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Students, Faculty & Staff, Alumni, Community Impact, Professional Development

Housing for Transition-Age Youth in DCFS Care and Post-21

August 06, 2024

Picture of a small wooden house sitting next to a heart

Housing for Transition-Age Youth in DCFS Care and post-21

October 25, 2024
1:00-2:30pm CST
1.5 CEs for LCSW/LSW and LCPC/LPC
$15 for CEs/$10 for no CEs
Webinar

Youth aging out of care are more likely to experience homelessness after leaving care. Our programs seek to prevent homelessness through housing advocacy, cash assistance and housing choice vouchers. Less than 10% of youth in care “age out” of care, meaning they remain in foster placements or transition to independent living after the age of 18. Most cases remain open until 21. There are living arrangements, and stipends, while the youth are in care to support independent living. These youth need an extraordinary amount of support due to lack of relationships, trauma, housing instability, placement changes, etc. HUD has created vouchers specifically for this population, and Illinois is on the forefront of Fostering Youth to Independence (FYI) voucher expansion. Being referred for a voucher extends housing advocacy and cash assistance until age 23, although youth can be referred to the program if housed by age 25. We consider this a “step down” in services from their case closing at 21.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Understanding different housing options for youth while they are in DCFS care in Illinois.
  2. Understanding barriers youth aging out of care will face.
  3. Understanding the new vouchers created by HUD and national trends.

Registration Options:

If you do NOT need CEUs for LCSW/LSW or LCPC/LPC, register via the link below:

NON-CEU REGISTRATION

If you DO need CEUs for LCSW/LSW or LCPC/LPC, register via the link below:

CEU REGISTRATION

Workshop Presenters

Headshots of Arielle Weston, Jamie Mocker, and Shawntae Early

Arielle Weston earned her Bachelor’s in Social Work from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2012 and her Master’s in Social Service Administration from University of Chicago in 2014. She has experience in a variety of social service fields working directly with different client populations and supervising programs. Her passion is government administration and policy, and she returned to DCFS (Department of Children and Family Services) in September 2019, where she completed her graduate internship five years prior. She works in the Office of Housing and Cash Assistance as the state-wide Youth Housing Assistance Program Coordinator serving youth transitioning, or who have transitioned, out of DCFS care. She also serves as the state-wide Program Monitor for 20+ contracted agencies that provide housing advocacy. In her free time, she enjoys hiking, spending time with loved ones and dogs.

Jamie Mocker earned her Bachelor of Arts in International Studies/Human Rights at Indiana University in 2011, taught English in Spain for a few years, and then obtained a Master of Arts in Human Rights from the University of Sussex in the UK. Before joining the Office of Housing and Cash Assistance, she worked for 6 years in direct service, serving as a case manager in both homeless and domestic violence shelters, and most recently for DCFS youth transitioning out of care. She has always had a passion for advocating for economic equality and improving services for families and youth experiencing homelessness and is currently the Statewide Liaison for the Family Unification Program and the Fostering Youth to Independence Program.

Shawntae Early graduated from Chicago State University in 2013 with her bachelors in Psychology. She has always had a desire to help others and in 2019 , decided to change career paths, beginning her work with DCFS as a case manager . During her time with DCFS, Shawntae worked with older adolescents that had a goal of independence. She helped foster these youth into independence by giving life skills and finding resources to help them live a more stable life. While doing that work, she saw that there was a high need for stable housing for young adults. After three years of case management, Shawntae pursued a career directly related to stable housing for youth between the ages of 18-24. As a housing advocate, she uncovers resources that will help youth successfully navigate housing and give them tools to advocate for themselves.  This career is her passion and it has renewed her joy in working in the helping field. She was recently admitted to Dominican University to pursue her masters in Social Work. She plans to use the knowledge she acquires from the program to continue to make a positive impact with the clients she serves.

Headshots of Arielle Weston, Jamie Mocker, and Shawntae Early
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