HR-577-119
Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.
Sponsored by Ken Calvert (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to create a demonstration (pilot) program within 180 days of enactment. The program would award up to 10 grants to Continuum of Care organizations — local homeless housing networks — located in the five states with the highest per-capita homeless populations and within 50 miles of a Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic (CCBHC). Grantees would refer eligible homeless individuals with disabilities to CCBHCs for mental health, behavioral health, and substance use disorder treatment. The bill authorizes $50 million over fiscal years 2025–2029 and requires HUD to submit a report to Congress after the program ends, including performance data and the number of participants receiving Social Security disability or SSI benefits.
Who benefits
Homeless individuals with disabilities — particularly those with mental illness or substance use disorders — who would gain coordinated access to behavioral health treatment alongside their housing. Continuum of Care organizations that would receive federal grant funding and technical assistance. Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics that would receive new patient referrals. State and local governments in high-homelessness states that may see reduced strain on emergency services. Researchers and policymakers who would gain data from the program's required outcome report.
Who is hurt
Homeless individuals in states not among the five highest per-capita homeless states, who would be ineligible regardless of need. Continuum of Care organizations located more than 50 miles from a CCBHC, which are excluded by the geographic eligibility requirement. Competing grant applicants, since the program is capped at 10 awards. Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $50 million authorization. Homeless individuals without a qualifying disability status may not meet the "qualified participant" definition, potentially excluding some of the most vulnerable people experiencing homelessness.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that homelessness and untreated behavioral health conditions are deeply intertwined — HUD's own data shows that roughly 30% of chronically homeless individuals have a serious mental illness, and many more have co-occurring substance use disorders. They contend that the current system siloes housing and treatment, forcing individuals to navigate separate bureaucracies, and that this pilot would test a coordinated model with measurable outcomes before any broader rollout. The use of CCBHCs — a federally certified, evidence-based clinic model — provides a quality standard, and the mandatory congressional report ensures accountability for the $50 million investment.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's narrow eligibility criteria — limited to 10 grantees, five states, and a 50-mile CCBHC proximity requirement — would exclude the vast majority of homeless individuals with behavioral health needs, making the program too small to generate nationally meaningful data. They contend that $50 million over five years spread across at most 10 sites amounts to roughly $1 million per site per year, which may be insufficient to demonstrate whether the model is scalable. Critics may also argue that the bill does not address the underlying shortage of affordable housing or CCBHC capacity, meaning referrals could outpace available treatment slots.