Federal Agency Announces $13 Million in Funding to Support Pay for Success Projects
- Corporation for Supportive Housing ($1.1 million)
The Corporation for Supportive Housing will select up to eight government agencies and service providers from across the nation, providing them with technical assistance required to successfully harness financing for Pay for Success projects. CSH’s proposed project will prioritize underserved populations, including homeless and at-risk individuals, as well as those with disabilities who are inappropriately institutionalized. This work will also strengthen and support the mission of the White House Data Drive Justice Initiative, in which CSH is a technical assistance partner.
- Green & Healthy Homes Initiative ($1.77 million)
The Green & Healthy Homes Initiative will support SIF Pay for Success projects that address the social determinants of health. GHHI strives to foster high-quality, evidence-based models that efficiently connect funding to meaningful health, economic, and social outcomes in order to advance health equity for people in low-income communities.
- Social Finance, Inc. ($1.44 million)
Social Finance will introduce Outcomes Rate Cards - an approach to PFS development successfully utilized in the United Kingdom. An Outcomes Rate Card is a menu developed upfront by government that defines what outcomes government wishes to purchase, how much they will purchase them for, and how they will be measured. The cards are then used to procure multiple service providers that will launch distinct PFS contracts using the outcome terms previously defined. Government can thus use one rate card to launch multiple PFS projects, significantly increasing the impact for the same scope of work.
- Third Sector Capital Partners ($2.4 million)
Working with Partners for Our Children, Third Sector Capital Partners will competitively select five government and research university Youth Development Performance Hubs (PHs). Once selected, PHs will receive technical assistance valued at up to $400,000 annually to integrate government data sets and create real-time data systems between local governments and service providers. The national initiative will focus on justice, homeless, and child welfare involved youth, with a focus on California, Oregon, and Washington, which are areas with a deep pipeline of PFS projects.
- The Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, in partnership with Third Sector Capital Partners ($1.5 million)
The Center on Poverty and Inequality (CPI) has been carrying out some of the country's most influential analyses of tax, census, and program data. As one of the leading players in the PFS field, Third Sector Capital Partners has extensive experience in innovative public-private financing and currently guides some of the country's most promising PFS projects. CPI, in partnership with Third Sector Capital Partners, will work together to improve the quality of the evidence used to evaluate PFS initiatives, focusing initially on projects addressing economic opportunity in California and Oregon.
- The Urban Institute ($1.05 million)
The Urban Institute, which houses the PFS Initiative and the National Neighborhood Indicators partnership, and its partner Actionable Intelligence for Social Policy, will provide data-related training and technical assistance to Pay For Success sites across the country working in youth development, economic opportunity, and healthy futures.
- University of Utah's David Eccles School of Business ($1.5 million)
Housed at the University of Utah, the Sorenson Impact Center develops innovative and data-driven solutions to difficult social problems. The Center will focus on removing both the legal and technical barriers to data access nationwide.
Created in 2009, the SIF has grown into nearly a $1 billion social impact incubator within the federal government, creating more than 450 public-private partnerships that deliver high-impact, community-based solutions that work.