Articles

Scaling Tenancy Sustainment Across Systems: Standardization, Partnerships, and Capacity Without Losing Quality
Scaling tenancy sustainment is not about doing “more of the same,” faster. This article explains how to expand across counties and provider networks using standardized workflows, governance, and partner agreements that keep services consistent, equitable, and accountable under real oversight. Read more...
Evidence That Holds Up: Outcomes Measurement and Audit Trails in Tenancy Sustainment Programs
Tenancy sustainment only “counts” when you can show stability over time, not just crisis payments made. This article sets out practical measurement designs, case file standards, and audit-ready evidence packs that prove prevention, fairness, and value for money to funders and system leaders. Read more...
Landlord Engagement and Risk Sharing: Building Durable Partnerships in Housing Stabilization
Housing stabilization programs depend on landlord trust as much as tenant support. This article explains how structured engagement, risk mitigation tools, and communication discipline create landlord partnerships that sustain tenancies and expand housing supply. Read more...
Arrears, Fees, and Flexible Assistance: Making Tenancy Sustainment Financially Defensible
Many tenancy sustainment failures begin with small financial shocks that escalate quickly when systems respond too late. This article explains how arrears workflows, flexible assistance governance, and repayment planning can stabilize tenancies while meeting landlord, funder, and audit expectations. Read more...
Tenancy Sustainment Documentation That Holds Up: Evidence, Audit Trails, and Defensible Decision-Making
Tenancy sustainment documentation is not paperwork—it is how a program proves timely action, fair practice, and effective risk management. This article sets out what to document, how to standardize it, and how to build “evidence packs” that satisfy oversight and improve delivery. Read more...
Designing Caseloads, Roles, and Coverage for Tenancy Sustainment and Housing Stabilization
Tenancy sustainment succeeds or fails on operational coverage: who responds, how fast, and with what authority. This article explains practical staffing models, caseload logic, escalation design, and assurance routines that keep housing stabilization consistent at scale. Read more...
Risk Stratification in Tenancy Sustainment: Targeting Support Without Overreach or Drift
Risk stratification in tenancy sustainment only works when it drives action. This article explains how programs design tenancy risk tiers, link them to concrete workflows, and avoid both neglect and over-intervention while meeting oversight expectations. Read more...
Landlord Engagement in Tenancy Sustainment: Operating Models, Risk Sharing, and System Trust
Landlord engagement is a core delivery function in tenancy sustainment, not a soft relationship task. This article sets out how programs operationalize landlord partnerships, manage risk, standardize communication, and meet system expectations while protecting tenant rights and housing stability. Read more...
Housing Stabilization Workflows: Preventing Tenancy Breakdown Through Structured Support, Documentation, and Escalation
A housing stabilization workflow is how services turn “support” into predictable tenancy outcomes. This article explains the operational mechanics: trigger-based outreach, landlord communication routines, escalation ladders, and quality controls that protect tenants, staff, and system performance. Read more...
Tenancy Sustainment Service Models: Operational Design, Roles, and Accountability in Supportive Housing
Tenancy sustainment is a service model, not a case management add-on. This article sets out the operational components that keep tenancies stable: role design, risk stratification, landlord interfaces, escalation pathways, and evidence-ready governance that holds outcomes and safety in balance. Read more...