A representative of the Community Safety Department of Greensboro City presented "Housing First Plus," a proposal to move the city's most vulnerable residents from the street into permanent housing and to pilot targeted stabilization programs for families and individuals. The proposal, the representative said, would require council approval before proceeding.
"It is designed to move our most vulnerable neighbors from the street into permanent stable housing," the Community Safety Department representative said, describing the initiative as both an immediate response to summer heat risks and a foundation for longer-term support.
Under the plan the department outlined, the program would launch two high-impact pilots: targeted housing stabilization for 10 small families and intensive support for 20 high-need individuals. The representative said the goal is to sunset the existing doorway project and replace it with a scalable, proactive system intended to demonstrate that permanent housing is the most effective intervention for Greensboro's future.
"If approved by council, this would provide a strategic dual advantage by addressing the immediate life saving needs of summer heat mitigation while serving as the official launch pad for long term stability," the representative said. Funding sources, specific timelines and site selections were not specified in the presentation.
More information, the representative added, can be found on the city's website under city news. The proposal will proceed to the council for consideration; no vote or formal action was recorded in the provided transcript excerpt.