Advocates today announced the formation of the National Policy & Advocacy Council on Homelessness (NPACH). NPACH is dedicated to ending homelessness through grassroots advocacy driven by the experiences, insights, and data of local communities, and through inclusive partnerships with anti-poverty organizations.
The need for a new national anti-homelessness policy and advocacy organization arose when financial difficulties forced the National Coalition for the Homeless (NCH) to lay off its entire policy staff. In order to carry on their critical policy work, including work on legislative initiatives such as the Bringing America Home Act (BAHA) and the National Housing Trust Fund, former NCH policy staff were joined by other advocates in the formation of NPACH. “Now, more than ever, strong policy advocacy is needed to end homelessness,” said NPACH Executive Director Brad Paul. “We believe that effective national anti-homelessness advocacy must be driven by the experiences, insights, and knowledge of local communities, including all voices within those communities. All sectors of anti-poverty work must be represented.” NPACH collaborators include representatives of state and local homeless coalitions, the labor movement, international bodies, education associations, academics, members of the business and entertainment community, and professional sports figures.
"Homeless and destitute families have few true champions in Congress right now. Were it not for the tireless work of homeless providers and advocates, and their indomitable spirit, important legislation such as the Bringing America Home Act and the National Housing Trust Fund would never see the light of day," Congresswoman Julia Carson (IN-7) said to an NPACH working group. Congresswoman Carson is the author of the Bringing America Home Act, a comprehensive bill aimed at ending homelessness in the United States. "I am encouraged that NPACH is joining with other homeless advocacy groups to work for the passage of the Bringing America Home Act."
NPACH activities will include:
· Educating the public and policymakers on the causes and consequences of homelessness, thus creating the political will necessary to end homelessness
· Creating and advocating for appropriate federal policies in collaboration with local communities, thus ensuring that those policies reflect the reality of local communities and meet their needs
· Connecting community-based organizations, schools, and work places to national anti-homelessness policy through advocacy and public education initiatives
NPACH will also work to address concerns about the current direction of federal homelessness policy. Despite its inextricable connection to core economic indicators, homelessness has been treated as an insular policy area, separated from the poverty and housing crisis that underlie it. The perpetuation of homelessness as a phenomenon that is distinct and somehow “different” from poverty has contributed to the marginalization of the issue among the public and policymakers, and thus distanced it from the very constituencies with the power to end it. For these reasons, NPACH will incorporate all sectors of anti-poverty work, including housing, labor, health, education, immigration, civil rights, domestic violence, disability, gender equity, child welfare, and faith-based initiatives.
For more information: (202) 714-0153
http://www.homelessnesscouncil.org, or [email protected]
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