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August 2016  

Policy&Practice

17

case-planning framework that is rooted

in financial planning and economics

but is accessible, using plain language.

Tools for Constructing Well-

Being: The Self-Sufficiency

Financial Calculator and the

Financial Cliff Forecaster

For all of us, financial stability is

essential to reach our potential and

thrive. Stresses like job and income

loss or family health emergencies make

everything harder. Many families lack

the resources necessary to weather

large, or even small, shifts in their

financial stability. Even short-term

hardships can quickly strain resources

and capabilities, negatively affecting

an individual or family’s social, emo-

tional, and physical health. In fact,

63 percent of Americans do not have

enough savings to cover a $500 emer-

gency.

3

Chronic poverty generates

even greater stress. Over time, it drains

mental bandwidth, reducing space

for problem solving and planning for

future self-sufficiency, as well as for

parenting, household management, job

performance, and other important life

responsibilities.

In many instances, agencies issue

benefits to address these symptoms

and miss the opportunity to identify

and address significant root causes.

The current system reacts to, and

provides, “defined benefits” or “treat-

ment” for symptoms. The current

system of benefits eligibility and dis-

tribution does not use a standardized

self-sufficiency scale to categorize

the actual degree of need (i.e., crisis,

at-risk, safe, stable, thriving) that

would make it possible to put federal,

state, and local funding to work to

offer each family an individualized

forward path toward self-sufficiency.

Benefits are also not currently struc-

tured in a way that acknowledges the

way in which a challenge in one area

of life affects another (e.g., the role of

affordable child care in achieving job

stability). By addressing root causes

and better aligning investments,

improved outcomes can be achieved.

When issuing benefits, the human

service system is not structured in an

agile way that promotes recipients’

financial empowerment or literacy. As

a result, unsustainable financial situ-

ations can result in individuals and

families needing to access emergency

benefits repeatedly.

The Local Council proposes strategi-

cally adjusting the current entitlement

and eligibility-based methodology

for distributing financial supports to

increase the likelihood of improved

overall outcomes for individuals,

setting them on a path toward greater

self-sufficiency. The Local Council has

joined to design self-sufficiency tools, a

Self-Sufficiency Financial Calculator

and a

Financial Cliff Forecaster

that

caseworkers and clients can use to

flexibly manage and distribute indi-

vidualized benefits tailored to the true

self-sufficiency needs of the family.

These tools create the capacity to assess

and evaluate a family’s self-sufficiency

“financial readiness” in an “as-is” state

and then develop the ability to apply

financial assistance modeling and

related investments across the social

determinants of health in order to

affect the overall self-sufficiency plan.

The Role of Housing in

Constructing Well-Being

Lack of access to affordable housing

is likely to be one of the most difficult

barriers to eliminate. Coordinating

integrated health and human service

systems is critical to the success of

these efforts. Many local members

participate in state and national efforts

to reduce homelessness, with some

success. In communities where cost

burdens are high or there is rapid

growth, however, many local members

continue to see growth in family and

youth homelessness. To break the

cycle of intergenerational poverty and

give these young families and their

children a chance at becoming gainfully

employed and self-sufficient, there must

be wrap-around services to provide

themwith social and emotional support

and eliminate the barriers to housing,

child care, health care, child support,

and food insecurity. Many have also

aged out of the child welfare and may

need specific supports targeted toward

their unique trauma-related needs.

The power of APHSA’s local members

is the opportunity to demonstrate

an evidence-based approach across

diverse localities nationwide. The goal

of local members is to test and spread a

two-generation approach focusing on

young, homeless families, specifically

disconnected youth and their families

in multiple local jurisdictions simulta-

neously. To accomplish this, they plan

to:

design and implement a set of

targeted interventions

identify and remove federal, state,

and local policy barriers

simultaneously create new braided

and blended funding streams in

order to scale up these services

across our diverse communities

Anchoring this work in universal,

holistic, family-focused assessment

tools like the

Self-Sufficiency Matrix,

Self-Sufficiency Financial Calculator,

and

Financial Cliff Forecaster

will

create a comprehensive and viable

approach that will be scalable and

flexible across jurisdictions.

Local agencies are natural labora-

tories for generating transformative

change that can achieve improvements

in service response more quickly,

along with supports to families.

Local agencies are among those at

the forefront, developing and testing

models and tools to generate a more

viable environment by strengthening

families’ capacities and foundations.

This article is an excerpt from the Local

Council “A New Pathway to Prosperity and

Well-Being” vision document. For more

information about the Local Council vision,

or to learn how you can get involved, contact

Christine Tappan, APHSA Local Liaison, at

ctappan@aphsa.org.

Reference Notes

1. For information is available at

http://www.naco.org

.

2. Leadership for a Networked World.

The Human Services Value Curve: A

Framework for Improved Human Services

Outcomes, Value, and Legitimacy.

http://

lnwprogram.org/sites/default/files/

HSVC%20Guide.pdf.

3. McGrath, Maggie. “63% of Americans

Don’t Have Enough Savings to Cover a

$500 Emergency.

Forbes

, January 6, 2016.

Retrieved from

http://www.forbes.com/

sites/maggiemcgrath/2016/01/06/63-of-

americans-dont-have-enough-savings-to-

cover-a-500-emergency/#33acc5e66dde