The Stella Performance Module is a powerful visualization tool providing insight into system-level performance for the CFCH FL-507 Homeless Response System. Among these insights are 3 important metrics for understanding system-level performance: Days Homeless, Exits to Permanent Housing, and Returns to Homelessness.


Stella Performance Module


The System Performance Overview gives us a high-level understanding of system-level performance, with the total households and people served in the time-frame, the average cumulative days homeless, the percentage of exits that were to permanent housing and the rate of returns to homelessness.  


The second view is the System Performance Map. This chart maps how households move through the homeless system, with different combinations of project types.

For example, if we look at the top part of the map, we see that 74% of all households enter into a Shelter (ES/SH). On average, they will spend 79 days in the shelter before exiting. In the time-frame, 83% of households exited shelter, with 26% of those exits being to a permanent housing destination. This contributes to our overall positive exit rate, which is 33% for the system. Finally, we can see the red line indicating that 9% of those households who exit to permanent housing return to homelessness, with an average of 134 days to return. This is one way we can follow a map to understand how people move through the homeless system.
Our first big metric: Days Homeless. This calculation is different from other federal reporting about the number of days people are homeless in one notable way; permanent housing projects, and the time people spend searching for housing while enrolled in these projects, is counted towards the cumulative days homeless. Days Homeless is also presented by household type. With the below visual, we can see that Adult & Child households are homeless in projects longer than Adult Only households.





This view shows average days homeless by different pathway groupings. This can be useful for measuring system engagement and how it relates to days homeless. Some important limitations to keep in mind is that system engagement with project types such as Street Outreach, Coordinated Entry, and Supportive Service projects is not counted in the days homeless.





Additionally, we cross-section Days Homeless by population groups such as; parenting youth, households aged 55+, households with disabilities, different racial groups, and households fleeing domestic violence, etc. One important way we can use this cross-section is to understand the average days homeless by race.


Our second major metric for system-level performance is Exits to Permanent Housing. This view shows us the total and percentage of households that exit to permanent housing destinations, by household type. Permanent housing destinations can include: rental with subsidy, rental without subsidy, staying with family or friends permanently, and home ownership. This provides another layer of understanding to system performance when examined alongside days homeless: for instance, Adult & Child households may experience more days homeless on average than Adult Only households, but their rate of permanent housing exits is higher.
In this view we can see Exits by Pathway. This works similarly to the Days Homeless by Pathway, except we are visualizing exit destinations for each pathway by type of exit: positive, temporary, or unknown. One takeaway is that we have an extremely high rate of unknown exit destinations, which can have a negative impact on data quality and limit our ability to make impactful decisions.
When All Destination Types is selected, the bars show the proportion of exits by destination type with the section on the left indicating permanent destinations, the section in the middle indicating temporary destinations, and the section on the right indicating unknown destinations.
  In this view we cross-section exits by population group, including by race and ethnicity. When making decisions that will carry the most impact, make sure to think about the population group size - prioritizing impact by population size will lead to bigger system-level changes.
Returns to Homelessness is our third big metric that indicates system-level performance. Returns to Homelessness evaluates households who exit to a permanent housing destination and then return to literal homelessness, either by 6 months, 6-12 months, or 12-24 months after exit. Here we are visualizing the rate of returns within 6 months of exit, by household type and population group.
This chart shows the percent of households who returned to the homeless system within six months of exiting to a permanent destination. For each household type, the upper bar shows exits to permanent destinations and the lower bar shows the percent that returned to the homeless system within six months.
The Returns by Population Group metric fits in with the other two metrics to paint a picture of system-performance: taking the previous Adult & Child households example, we can see that while they have longer average days homeless, they exit to positive destinations at a higher rate than other household types, and they return at a much lower rate than other household types. This paints a more holistic picture for those seeking to understand homelessness for Adult & Child households.
This chart shows returns to the homeless system within six months of exit for households with certain demographic or system utilization characteristics called population groups. The top bar for each population group shows the percent of households that exited. The bar on the bottom shows the proportion that returned within six months of exiting.


Demographics are a large part of what makes Stella such a powerful tool for analysis. Understanding differences in system-level participation and performance by subpopulations can inform nuanced decision-making. One piece of this is simply understanding how many households a certain project type serves in a given year. Here we can see the vast majority of households interacting with our homeless response system do so in shelters and transitional housing.

Households may have been served in more than one project type, the data has not been deduplicated across project types.

Looking further at system engagement for households in shelters and transitional housing, we can understand what proportion is homeless for the first time vs continuously homeless, what proportion is a Veteran, what proportion is chronically homeless, and the household composition.

Note: This analysis is based on the household unit. Though individuals may be part of different households at different times throughout the reporting period, a household will only be considered as returning or re-engaging if their household composition is the same as in their previous interaction with the homeless system.

Veterans are adults who have been on active duty in the armed forces of the United States. Non-Veterans are adults who have not been on active duty in the armed forces of the United States. Adults whose veteran status was recorded as "unknown," "refused," or "data not collected" are included in Unknown veteran status.

A person is counted as chronically homeless if they report the following conditions: - Either 365 continuous days homeless OR 365 cumulative days homeless during four or more episodes over the past three years, AND - Have a disabling condition.


This chart displays household composition categories based on the the number of adults and children who make up each household for all households that were served in the household type and project type selected.

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