Stabilization Pathway
Pathway: From Housing Instability to Sustained Independence
This model outlines common pathways from homelessness or housing instability to long-term housing and employment stability. Individuals may enter at different starting points. Movement through the system is not always linear.
Phase I – Entry & Crisis Engagement
Step 1A – Substance Use Disorder
Opioid or other substance addiction contributing to housing loss or instability.
Step 1B – Economic Displacement
Job loss, rent increases, eviction, or insufficient wages.
Step 1C – Mental Health Crisis
Untreated depression, psychosis, PTSD, or severe anxiety affecting housing stability.
Step 1D – Domestic Violence / Family Breakdown
Leaving unsafe or unstable living conditions.
Step 1E – Medical Crisis or Disability
Illness, injury, or inability to maintain employment.
Step 1F – Re-Entry from Jail or Prison
Housing barriers related to criminal history and lack of support systems.
Step 2 – Crisis Contact or Outreach
Initial engagement through street outreach, emergency shelter intake, hospital discharge, law enforcement diversion, or self-referral.
Step 3 – Immediate Stabilization
Basic safety needs are addressed, including shelter, food access, overdose prevention (if applicable), medical triage, and safety planning.
Phase II – Assessment & Targeted Intervention
Step 4 – Comprehensive Assessment
Evaluation of housing barriers, income status, health needs, behavioral health conditions, legal issues, and identification documentation.
Step 5 – Targeted Intervention
Services matched to identified needs, which may include:
Addiction treatment and medication support
Mental health treatment
Domestic violence advocacy
Medical stabilization
Employment services
Legal assistance
Not all individuals require all interventions.
Phase III – Housing & Economic Stabilization
Step 6 – Temporary Housing Support
Emergency shelter, transitional housing, diversion programs, or rapid re-housing placements.
Step 7 – Income Stabilization
Employment placement, job training, disability benefits (SSI/SSDI), or other income supports.
Step 8 – Financial Capability Development
Budgeting skills, credit repair, savings planning, and tenant education to reduce future housing risk.
Phase IV – Permanent Stability & Community Integration
Step 9 – Permanent Housing Placement
Market-rate units, voucher-supported housing, income-restricted housing, or permanent supportive housing.
Step 10 – Employment Stabilization
Job retention support, advancement planning, transportation stability, and workplace conflict resolution as needed.
Step 11 – Ongoing Support (As Needed)
Light-touch case management, peer support, landlord mediation, and continued access to healthcare or behavioral health services.
Step 12 – Sustained Independence & Community Integration
Long-term housing retention, stable income, reduced reliance on crisis systems, and integration into community networks.
Important Note: Progress is rarely linear. Individuals may move backward or forward between steps due to relapse, job loss, health crises, or housing market conditions. Effective systems allow re-entry without restarting from the beginning.