborate; however, we 
believe that we correctly assess the opportunities for further 
progress by the agencies in linking housing and supportive services 
across their programs. 

HUD also commented that it agreed that a common vocabulary among 
federal agencies and increased collaboration would improve the 
delivery of services in rural areas, but that the existence of both of 
these elements does not equate to a seamless integration of various 
streams of funding to create a project to serve homeless persons. We 
are not suggesting that a common vocabulary and increased 
collaboration by themselves will equate to a seamless integration of 
funding streams, but we believe that it could help to improve the 
delivery of services. Finally, HUD commented that it believes our 
report's focus on the anecdotal experiences of local providers does 
not provide a complete picture of efforts made by HUD regarding data 
collection, interagency collaboration, and the funding of supportive 
services. As noted earlier, we did not seek to repeat the level of 
detail on HUD's efforts regarding data collection as had already been 
included in our June 2010 report and we refer readers to this report 
for additional information.[Footnote 55] Also, while our report 
provides the perspectives of local providers as gathered from six site 
visits, we also conducted numerous interviews with national 
stakeholder groups and federal agency officials, and reviewed relevant 
reports and federal agency documents. Based on all of the information 
we gathered and reviewed, we believe we have correctly assessed the 
data collection, interagency collaboration, and funding of supportive 
service issues referred to by HUD in their comment. 

HHS's Deputy Assistant Secretary for Legislation stated in written 
comments that HHS strongly agrees with the importance of collaboration 
with HUD to effectively address homelessness. In addition, HHS 
commented that GAO's reference to the demonstration initiative--around 
housing vouchers for homeless people--included in the Fiscal Year 2011 
President's Budget was incomplete. We added an expanded description of 
this initiative. HHS commented that the Patient Protection and 
Affordable Care Act will contribute to filling gaps in supportive 
services for homeless people. We did not examine the Patient 
Protection and Affordable Care Act as part of our review. HHS also 
commented that the discussion of funding and services in the report 
needs to distinguish between linking homeless individuals with the 
services that they need and aligning services with housing programs 
that target specific homeless populations. We acknowledge that 
collaboration between HHS and HUD related to housing and supportive 
services could take different forms. As we state in our 
recommendation, the two agencies should explore opportunities to link 
housing and supportive services while considering the most appropriate 
forms and combinations for this collaboration. 

We will send copies of this report to interested congressional 
committees, the United States Interagency Council for the Homeless, 
and to the Departments of Agriculture, Education, Health and Human 
Services, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Labor, and Veterans 
Affairs. This report will also be available on our home page at no 
charge at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you have any question about this report, please contact me at (202) 
512-8678 or cackleya@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions to this 
report are listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Alicia Puente Cackley: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

List of Committees: 

The Honorable Christopher J. Dodd: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard C. Shelby: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Robert Menendez: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable David Vitter: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation and Community Development: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Barney Frank: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Spencer Bachus: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Financial Services: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Maxine Waters: 
Chairwoman: 
The Honorable Shelley Moore Capito: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity: 
Committee on Financial Services: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To address all of our objectives, we conducted site visits to six 
states--Arizona, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, New Mexico, and Texas. 
During these visits, we interviewed federal, state, and local housing 
and homelessness officials and nonprofit homelessness organizations, 
and toured rural areas in which homelessness was present. We selected 
the site visit locations based on several factors, including (1) 
discussions with advocates and researchers in the field of 
homelessness--including the Housing Assistance Council, the National 
Alliance to End Homelessness, the National Law Center on Homelessness 
and Poverty, and the Urban Institute--to learn about rural 
homelessness issues and the outcomes across different states; (2) a 
review of studies and reports on local and state efforts to serve the 
homeless in rural areas, including papers prepared for the 2007 
National Symposium on Homelessness Research that highlighted issues 
related to rural homelessness; (3) the presence of tribal lands and 
colonias; and (4) geographical diversity. While on site visits we 
interviewed federal field office officials, state officials, local 
providers, and local advocates, and in Minnesota panels of homeless 
individuals. We also toured service areas and providers facilities, 
and in Texas we toured several colonias. On the site visits to Arizona 
and New Mexico we visited the tribal lands of the San Carlos Apache 
Tribe of the San Carlos Reservation, Arizona; the Tohono O'odham 
Nation of Arizona; the Pueblo of Acoma, New Mexico; and the Pueblo of 
San Felipe, New Mexico. We interviewed tribal officials from the 
tribal designated housing entities, service providers on and off 
tribal lands, and advocates. We reviewed relevant laws, regulations, 
and program documentation and interviewed officials from various 
federal agencies, including Departments of Agriculture, Education, 
Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, 
Labor, Veterans Affairs, and the U.S. Interagency Council on 
Homelessness (Interagency Council). We also conducted interviews with 
a variety of stakeholders, including advocates and researchers. 

To describe the characteristics of homelessness in rural areas, we 
reviewed existing research and studies on homelessness issues, 
particularly those that are related to rural homelessness. We 
conducted interviews with relevant federal and state officials, 
service providers, national homeless and poverty organizations, and to 
the extent possible, homeless individuals and families to obtain their 
perspectives on the conditions of homeless in rural areas and the 
extent of migration to nonrural areas for assistance. Specifically, we 
interviewed federal officials to understand the extent data is 
available in estimating the incidence and prevalence of homelessness 
in rural areas and how it compares to nonrural areas. 

To identify the federal homeless assistance and amount of funding 
awarded, we reviewed statutes, regulations, and reports, including our 
prior work, on federal homeless assistance for both targeted and 
mainstream programs. We interviewed federal, state, and local 
officials, to understand the range of assistance that is available to 
assist homeless individuals or families in rural areas, how those 
assistance programs are delivered, and the amount of funding that has 
been awarded. To the extent that data were available for comparison, 
we interviewed selected federal officials to understand funding 
differences between rural and nonrural areas. Specific data from some 
programs funded by the Departments of Agriculture, Housing and Urban 
Development, and Veterans Affairs were determined to be reliable 
enough to use in this report. 

To identify the barriers persons experiencing homelessness and 
homeless service providers encounter, we interviewed state and local 
officials, homeless service providers, and to the extent possible, 
homeless individuals and families for information on barriers 
encountered when seeking assistance, barriers encountered when 
providing assistance, and any challenges related to federal 
coordination and efforts. We also interviewed select federal 
officials, including officials from the Interagency Council, to 
understand the extent of federal collaboration in providing services 
to persons or families experiencing homelessness in rural areas. 

We conducted this performance audit from September 2009 to July 2010 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Health and Human Services: 

Department Of Health & Human Services: 
Office Of The Secretary: 
Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 
Washington, DC 20201: 

July 12, 2010: 

Alicia P. Cackley: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Cackley: 

Attached are comments on the U.S. Government Accountability Office's 
(GAO) draft report entitled: "Rural Homelessness: Better Collaboration 
by HHS and HUD Could Improve Delivery of Services in Rural Areas" (GAO 
10-724). 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to review this 
correspondence before its publication. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Andrea Palm: 
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 

Attachment: 

[End of letter] 

General Comments Of The Department Of Health And Human Services (HHS) 
On The Government Accountability Office's (GAO) Draft Report Entitled, 
"Rural Homelessness: Better Collaboration By HHS And HUD Could Improve 
Delivery Of Services In Rural Areas" (GAO-10-724): 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on this GAO 
draft report. 

GAO Recommendations: 

To strengthen formal collaboration efforts, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the Secretary of Health 
and Human Services direct the appropriate program offices to further 
explore opportunities to more formally link housing and supportive 
services--in the most appropriate forms and combinations of mainstream 
and/or targeted programs identified by both agencies, with specific 
consideration for how such collaboration could minimize barriers to 
service provision in rural areas. 

HHS Response: 

The Department strongly agrees with the importance of collaboration 
with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to 
effectively address homelessness. The Administration for Children and 
Families (ACF) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning 
and Evaluation (ASPE) have been actively working with HUD in efforts 
to design a voucher program demonstration effort for improving 
services to homeless families. In addition, on June 17, 2010, HIIS and 
HUD issued a letter highlighting the opportunities for state Temporary 
Assistance for Needy Families programs and HUD's Homelessness 
Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program to coordinate resources and 
improve services to homeless families. [hyperlink, 
http://www.acf.hhs.gov/proqrams/ofa/policy/colleague-ltr/2010_TANF-
HUD.html] 

On page 31, GAO makes a brief reference to HUD and HHS's	
collaboration on a demonstration initiative around housing vouchers 
for homeless people, but the description is incomplete. This important 
initiative, which is part of a broad collaboration between HUD and HHS 
warrants a more extensive description in the GAO report. Last summer, 
HHS Secretary Sebelius and HUD Secretary Donovan initiated a 
collaboration to better integrate the nation's housing, health, and 
human services delivery systems. The two Departments established 
workgroups co-facilitated by senior HHS and HUD officials to identify 
concrete opportunities in three related areas: homelessness, community 
living (for people with disabilities and the elderly), and livable 
homes and communities (macro-level, healthy housing and community 
planning and design). Two demonstration initiatives are included in 
the FY 2011 President's Budget, one involving 4,000 housing vouchers 
with health, behavioral health and other supportive services for 
chronically homeless persons and the other involving 6,000 housing 
vouchers, linked with a range of mainstream services like job training 
and income assistance through the Temporary Assistance for Needy 
Families program, for homeless and at-risk families with children. 

Concerning the report's discussion of the need to fill gaps in 
supportive services for homeless people, we note that the landmark 
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will contribute greatly to 
filling those gaps. Medicaid will be expanded to nearly all 
individuals under the age of 65 with incomes up to 133 percent of the 
federal poverty level. This significant expansion will allow more 
families and adults without dependent children to enroll in Medicaid 
in 2014 or before. In addition, the Affordable Care Act will support 
demonstrations to improve the ability of psychiatric facilities to 
provide emergency services. It will also expand the availability of 
medical homes for individuals with chronic conditions, including 
severe and persistent mental illness. Expansion of Community Health 
Centers is another major change that will serve many vulnerable 
populations, including those who are homeless or at risk of being 
homeless. 

The discussion about services and their funding sources throughout the 
report needs to distinguish between linking homeless individuals with 
the services that they need and aligning services with housing 
programs that target specific homeless populations. Homeless 
populations range from those who experience a crisis driven short-term 
experience of homelessness to those who are chronically homeless for 
long periods and have complex and multiple service needs. Many 
individuals and families only need temporary access to housing 
assistance to escape homelessness, while others, especially 
chronically homeless individuals, may need longer term housing along 
with supportive services. 

The following are two current examples of demonstration projects in 
ACF's Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB) that focus on rural 
homeless populations. 

Rural Host Home Demonstration Project: 

The Basic Center Program (BCP) provides shelter and support services 
to assist youth in crisis, re-unite them with their families, as 
appropriate, strengthen their family relationships; and help them 
transition to safe and appropriate alternative living arrangements 
where they can become independent, self-sufficient and contributing 
members of society. The Rural Host Homes Demonstration Project was 
designed to expand those services to runaway and homeless youth who 
reside in rural areas not served by shelter facilities. 

* Expanding Opportunities for Service: 

Organizations funded through this demonstration project are required 
to recruit, screen, train, and provide ongoing support to host home 
families that provide services to youth in their homes. While in the 
program, youth under age 18 receive: 

* shelter for up to 21 days, 

* transportation, 

* individual, family, and group counseling services, 

* assistance staying connected with their schools or staying current 
with the curricula, in accordance with the provisions of the McKinney-
Vento Homeless Assistance Act, and, 

* an after-care plan to ensure continuing support after they leave the 
program. 

* Finding Solutions: 

Through the demonstration project, FYSB will attempt to assess the gap 
in services to rural RHY. It will evaluate whether host homes were 
utilized, and if the youth were able to receive the same services as 
those in large metropolitan areas. 

Support Systems for Rural Homeless Youth: A Collaborative State and 
Local Demonstration Project: 

FYSB recently awarded grants to three States — Colorado, Iowa, and 
Minnesota — to carry out demonstration projects helping young people 
in rural areas, including Tribal lands and other rural Native 
communities, who arc approaching young adulthood and independence but 
have few or no connections to a supportive family or community 
resources. 

Specifically, grant awards provide funding to States to collaborate 
with local community-based organizations to influence policies, 
programs, and practices that affect the design and delivery of 
services to RHY, ages 16-21, in the Transitional Living Program (TLP), 
as well as youth aging out of State child welfare systems and into the 
Independent Living Program (ILP). 

* Focusing on Three Areas: 

The demonstration project focuses on improving coordination of 
services and creating additional supports for rural youth, especially 
in three vital areas: 

* survival support services, such as housing, health care, substance 
abuse, and/or mental health, 

* community service, youth and adult partnerships, mentoring, peer 
support groups, and/or Positive Youth Development activities, and, 

* education and employment, such as high school/General Equivalency 
Diploma completion, post-secondary education, employment, training, 
and/or jobs. 

* Involving Youth in All Phases: 

This demonstration project is being conducted in two phases: planning 
and implementation. Currently, grantees are in the planning phase: 
identifying, convening and consulting with local FYSB-funded agencies 
providing services to youth in TLP and ILP programs in rural 
communities. 

FYSB sees youth participation as fundamental to the success of the 
projects. Each project will emphasize youth participation and 
leadership development in the planning and implementation of project 
strategies and activities. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development: 

U.S. Department Of Housing And Urban Development: 
Assistant Secretary For Community Planning And Development: 
Washington, DC 20410-7000: 

July 9, 2010: 

Ms. Alicia Cackley, Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW, Room 2017: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Cackley: 

This is in response to the Government Accountability Office's draft 
report entitled Rural Homelessness: Better Collaboration by HHS and 
HUD Could Improve Delivery of Services in Rural Areas (July 2010)-—GA0-
10-724. HUD provided specific technical comments under separate cover. 
HUD agrees with the overall GAO recommendation regarding the value of 
collaboration among federal partners. However, HUD is including in 
this letter additional information that may provide context on complex 
issues presented in this report, particularly related to the 
definition of rural, HUD's data collection efforts, and collaboration 
with other federal agencies. This report contains references to GAO's 
recently released report on the definition of homelessness. HUD 
provided extensive comment and a letter for the record to GAO on that 
report and will not repeat many of those concerns here, and encourages 
readers to review both reports in order to fully understand HUD's 
position on the issues. HUD's specific comments related to this report 
are as follows: 

* GAO points out that federal agencies do not employ a single 
definition of "rural." In many cases, this is due to statutory 
requirements rather than policy decisions made by the federal 
agencies. The Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs (SNAPS), for 
example, has used the definition of rural that was included as part of 
the "Rural Homelessness Grant Program" that was created in the Stewart 
B. McKinney Homeless Housing Assistance Amendments Act of 1992. 
Furthermore, it may not be reasonable for all agencies to utilize the 
same definition of rural as the purposes of their programs may be 
vastly different. 

* Since 2005, HUD has been reporting local and national level homeless 
data to Congress through the Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR)—
the first and only national estimate of homelessness to use 
longitudinal data. GAO's report presents a limited review of HUD's 
data collection and reporting efforts and does not acknowledge the 
progress that has been made in this area or the value of the data 
currently being collected or reported. 

* This report discusses the need for better coordination between 
federal agencies that require homeless data collection systems. HUD 
agrees, and has been working since 2006 with the Departments of Health 
and Human Services (HHS) and Veterans Affairs (VA) to improve and 
align data collection and reporting requirements for federally funded 
programs addressing homelessness. The partnership with HHS has 
resulted in successful alignment with the Projects for Assistance in 
Transition from Homelessness (PATH) program noted by a December 2009 
joint announcement of HHS' intent to utilize HMIS for the PATH 
program. The partnership with the VA has resulted in an initial 
evaluation of alignment for the Grant and Per Diem and HUD VASH 
programs. 

* GAO's report indicates that effective collaboration hinges 
predominantly on the use of a common vocabulary. HUD offers that, 
while a common vocabulary and definitions would improve coordination 
for rural areas, key differences in authorizing statutes, implementing 
regulations, and administrative processes are more significant 
barriers to effective collaboration. 

* The report discusses the reduction in Continuum of Care (CoC) funds 
for supportive services costs and indicates that HUD "emphasized the 
funding of housing activities and decreased its own funding for 
supportive services." While it is true that the proportion of dollars 
being awarded for supportive service activities has decreased, the 
total dollar amount associated with those services remains 
significant. In 2008, HUD awarded $453 million for supportive service 
budget requests. 

* The report asserts that there "is little evidence that HUD and HHS 
have formally agreed on their respective roles and responsibilities, 
or identified ways to leverage resources to support the delivery of 
coordinated housing and supportive services." HUD remains committed to 
ensuring that participants in all of its homeless assistance projects 
receive needed supportive services and has worked with HHS to improve 
access by homeless persons to their programs. In fact, this type of 
federal coordination and collaboration is evident in the U.S. 
Interagency Council on Homelessness' (USICH) Federal Strategic Plan to 
Prevent and End Homelessness, which was announced by USICH Chair and 
HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan last month. 

The Department agrees that a common vocabulary amongst federal 
agencies and increased collaboration would improve the delivery of 
services in rural areas. However, the existence of both of these 
elements does not equate to a seamless integration of various streams 
of funding to create a project to serve homeless persons, especially 
given that agencies often have differing statutory requirements or 
Congressional direction. In addition, the Department believes that the 
GAO report's focus on the anecdotal experiences of local providers 
does not provide a complete picture of efforts made by HUD regarding 
data collection, interagency collaboration, and the funding of 
supportive services. 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to respond to this report. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Mercedes Marquez: 
Assistant Secretary: 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Alicia P. Cackley, (202) 512-8678 or cackleya@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Marshall Hamlett, Assistant 
Director; Aglae Cantave; Chir-Jen Huang; Karen Jarzynka; John Lord; 
Paul Thompson; Marc Molino; LuAnn Moy; Andrew Pauline; and Barbara 
Roesmann made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] K. Hopper and J.Hamburg, "The Making of America's Homeless: From 
Skid Row to New Poor, 1945-1984," Critical Perspectives on Housing, R. 
G. Bratt, C. Hartman, and A. Myerson (Eds.), (Philadelphia, PA., 
Temple University Press 1986). 

[2] The HEARTH Act is contained in Division B of Public Law 111-22. 
Pub. L. No. 111-22 § 1001, et seq., 123 Stat. 1669 (May 20, 2009). The 
Rural Stability Housing Grant Program was established in section 1401 
of the HEARTH Act. The pertinent provisions of the act become 
applicable on November 20, 2010, or 3 months after the Department of 
Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) publication of final regulations 
under section 1504 of the act, whichever is earlier. The act requires 
HUD to promulgate the regulations not later than 1 year after the date 
of enactment. Id. §§ 1503, 1504. 

[3] Id. § 1402. Colonia, a Spanish word for neighborhood or community, 
refers to a settlement located within 150 miles of the U.S.-Mexico 
border that has a majority population composed of individuals and 
families of low and very low income and which may lack basic 
infrastructure such as water and sewer. 

[4] The HEARTH Act changed various aspects of the Emergency Shelter 
Grant program and also changed the name of the program to the 
Emergency Solutions Grant program. Pub. L. No. 111-22 § 1201. 

[5] The act was originally named the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless 
Assistance Act, Pub. L. No. 100-77 (July 22, 1987), but was renamed as 
the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act in 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-
400 (Oct. 30, 2000). 

[6] The HEARTH Act codified the CoC process. Pub. L. No. 111-22 § 
1301. Among other things, the act requires a collaborative application 
for each geographic area applying for HUD McKinney-Vento funds. 

[7] In this report we use "supportive services" to include all 
nonhousing services that may assist persons experiencing homelessness. 

[8] The Interagency Council members are HUD; HHS; Education; Labor; 
DOJ; VA; DHS; the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, 
Interior, Energy, and Transportation; the Social Security 
Administration; the General Services Administration; the Office of 
Management and Budget; the Postal Service; the Corporation for 
National and Community Service; and the White House Office of Faith-
Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. 

[9] Pub. L. No. 111-22 § 1004. 

[10] GAO, Homelessness: A Common Vocabulary Could Help Agencies 
Collaborate and Collect More Consistent Data, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702] (Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
2010). 

[11] Two of HUD's programs, the Emergency Shelter Grant program and 
the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Rehousing program, may fund 
homelessness prevention. 

[12] The definition of "homeless children and youths" is codified at 
42 U.S.C. § 11434a. 

[13] In April 2010 HUD published a proposed rule designed to clarify 
and elaborate the definitions of "homeless," "homeless individuals," 
"homeless person," and "homeless individual with a disability." 
Comments were due on June 21, 2010. 75 Fed. Reg. 20541 (Apr. 20, 2010). 

[14] GAO, Rural Housing: Changing the Definition of Rural Could 
Improve Eligibility Determinations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-110] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 3, 
2004). 

[15] Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, Pub. L. No. 
101-625 (Nov. 28, 1990). 

[16] Tribal officials defined a unit as overcrowded if there were more 
than one-and-a-half people per bedroom. Some units had three or more 
people per bedroom. 

[17] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[18] HUD developed the data standards pursuant to the 2001 amendments 
to the McKinney-Vento Act. For a discussion of the Congressional 
directive, see HUD, Report to Congress: HUD's Strategy for Homeless 
Data Collection, Analysis and Reporting, Congressional Directive/HUD 
Study, (August 2001), [hyperlink, 
http://www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/homeless/hmis/strategy/]. 

[19] PIT counts are conducted biennially, but HUD has compiled 
national data on homelessness for AHAR in each of the last 5 years 
(2005-2009). In the odd numbered years, the PIT was required for all 
CoCs and in 2006 and 2008 it was optional. The most recent PIT count 
was conducted in January 2010. The last AHAR was issued in June 2010 
and includes data collected in January 2009. 

[20] According to HHS officials, organizations that receive PATH funds 
are required to submit an annual PATH Report, providing information 
about funding, staffing, enrollment, services, and demographics of 
recipients. Similarly, health centers that receive specific funding as 
part of the Health Care for the Homeless Program are required to track 
information including patient demographics, services provided, 
staffing, clinical indicators, utilization rates, costs, and revenues. 

[21] According to VA officials, VA staff, working with community 
providers in local meetings and planning processes, collect population 
based data on homeless veterans and conduct assessments of local 
service needs. For more information on statutory requirements, see 
Public Laws 102-405, 103-446, and 105-114. 

[22] For additional information on actions HUD has taken to improve 
the data, see [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[23] GAO, Homelessness: Information on Administrative Costs for HUD's 
Emergency Shelter Grants Program, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-491] (Washington, D.C.: May 20, 
2010). 

[24] ESG has been funded at approximately $160 million per year for 
several years. 

[25] Eligibility requirements for entitlement cities or counties were 
established in section 102 of the Housing and Community Development 
Act and include central cities of metropolitan areas, other cities 
with a current population of 50,000 or more that are also in 
metropolitan areas, counties that are in metropolitan areas and which 
have a population of 200,000 or more after excluding metropolitan 
cities, small cities that do not participate with the county, and 
eligible tribes and cities or counties that retain status as a result 
of previously meeting the relevant criteria. The ESG funds are 
allocated in a three step process: First, 2 percent of the funds are 
set aside for the territories. Second, the balance of the funds is 
allocated by the CDBG formula. Third, as required by law, funds for 
entitlement jurisdictions that would receive less than 0.05 percent of 
the overall allocation--$80,000 in 2009--are added to the allocation 
of the state in which the jurisdiction is located. In 2009, 304 
entitlement jurisdictions received a separate allocation, while 48 
percent of ESG funding was distributed by state entities. 

[26] CoCs submit a single application that includes a ranked list of 
individual organization projects and a comprehensive CoC wide planning 
document that outlines the activities, planning process, and needs 
assessment of the CoC. HUD scores the application as a whole but funds 
the projects directly. 

[27] HUD determines a final pro rata need each year for each CoC 
utilizing the CDBG formula, the ESG Program's universe of 
jurisdictions, and the funding needed to renew all expiring Supportive 
Housing programs for one year. Using the CDBG formula, 75 percent of 
the funds are allocated to metropolitan cities and urban counties who 
have qualified for a direct ESG allocation since 2004 and the 
remaining 25 percent of the funds are allocated to all other 
metropolitan cities or urban counties and all other counties. A CoC's 
total preliminary pro rata need is the sum of the funds allocated to 
each municipality or county that participates in the CoC. A CoC's 
final pro rata need may be adjusted up if the funding required to 
renew its expiring Supportive Housing projects exceeds its preliminary 
pro rata need. 

[28] Since 1997, New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas have set aside 10 
percent of their CDBG funds for the colonias and California has set 
aside from 2 to 5 percent. 

[29] Congressional Research Service, Homelessness: Targeted Federal 
Programs and Recent Legislation, RL30442 (Washington, D.C., Jan. 20, 
2010). 

[30] Labor uses "nonurban" rather than rural in its Homeless Veterans' 
Reintegration program. Labor chose 569,463 to include the largest 75 
cities in its urban category. All other areas below that population 
number, regardless of size, are eligible for competition in the 
nonurban category. 

[31] According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, a 2007 
report noted that between 1997 and 2007, 170,000 public units and 
300,000 federally subsidized private market units have been lost due 
to deterioration. 

[32] The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program provides an indirect 
federal subsidy used to finance the development of affordable rental 
housing for low-income households. 

[33] Tenant-based Section 8 vouchers assist very low-income families, 
the elderly, and the disabled with affordable, decent, safe, and 
sanitary housing in the private market. Tenant-based Section 8 
vouchers are administered locally by public housing agencies (PHAs). 
The PHAs receive federal funds from HUD to administer the voucher 
program. A family that is issued a housing voucher is responsible for 
finding a suitable housing unit that must meet minimum standards 
determined by the PHA. 

[34] M.R. Burt, et. al., Homelessness: Programs and the People They 
Serve, Findings of the National Survey of Homeless Assistance 
Providers and Clients (Washington, D.C., Urban Institute, 1999). 

[35] According to VA officials, HUD-VASH allows some waivers for 
felons. 

[36] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[37] HUD, Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. Housing 
Market Conditions (May 2010). 

[38] State and local governments that receive an ESG allocation by 
formula establish the reimbursement rate for ESG-funded activities. In 
Maine, "bednight" refers to one bed in an emergency shelter occupied 
for one night by one individual. The initial bednight per diem 
calculation is based on an amount equal to 85 percent of the funds 
available for the calendar year, which will be divided by a number 
equal to the total number of bednights of all eligible emergency 
shelters during the previous calendar year. 

[39] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005). 

[40] In particular, mental illness, alcohol abuse, and drug abuse 
decreased for participants in the study, which are among some of the 
most costly public health problems in the country. 

[41] L. Sadowski, R. Kee, VanderWeele, et al, "Effect of a Housing and 
Case Management Program on Emergency Department Visits and 
Hospitalizations Among Chronically Ill Homeless Adults: A Randomized 
Trial," JAMA, vol. 30, no. 17, 1771-1778 (2009); and T.E. Martinez and 
M.R. Burt, "Impact of Permanent Supportive Housing on the Use of Acute 
Care Health Services by Homeless Adults," Psychiatric Services, vol. 
57, no. 7, 992-999 (2006). 

[42] HUD, HHS, and VA (with the coordination of the Interagency 
Council) provided housing and supportive services for individuals 
experiencing chronic homelessness in 11 communities through CICH. 
According to research studies in behavioral sciences, the CICH 
demonstration project had positive outcomes due to the combination of 
resources including federal funding and oversight, technical 
assistance, and opportunities for meetings with other CICH 
communities. For more information, see M. Kresky-Wolff, M.Larson, R. 
O'Brien, and S. McGraw, "Supportive Housing Approaches in the 
Collaborative Initiative to Help End Chronic Homelessness (CICH)," The 
Journal of Behavioral Health Services and Research, Vol. 37, No. 2 
(2010). 

[43] Labor and HUD offered permanent housing, supportive services, and 
employment assistance to people who were chronically homeless. Martha 
Burt's study of the demonstration project in Los Angeles, California, 
found that the project succeeded in its goal of moving chronically 
homeless clients into permanent supportive housing and helping them 
get and keep employment. Martha Burt, Urban Institute, Evaluation of 
LA's HOPE: Ending Chronic Homelessness through Employment and Housing 
Final Report (Washington, D.C., 2007). 

[44] The 2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act, which authorizes a 
joint effort between HUD and VA to coordinate housing and supportive 
services for homeless veterans, articulated steps for identifying 
roles and responsibilities and a system of leveraging resources. See 
Pub. L. No. 110-161 (Dec. 26, 2007). 

[45] Although HUD-VASH is not included in the fiscal year 2011 budget, 
HUD officials said that they expect it will be included in future 
budgets. 

[46] According to HHS officials, ongoing funding for services in 
permanent supportive housing is frequently funded through contracts 
with local departments of health, mental health, behavioral health and 
social services using HHS block grant resources. 

[47] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[48] The 2001 HUD Appropriations Act included the requirement that no 
less than 30 percent of HUD's total appropriation must go to permanent 
supportive housing. 

[49] Beginning in 2002, HUD began scoring CoCs on housing emphasis, 
which is a calculation based on the relationship between funds 
requested for housing activities and funds requested for supportive 
service activities. Furthermore, HUD began scoring CoCs on enrollment 
and participation in various mainstream programs. 

[50] GAO, Rural Economic Development: Collaboration between SBA and 
USDA Could be Improved, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1123] (Washington, D.C.: Sep. 18, 
2009). 

[51] For HUD's guidance to rural communities see HUD, Homeless 
Assistance Programs: Rural Continuum of Care (June 2009). Also, as 
discussed previously, the McKinney-Vento programs, through the CoC 
system, require local communities to assemble partners to develop a 
comprehensive plan for housing and supportive service, such as case 
management, treatment programs, and training programs, to address the 
needs of those who are experiencing homelessness. 

[52] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702] identified 
similar challenges in nonrural areas. 

[53] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[54] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[55] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-702]. 

[End of section] 

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