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462A.204 FAMILY HOMELESS PREVENTION AND ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.
    Subdivision 1. Establishment. The agency may establish a family homeless prevention and
assistance program to assist families who are homeless or are at imminent risk of homelessness.
The term "family" may include single individuals. The agency may make grants to develop and
implement family homeless prevention and assistance projects under the program. For purposes
of this section, "families" means families and persons under the age of 22.
    Subd. 2. Selection criteria. The agency shall award grants to counties with a significant
number or significant growth in the number of homeless families and that agree to focus
their emergency response systems on homeless prevention and the securing of permanent or
transitional housing for homeless families. The agency shall take into consideration the extent
to which the proposed project activities demonstrate ways in which existing resources in an
area may be more effectively coordinated to meet the program objectives specified under this
section in awarding grants.
    Subd. 3. Set aside. At least one grant must be awarded in an area located outside of
the metropolitan area. A county, a group of contiguous counties jointly acting together, or a
community-based nonprofit organization with a sponsoring resolution from each of the county
boards of the counties located within its operating jurisdiction may apply for and receive grants
for areas located outside the metropolitan area.
    Subd. 4. Project requirements. Each project must be designed to stabilize families in their
existing homes, shorten the amount of time that families stay in emergency shelters, and assist
families with securing transitional or permanent affordable housing throughout the grantee's area
of operation. Each project must include plans for the following:
(1) use of existing housing stock, including the maintenance of current housing for those
at risk;
(2) leveraging of private and public money to maximize the project impact;
(3) coordination and use of existing public and private providers of rental assistance,
emergency shelters, transitional housing, and affordable permanent housing;
(4) targeting of direct financial assistance including assistance for rent, utility payments
or other housing costs, and support services, where appropriate, to prevent homelessness and
repeated episodes of homelessness;
(5) efforts to address the needs of specific homeless populations;
(6) identification of outcomes expected from the use of the grant award; and
(7) description of how the organization will use other resources to address the needs of
homeless individuals.
    Subd. 5. Authorized uses of grant. A grant may be used to prevent or decrease the period
of homelessness of families and to decrease the time period that families stay in emergency
shelters. Grants may not be used to acquire, rehabilitate, or construct emergency shelters or
transitional or permanent housing. Grants may not be used to pay more than 24 months of rental
assistance for a family.
    Subd. 6. Advisory committee. Each grantee shall establish an advisory committee consisting
of a homeless advocate, a homeless person or formerly homeless person, a member of the state
interagency task force on homelessness, local representatives, if any, of public and private
providers of emergency shelter, transitional housing, and permanent affordable housing, and other
members of the public not representatives of those specifically described in this sentence. The
grantee shall consult on a regular basis with the advisory committee in preparing the project
proposal and in the design, implementation, and evaluation of the project. The advisory committee
shall assist the grantee as follows:
(1) designing or refocusing the grantee's emergency response system;
(2) developing project outcome measurements; and
(3) assessing the short- and long-term effectiveness of the project in meeting the needs of
families who are homeless, preventing homelessness, identifying and developing innovative
solutions to the problem of homeless families, and identifying problems and barriers to providing
services to homeless families.
    Subd. 7. Reporting requirements. Each grantee shall submit an annual project report to
the state Interagency Task Force on Homelessness. The report must include the actual program
results compared to program objectives. The state interagency task force shall report on program
activities to all state agencies that provide assistance or services to homeless persons.
    Subd. 8. School stability. (a) The agency in consultation with the Interagency Task Force
on Homelessness may establish a school stability project under the family homeless prevention
and assistance program. The purpose of the project is to secure stable housing for families with
school-age children who have moved frequently and for unaccompanied youth. For purposes of
this subdivision, "unaccompanied youth" are minors who are leaving foster care or juvenile
correctional facilities, or minors who meet the definition of a child in need of services or
protection under section 260C.007, subdivision 6, but for whom no court finding has been made
pursuant to that statute.
(b) The agency shall make grants to family homeless prevention and assistance projects in
communities with a school or schools that have a significant degree of student mobility.
(c) Each project must be designed to reduce school absenteeism; stabilize children in one
home setting or, at a minimum, in one school setting; and reduce shelter usage. Each project
must include plans for the following:
(1) targeting of families with children under age 12 who, in the last 12 months have either:
changed schools or homes at least once or been absent from school at least 15 percent of the
school year and who have either been evicted from their housing; are living in overcrowded
conditions in their current housing; or are paying more than 50 percent of their income for rent;
(2) targeting of unaccompanied youth in need of an alternative residential setting;
(3) connecting families with the social services necessary to maintain the families' stability
in their home; and
(4) one or more of the following:
(i) provision of rental assistance for a specified period of time, which may exceed 24
months; or
(ii) development of permanent supportive housing or transitional housing.
(d) Notwithstanding subdivision 2, grants under this section may be used to acquire,
rehabilitate, or construct transitional or permanent housing.
(e) Each grantee under the project must include representatives of the local school district
or targeted schools, or both, and of the local community correction agencies on its advisory
committee.
History: 1993 c 369 s 137; 1995 c 224 s 102; 1999 c 139 art 4 s 2; 1999 c 223 art 2 s 51;
2001 c 178 art 1 s 44; 1Sp2001 c 4 art 4 s 21

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes