Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Homeless students get more help under new law

- By Carolyn Thompson Associated Press

BUFFALO, N.Y.— School administra­tors this year are being pushed to get better at recognizin­g homeless students — those “hidden” in other people’s homes or whose families are staying in places like campground­s, motels and cars — and to keep them in school even if they’re missing paperwork ormove around.

The count of homeless students enrolled in American schools, now more than 1.3 million, is nearly double what itwas a decade ago.

The number is expected to grow — or rather, become more accurate — as schools relax enrollment barriers and strengthen the role of district liaisons charged with identifyin­g and connecting homeless students with services.

The provisions take effect Oct. 1 under an expansion of homeless services in a neweducati­on law, which also will require states to break out achievemen­t and graduation rates among the homeless.

Homeless children are especially vulnerable to chronic absence and poor grades.

“I think there are many, many more of them than any one is counting,” said Kris Amundson, a former homeless shelter executive who heads the National Associatio­n of State Boards of Education.

Barbara Duffield, director of policy and programs for the National Associatio­n James Edwards, right, poses with, from left, fellow residents Dujour Rice, Brandon David and Tyren Jones outside the Plymouth Crossroads youth homeless residence.

for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth, attributes the rise in student homelessne­ss to lingering effects from the recession, the opioid crisis and better reporting.

Tyren Jones managed to find places to stay after his grandmothe­r would no longer let him stay in her Buffalo apartment — a crack house, his godmother’s home, with a friend — what’s called “couch surfing.”

With no birth certificat­e or other records, Jones said, it was impossible to get a job.

But without a legal guardian — his father is in prison, his mother out of state— he couldn’t get back

into school, suspension.

He stumbled upon a youth shelter, which got him placed in a suburban Buffalo homeless residence and helped navigate the road back to school. He begins his senior year this month.

“Eventually, we will see an increase in the number of homeless students who graduate and go on to college,” Duffield said, “because there aremany, many provisions about making school more stable, getting credit for work you’ve done, having access to early childhood programs.”

After spending part of his senior year of high school living in a crawl

either,

after space under a bridge, a rented storage unit and a friend’s car, 18-year-old JamesEdwar­ds packedthis August for college, something that seemed out of reach for the New York teenager only months earlier, when he left home amid family turmoil and was stealing supermarke­t food and showering at school.

After a guidance counselor steered him toward services and placement in a residence, Edwards, under a provision being expanded to preschoole­rs, was given daily bus transporta­tion to the school he’d been attending before, even though his residentia­l placement took him miles outside the district.

He said the arrangemen­t gave him stability at home and school.

“If I didn’t have this house, for all I know, I probably wouldn’t be alive right now,” said Edwards, wearing a cap fromhis new school, Alfred State College, in the rec room of the Plymouth Crossroads residence in Lancaster, where Jones also lives.

Administra­tors expect transporta­tion to pose the biggest financial challenge under the changes as more families become aware of the ability to keep students in their home schools. Amundson said educators are hoping for flexibilit­y to shift funding asneededth­at may be earmarked for other programs.

The 2017 budget proposes a 21 percent increase for homeless education, according to the U.S. Education Department.

 ?? CAROLYN THOMPSON/AP ??
CAROLYN THOMPSON/AP

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