Cynthia Jackson arrived at the homeless shelter armed with a mission to get Donzell Varnado back on his feet as he looked for work.
Unlike the last time he was homeless 11 years ago, Varnado, 43, of Minneapolis, got one-on-one help from Jackson, connecting him to career fairs and job training. Those are the things that keep people from having to return to shelters, said Jackson, a career specialist for Goodwill-Easter Seals Minnesota.
"It's just filling in those little gaps that were gaping holes before. And it's making a difference," she said.
Hennepin County is boosting its resources for so-called "repeat users" of homeless shelters, connecting families to more housing, employment or parenting services to keep them out of shelters. The effort began when the number of repeat users doubled from 2008 to 2013, prompting the county to test a new pilot program that targeted services for repeat shelter families.
The two-year pilot, called the Stable Families Initiative, ended in 2015. Now elements of it, such as one-on-one job counseling and child care funding, are part of the county's homelessness prevention program.
"If we do better for families the second time around … we'd like to break that cycle," said Lisa Thornquist, a researcher in the county's Office to End Homelessness.
Hennepin County is the only county in Minnesota and one of only five jurisdictions in the nation with a "shelter all" policy, meaning that county workers must find a bed for any homeless family.
So far the extra services, which are voluntary for families, appear to be working.