Family Options Study: 3-Year Impacts of Housing and Services Interventions for Homeless Families

275 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2017

See all articles by Daniel Gubits

Daniel Gubits

Abt Associates, Inc.

Marybeth Shinn

Abt Associates, Inc.

Michelle Wood

Abt Associates, Inc.

Stephen Bell

Abt Associates, Inc.

Samuel Dastrup

Abt Associates, Inc.

Claudia Solari

Abt Associates, Inc.

Scott Brown

Abt Associates, Inc.

Debi McInnis

Abt Associates, Inc.

Tom McCall

Abt Associates, Inc.

Utsav Kattel

Abt Associates, Inc.

Date Written: October 2016

Abstract

The Family Options Study: Three-year Impacts of Housing and Services Interventions for Homeless Families documents the outcomes of the 2,282 formerly homeless study families approximately 37 months after having been randomly assigned to one of four housing and/or services interventions. The findings at 37-months in large part mirror the findings documented at 20 months, with the long-terms outcomes again demonstrating the power of a voucher to convey significantly improved housing outcomes to formerly homeless families, when compared with the housing outcomes of families offered other interventions. Families offered a permanent subsidy experienced less than half as many episodes of subsequent homelessness, and vast improvements across a broad set of measures related to residential stability. Many of the non-housing outcomes of interest that were strongly influenced by the offer of a voucher in the short-term, such as reductions in psychological distress and intimate partner violence, are still detected, but some positive impacts found at the 20-month followup are not detected at the longer, 37-month followup. For example, 20 months after random assignment, assignment to SUB reduced the proportion of families with child separations in the 6 months before the survey--this effect was not detected in the 6 months before the 37-month survey. Also in this longer window of observation, some positive impacts in the child well-being domain have emerged. Families offered a voucher continue to be significantly more food secure and experience significantly less economic stress than families offered the other interventions. On measures of employment and earnings, the modest negative impacts of vouchers relative to usual care have fallen, although some remain statistically significant.

Suggested Citation

Gubits, Daniel and Shinn, Marybeth and Wood, Michelle and Bell, Stephen and Dastrup, Samuel and Solari, Claudia and Brown, Scott and McInnis, Debi and McCall, Tom and Kattel, Utsav, Family Options Study: 3-Year Impacts of Housing and Services Interventions for Homeless Families (October 2016). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3055295 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3055295

Daniel Gubits (Contact Author)

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Marybeth Shinn

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Michelle Wood

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Stephen Bell

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Samuel Dastrup

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Claudia Solari

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Scott Brown

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Debi McInnis

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Tom McCall

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

Utsav Kattel

Abt Associates, Inc. ( email )

55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-1168
United States

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