In Washington state, where the first coronavirus cases were detected in the country last January, schools and emergency shelters shut down at the same time.
The simultaneous closing of two safe havens for homeless students and their families portended a looming disaster for those already struggling with housing insecurity.
鈥淭he temperatures at night were freezing鈥17 or 18 degrees [Fahrenheit]鈥攁nd I was getting called about families who were sleeping in their car because the hotel wouldn鈥檛 rent to them because they were coughing,鈥 said Amy Perusse, the coordinator of the homeless Kids in Transition program for the 20,000-student Everett school district, about 30 miles north of Seattle.
鈥淭here were no emergency shelters we could find.鈥
The fluidity of the situation and the novelty of the fast-moving pandemic made it easy for homeless children, who make up about 2.6 percent of all K-12 students nationally, to get lost in the shuffle. And indeed, as schools have moved to remote and hybrid-learning, districts across the country have reported that more than one in four of the nation鈥檚 record-high 1.5 million homeless children have fallen off the radar.
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As a result of Perusse鈥檚 aggressive outreach, Everett, which averages about 1,100 homeless students annually, has identified 60 more homeless students this academic year than last year.
Even before the pandemic, student homelessness was a challenge in Everett. In 2009, the district enrolled 510 homeless students. But that number鈥攚hich includes about 200 unaccompanied homeless children annually鈥攈as doubled in recent years. The growth mirrors a national rise in child poverty and homelessness in the last decade.
Perusse believes the key to locating and keeping track of homeless students during a crisis is ensuring that everyone is looking for them鈥攁nd that every family feels seen.
鈥淪he really listens to each family, even with how time-consuming it can be, and she will figure out how to get them supported and connected to what they need,鈥 said Chad Golden, Everett鈥檚 director of categorical programs, which are federal programs for disadvantaged students.鈥
In part that鈥檚 because Perusse remembers what it鈥檚 like to feel unmoored. She graduated high school at 18, already married with two children. But the marriage fell apart abruptly when her children were in elementary school. Perusse had to leave her home on short notice and struggled to make ends meet and find a new place to live.
鈥淭here were times when my own children would have qualified for [McKinney-Vento],鈥 the federal program to support education for homeless students, she said.
Perusse鈥檚 experience was like that of many of the families who become homeless but often fly under schools鈥 radar.
Under McKinney-Vento, any student without a 鈥渇ixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence鈥 is considered homeless.
Students living on the street or in homeless shelters can be more easily identified, as are students moving frequently within the foster care system; however, many more homeless students live 鈥渄oubled up,鈥 as Perusse鈥檚 children were, sometimes with relatives, friends, or in motels. These children aren鈥檛 as readily spotted by school or social service officials, and often their parents do not realize they qualify for help.
鈥淚 worked in a school, and I talked with my administrators, and they knew my situation鈥攁nd nobody ever offered support,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 drove my kids clear across town to go to school and got up really early in the morning. I didn鈥檛 know that because I was living at a friend鈥檚 house one night, and then over at my mom鈥檚 on another night, and sometimes in a motel, that I could have gotten any help.鈥
- Coordinate Online: Create easy ways for those working in education, housing, social services, and nonprofits to share the load for identification and services.
- Get More Eyes on Students: Train all adults in schools, not just teachers, to identify homeless students in live and virtual environments.鈥
- Build on Other Services: Add questions that can flag potential homeless children in other critical forms, such as school meals applications, or on the main school site.
That personal experience fuels Perusse鈥檚 work, and she keeps her children in mind when working with families.
鈥淧art of my passion for what I do now is [because] people need to know that this exists,鈥 said Perusse, an 11-year veteran of Everett鈥檚 schools. 鈥淚 also know we need to handle it delicately because you don鈥檛 want people to feel bad.鈥
Before the pandemic, Perusse noticed that some homeless families were uncomfortable connecting through email or calls. She got a department cell phone to send and receive text messages from families to put them at ease.
鈥淭hat really came in handy when we started to go remote,鈥 Golden said, because families still had a fast way to reach the school for help.
Perusse came to Everett in 2009 to coordinate academic and transition services for high school students in the Snohomish County juvenile justice facility school, housed in the district鈥攁 job she considers one of her favorites.
Four years later, she became a high school graduation coordinator for the entire school system, and took over the district鈥檚 McKinney-Vento programs a year later.
Part of my passion for what I do now is, people need to know that this exists. But I also know we need to handle it delicately because you don't want people to feel bad.
Before Everett, Perusse worked for several Washington districts and, for a year, with the Washington Housing Authority, which she said has given her better insight into which housing programs may best fit her students鈥 families.
鈥淓very position I鈥檝e held has really prepared me for this,鈥 she said.鈥
Creating a Regional Support Network
About five years ago, she began to hold quarterly countywide meetings for homeless education and foster-care coordinators. Those meetings initially focused on arranging transportation for homeless students who lived outside of their home districts. Over time, representatives from neighboring counties and local housing agencies also began to attend.
When the pandemic hit, Perusse brought together representatives from local homeless and domestic violence shelters, law enforcement, community groups, and housing officials via virtual meetings and joint Google Docs.
The group tracked homeless students across school and district boundaries, pooled community resources and connected families with everything from food, clothing, and pandemic-related health care needs to temporary housing and mental health. It also provided school support services such as portable Wi-Fi and phones.鈥
鈥淚t was really understanding the mobility inherent in homelessness, going right away for a regional approach, and creating the kinds of systems for liaisons to communicate with each other,鈥 said Barbara Duffield, executive director of SchoolHouse Connection, a national nonprofit working to support homeless children鈥檚 education, which used Everett鈥檚 network to model guidance for other districts.
鈥淭hey can say, OK, I鈥檝e got X number of families living in my districts, but they鈥檙e enrolled in your school district. Here [are] the resources that they need.鈥
The collaboration has allowed Everett to adapt its supports quickly to meet the needs of students during the pandemic.
Some of those needs are immediate and practical. On the tech side, the district purchases mobile phones for families in domestic violence shelters (where parents are often asked to surrender their phones) and noise-cancelling headsets for students crowded together with siblings and parents to hear their teachers during their Zoom classes. The district also coordinates regular deliveries of masks and hygiene supplies.
Other assistance can include helping families wend their way through the bureaucracy. For example, at the end of a typical year, Perusse transitions about 500 students out of homeless education services after they graduate or their families find a stable place to live. In 2020, though, the sinking economy threatened the stability of families who had recently found stable housing. Perusse worked with state homeless coordinators to keep supports in place for families at risk of becoming homeless again.
Erika Phillips, the associate director of housing and resources at Millennia Ministries, a local nonprofit which helps connect homeless families to housing and social supports, called Perusse 鈥渁 constant voice for the Everett public school district children.鈥濃
鈥淧arents are overwhelmed, the kids are stressed out. It鈥檚 hard for kids to be on Zoom ... and it鈥檚 hard when you鈥檙e living in your car, or when you are moving from shelter to shelter to hotel, to check in and keep your kids motivated,鈥 Phillips said.
She added, 鈥淲e鈥檙e able to get the moms and the dads emotional support, while Amy gets the kids the emotional support they need.鈥 That might include therapy and other mental health services, or even just opportunities to participate in school clubs or activities that would otherwise be difficult to manage.
Perusse has steadily expanded supports for homeless students, with building-level coordinators at every school and partnerships with the district鈥檚 early-childhood program and local preschools. (Federal estimates suggest 45 percent of all homeless children are younger than five years old.)
In high schools, she teamed with Western Washington University to create internships for students in the human services program to support the homeless coordinators, stock food pantries and clothing closets, and deliver supplies to shelters and campgrounds.
Last summer and fall, Everett also trained all district staff, not just teachers and principals, on how to recognize students who may be homeless, during in-person and virtual instruction.
A big part of training involves helping staff learn to ask more questions, rather than ticking off boxes about students鈥 home environments, she said.
When students are in the building, school staff may note 鈥渞ed flags,鈥 such as tardiness or a student wearing the same clothes days in a row.
In virtual environments, this might mean asking children about others in their home if there seem to be many children or adults in view, or questioning whether a student has a set place to do schoolwork if their video background regularly shows different homes.
鈥淭here could be people who are living together, and it鈥檚 more of a roommate situation,鈥 Perusse said. 鈥淏ut if you dig a little bit deeper and start peeling back that onion layer, you realize that, oh, the reason they鈥檙e really living together is because they lost [their] housing or they fled a domestic violence situation.鈥
鈥淭here are so many layers to the story that people don鈥檛 even think to share details about with a school,鈥 Perusse said.