14
ensuring smooth transitions into adulthood Prevention of youth homelessness: Introducing an aftercare guarantee for youth leaving state care Catherine Maher and Mike Allen Focus Ireland reland

Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

  • Upload
    feantsa

  • View
    70

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Presentation given by Catherine Maher during the "Prevention of youth homelessness: ensuring smooth transitions into adulthood" seminar at the FEANTSA 2014 Policy Conference, "Confronting homelessness in the EU: Seeking out the next generation of best practices", 24-25 October 2014, Bergamo (Italy)

Citation preview

Page 1: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

ensuring smooth transitions into adulthood

Prevention of youth homelessness:

Introducing an aftercare guarantee for

youth leaving state care

Catherine Maher and Mike Allen – Focus Ireland reland

Page 2: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

This Presentation

• Care and Aftercare in Ireland

• Focus Ireland’s Aftercare Model

• The Challenges

• Aftercare Assessment Guarantee

Page 3: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Care and aftercare in Ireland

Children in State care

• 6,466 children in state care

• 93% in foster care

• 6% in residential care

• 1% other

Page 4: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Young people in Aftercare Ireland: 2013

Page 5: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Focus Ireland’s Aftercare Model

Grew out of recognition of high number of care leavers among homeless

This is not a homeless service

• Care leavers are defined under Ethos

6. People due to be released from institutions

6.3 Childrens institutions/homes

Preventative Service targetting the small number of young people at risk of homelessness

Complex needs

Frequently from Residential Care or multiple foster placement

Page 6: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

The first phase

‘Young Women’s Aftercare Project (1989)

• 4 bedrooms for young women who had been in care

and experienced street homelessness

• ‘Shared Living Model’

• Staff on-site, shared cooking arrangements

• Experience showed this model did not

progress towards independent living skills.

Page 7: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

The Second Phase

‘On-Site Residential Supported Housing’

Independent units

24 hour on-site case management support

Support plans - towards independent living

Up to 9 months

‘Visiting Support in Private Rented’ model

For young people with greater capacity

24 hour on-call case management support

‘Visiting Support in FI-owned premises

Provides greater sustainability: tolerant landlord

Page 8: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Focus Ireland Aftercare stats 2013

Residential

North Dublin 14

South Dublin 19

Waterford 11

TOTAL 44

Visiting Support

North Dublin 42

South Dublin 77

Limerick 12

Waterford 19

TOTAL 150

Page 9: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

So what is the problem?

• Insufficient resources: waiting

lists and ‘post-code lottery

• Lack of

• Access to Education

• Access to Employment

• Personal finances

• Housing…..

Page 10: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

So what was the answer?

• Create a legal right to aftercare

– the state ‘shall’ (not MAY) provide

aftercare

• Campaigned for ten years for this

legislative change

• Government responded with commitment

to “a right to assessment for all”

Page 11: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Eligibility for the Aftercare Assessment

A child, aged 16/17,

who had been in care for 12 consecutive months

Or has been in care on a number of occasions

totalling at least 12 months

Or between 18 and 21 and

who was an eligible child but a care plan was not

prepared, or who did not engage with the plan on

reaching 18

there has been a significant change in their

circumstances e.g. children who leave care to return

home and then arrangements break down

Page 12: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Limitations of assessment guarantee

• It doesn’t guarantee resources

• If assessment were to have legal power then authorities respond by underestimating young people’s needs

• If assessment were to have too little authority it would be meaningless

• Needs to have legal power to command resources

• Provides support for advocates

Page 13: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood

Promoting a European Guarantee

• Existing Youth Guarantee does little for

young people at risk of homelessness

• Careleavers are at risk of

homelessness all over EU

• EU should take the lead in ‘parental’

role

• We can build on the Irish progress

• FEANTSA should adopt this campaign

Page 14: Prevention of Youth Homelessness: Ensuring Smooth Transitions into Adulthood