In November 2003, the Coalition adopted the following position statements to guide our advocacy efforts:
Therefore, we oppose legislation, ordinances, policies, or practices that diminish that fundamental right to safe, decent and affordable housing. This includes policies and practices that discriminate against a person’s ability to secure safe, decent housing, that criminalize homelessness, or that turn people away from services in times of crisis.
The Coalition supports measures to promote equal education and voting rights for people experiencing homelessness.
We believe in the need for a variety of housing types and the provision of related services that ensure the preservation, stability and affordability of housing for all residents of Minnesota.
Appropriations and tax expenditures used to subsidize housing should be targeted to those with the greatest need.
This includes maintaining a livable minimum wage as well as providing a social safety net that is both sufficient to meet basic needs for anyone who, for any reason, cannot obtain or retain employment, and that provides meaningful avenues to build toward self-sufficiency through education, training, and employment support.
Outreach is targeted to all agencies serving those at risk of homelessness, including homeless service and housing providers such as street outreach, emergency shelter, and transitional and permanent supportive housing programs, as well as mainstream service providers such as the criminal justice system, chemical dependency and mental health treatment facilities, battered women’s services, public housing authorities, and county human services staff and policy makers.
The Coalition seeks to ensure that such mainstream programs and services will adequately serve those with the greatest needs, and to improve service delivery capacity, quality, and outcomes for all providers.
The intersection of poor health and homelessness is irrefutable. Untreated disease and disability contribute to homelessness, are consequent to it, and present barriers to its ultimate end.
The consequences of restricted access to comprehensive health care are reflected in extremely high rates of both chronic and acute health problems among people experiencing homelessness.