For Fred, Support Led to Stability—and the Chance to Pay It Forward
Ventura County Project to Support Reentry participant
Public Sector Solutions, Homelessness & Housing
IMPACT
The analysis helped Ventura County win a $2.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice
In 2019, homelessness was on the rise in Ventura County, California. Seeking to better understand the problem, county leaders, in partnership with the Cities of Oxnard and Ventura, turned to Social Finance.
Our team dove into the problem by integrating cost data from over a dozen county and city departments, seeking to measure the dollars and cents associated with homelessness—with the hopes that our findings might inform future discussions about using public funding to prevent, rather than address, homelessness in the county.
After determining that service use is often concentrated disproportionately among a relative minority of people experiencing persistent homelessness, we developed a method to estimate the service use and costs of the top quartile of people who are very likely experiencing homelessness and are frequent users of emergency services. We found that services for this high-utilizing population cost the county $5-8 million per year, with an average per-person annual expenditure of $37,500-$57,000.
The analysis was eye-opening for county leaders, who committed to fund more homelessness services moving forward.
To submit a referral to Ventura County community resources and health services, call 211, visit 211ventura.org, or text your zip code to 898211.