快活app

Skip to Content

快活app Groups Facilitate Community Change in Colorado Program

Back to Article Listing

Author(s)

Lorne Fultonberg

Writer

Lorne Fultonberg
Writer"

Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

Writer"

303 871-2660

Pay for Success programs tackle underserved youth issues

News  •

The state of Colorado is partnering with the 快活app and the community on novel models to help underserved youth and their families.

The , as the three pilot programs are known, will draw on expertise from two 快活app programs 鈥 the , within the and the Graduate School of Social Work鈥檚 鈥 as they test solutions to address a litany of issues that affect youth in or at risk for placement in foster care, juvenile detention, group homes or treatment centers.听End goals include the听educational success of youth in foster care and preventing the need for child welfare and juvenile justice involvement for youth who run away.

Rebecca Arno
Rebecca Arno

鈥淭he concept is a little complex,鈥 says Rebecca Arno,听director of the Barton Institute,听鈥漛ut if it works, it would be amazing.鈥

The Pay for Success financing is new to the state of Colorado but has slowly spread across the world over the last decade, on the back of 鈥渋mpact investments鈥 that bring both a financial and a social return. The thinking, when former Gov. John Hickenlooper put out a 鈥渃all for innovation鈥 in January 2017, was that investing money to expand certain programs would save cash in the long run. But since the upfront cost for the state would be high, half of the funding comes from investors, who will get their money back if the projects succeed.

With more than $2.3 million in backing, , a GSSW research associate professor and executive director of the CEI, sees an opportunity to reach more than 600 families over the next three years with an intervention called

Sue Kerns and Gov. Hickenlooper
Sue Kerns with former Gov. John Hickenlooper

鈥淭hat鈥檚 an intervention for youth who are 12鈥17 years old and are at risk for out-of-home placement, either in the juvenile justice system or to child welfare or congregate group care,鈥 due to antisocial behaviors or substance abuse, Kerns says. The agencies she works with deliver the intervention to families, coming up with individualized treatment plans that take into consideration a number of factors related to youth behavior and risk for placement.

The CEI works with local agencies to make sure the services they provide are effective and cost-efficient, maximizing the return on investment. 鈥淭here needs to be a bridge between the science and the community,鈥 Kerns says.

Such intervention typically isn鈥檛 cheap. MST teams consist of two to four therapists and a supervisor who must monitor the youth outcomes and meet accountability requirements. But Kerns estimates that with the implementation of MST, which will continue through 2022, the state will save more than $3 for every dollar that鈥檚 invested.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 think about creative funding streams, we鈥檙e probably never going to make these services widely available,鈥 Kerns says. 鈥淪o for those of us in universities who struggle with that reality, to be able to be thought partners and participate in these types of initiatives is a tremendous opportunity.鈥

Elysia Clemens
Elysia Clemens

Evaluating the accomplishments of Pay for Success programs 鈥 which, in addition to MST, include the Denver Runaway Project and Fostering Opportunities in Jefferson County Public Schools 鈥 falls to the Colorado Evaluation and Action Lab.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to work with these project teams to create rigorous studies to truly measure the impact on the outcomes the governor鈥檚 office has identified as having a key return on the investment,鈥 says Elysia Clemens, the lab鈥檚 deputy director. 鈥淎t the Colorado Lab specifically, we focus on projects that are cross-system in nature. They have the potential to inform insights and actions for multiple systems that serve an individual, youth or family.鈥

Independent evaluation, Arno explains, is one of the Barton Institute鈥檚 specialties.

鈥淲e look at things that are testing an idea of how to serve the community and determining whether or not it鈥檚 something that can be brought to scale by any number of systems,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really important for the state of Colorado to have a partner like the Colorado Lab that can do this up-front thinking and invest the understanding of multiple systems in addressing the needs of these programs.鈥