In the News
by Megan Wood
The San Diego Unified School District enrolled the third most homeless students in the state last year, yet it will miss out on up to $750,000 in federal funding for these students because of a missing signature from a finance official on its application.
A California Department of Education spokesman told inewsource the application was disqualified and not read because of the missing signature.
Click here to view San Diego Unified’s Education for Homeless Children and Youth grant application.
“Specific instructions are made clear,” spokesman Robert Oakes said in an email. “In addition, the date for applicants to appeal has passed.”
The district reported 6,767 — or 5.3 percent — of its students as homeless in its 2018 application. That made the district eligible to apply for a yearly $250,000 grant for the next three school years. The money would fund resourcessuch as transportation, school supplies and staff for homeless students.
“We’re disappointed as a district that we weren’t funded. … That sums it up,” said Jennifer Coronel, program manager for the district’s Children and Youth in Transition office.
In the last three-year cycle, the district received $725,000 through the Education for Homeless Children and Youth Program. Coronel said a bulk of that money paid for clothing and hygiene products for students and the salary of a staff member dedicated to homeless youth.
The county Office of Education and three San Diego County school districts — San Ysidro, Escondido Union and Poway Unified — will receive the federal grant money beginning in July. Eight San Diego County school districts and the county office submitted applications for funding.
The amount of money each district can receive varies depending on the number of homeless students reported, the maximum being $250,000 a year.
Despite missing out on the upcoming funding, Coronel said the support San Diego Unified offers homeless students won’t end, but it is changing. She said her office recently restructured, allowing it “to incur the costs that the grant would have supported.”
The district has six resource teachers in the Children and Youth in Transition Office dedicated to homeless students. Next year, she said, it will instead have six counselors who can provide students with “resources, clothing and links to mental health services.”
Coronel said that will better meet the students’ needs and will save the district money. The teachers are paid for 11 or more months throughout the year, while the counselors are 10-month employees. Other needs will be funded through Title I, a program designed to support low-income students.
Walter Philips, CEO of the nonprofit San Diego Youth Services, said specialized funding like the Education for Homeless Children and Youth grant is crucial even if San Diego Unified has other resources to support homeless students.
“There’s such little money that comes to San Diego for homeless youth across the board. … Anything we can get here in this community is valuable, especially when it’s dedicated for that purpose,” Philips said.
Students are classified as homeless when they lack a “fixed, adequate and regular nighttime residence.” That means living unsheltered, in transitional housing or shelters, in motels or hotels, or most frequently, doubled up in a home with another family. Identifying these students guarantees certain protections to help them immediately enroll and succeed in school.