Revised: January 2019
By Sarah Owens and Michael Livingston
At left is the first page of a letter from Robin Winkle, an officer in the ROCC (Secretary). She also happens to work for one of two providers serving Marion and Polk Counties that, for years, has received funding through ROCC. She also happens to be a good friend of ROCC's paid Program Coordinator, Jo Ann Zimmer.
The letter was sent to CANDO the day we were considering this resolution.
The letter makes no representations about funding levels or costs, as it assumes those matters will be addressed in the planning phase, at which point it will be determined "how much funding will actually come to our community should this separation move forward."
Same with respect to costs associated with ServicePoint (Oregon's HMIS) and Winkle's bulleted questions (see below).
For the record, several weeks before Winkle wrote the letter, we met with her to ask her views on a possible separation, and we assured her that her concerns would be dealt with to everyone's satisfaction during the planning process, a fact she omits from her letter.
On page two (at right), Winkle refers to us condescendingly as "a few community members that have never participated in a HUD Continuum of Care", a reference that unsurprisingly ignores HUD's definition of a CoC, which consists of all those in the community who serve or care about the homeless, and the fact that we've been members of the ROCC and attending meetings since June 2016.
Sadly, although we've come to expect this haughty lack of respect from the ROCC leadership, we know it's not personal; it's merely a symptom of ROCC's many internal problems.
Winkle's letter asks, "Are there changes that need to occur in the current CoC system that can be made without separating from the Oregon Balance of State CoC [aka the ROCC]?" and then answers it with "I believe that our community can come together to provide a continuum of care without separating." In other words, we are admonished to "work from within", without any admission that there is a problem and without any offer of assistance. Precisely what one might expect from a 17-year veteran of a closed system/organization.
Having given all due consideration to the concerns raised in this letter, the CANDO board at its February meeting voted unanimously in favor of proceeding "to the planning phase to determine how best to proceed with recreating a Marion & Polk Counties CoC."
Brief responses to Winkle's bulleted questions
Why does HUD recommend that smaller CoCs merge with larger CoCs? Well, first, what's a "small CoC", and when has HUD recommended that, to whom, based on what information? It's certainly not general advice. We asked Ms. Winkle these questions, and she declined to answer. So, that would be a question for HUD. Certainly HUD might advise CoCs with insufficient capacity/resources (like OR-504 back in 2011) to merge, but that doesn't mean HUD would advise against Marion and Polk Counties recreating an effective and sufficiently resourced local CoC today.
Why did Marion and Polk Counties merge with the Oregon Balance of State [ROCC] in 2012? Because MWVCAA lacked the organizational capacity to continue as the lead agency, and they just more or less threw up their hands. It wasn't a considered or even thoughtful solution. It was just the first door out.
How much funding would truly come back to the Marion and Polk Communities? Not sure what "truly" means here, but, as Ms. Winkle well knows, that question is for HUD, and someone with a relationship with HUD will need to ask it in order to get a straight answer. That said, MWVCAA and Shangri-La received $610K in this last cycle. In 2010, Marion and Polk received over $900K. Although there will be a gap in funding due to the transition, it seems unlikely we'll do worse in the long run.
What will the implementation of an HMIS cost the grantees, in addition to what each grantee pays for? The current grantees (MWVCAA and Shangri-La), and many potential grantees in Marion and Polk Counties have already implemented an HMIS (in Oregon, it's ServicePoint). Licenses are less than $400. Training/technical assistance funding is a gap issue, but not an issue overall. It just needs to be planned for, and it will be.
What Marion-Polk agency has the funding, capacity and staff knowledge to be the lead agency and collaborative applicant? Several, actually. This is a silly question. Consider the fact that ROCC relies on a part-time consultant nominally supervised by the admittedly totally uninvolved Community Action Partners of Oregon. We're hardly likely to do worse, and we certainly intend to do better.
Are there changes that need to occur in the current CoC system that can be made without separating from the Oregon Balance of State CoC [ROCC)]? No. Not based on what we've seen. If it coulda happened in ROCC, it woulda happened by now. It's not gonna happen, and Ms. Winkle can't even bring herself to assert that it could, she can only ask questions.
What is the true benefit of Marion and Polk Counties separating out from the Oregon Balance of State CoC [ROCC]? Having a functional, effective, local CoC would include these benefits (note that none focuses on "the money"):
- Homelessness, and chronic homelessness in particular, is a humanitarian concern that has significant economic impacts on every community's resources. Therefore, any reorganization that promises to improve the effectiveness of homeless assistance dollars should be supported.
- Since 2011, Marion and Polk Counties have been working with 26 other counties in Oregon to improve homeless services through a federal program called the Continuum of Care, but progress is very slow.
- If Salem/Marion, Polk Counties were to reorganize as our own CoC, we could concentrate on local programs and services that directly address the unique needs of area residents.
- Accurate local data allows providers to respond appropriately to the needs of area residents, but right now, Salem/Marion, Polk Counties' data gets rolled in with the other counties and is difficult to separate.
- Currently, only two providers in Salem/Marion, Polk Counties receive federal CoC Program grants. Reorganizing under local control would make it easier for Salem/Marion, Polk Counties providers to learn about the program and apply for grants to support and house local residents.
- Reorganizing under local control would make it easier to expand the number of providers collecting and sharing data and to improve the quality of the data and use it to allocate resources where they will be most effective.
- Developing a coordinated entry system that will allow providers to prioritize resources for the most vulnerable is much more feasible across 2 counties than across 28.
- A locally controlled collaborative can be held to account for progress or lack of progress in preventing and ending area homelessness in ways that a 28-county collaborative cannot.
- The local community, including the homeless community and homeless advocates, would be able to participate in and expand the capacity of a locally controlled collaborative in ways that are just not feasible across 28 counties.
- A Salem/Marion, Polk Counties collaborative would be more agile and more likely to adopt innovative strategies.]