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transitional housing, and hotels and motels barriers to employment, which include the lack <br /> paid for by charitable organizations or by of a high school degree or General Education <br /> federal, state, or local government programs for Development (GED), illiteracy, low English <br /> low-income individuals), or proficiency, a history of incarceration or <br /> (Iii) An individual who is exiting an detention for criminal activity, and a history of <br /> institution where he or she resided for 90 days unstable employment; or <br /> or less and who resided in an emergency (4) Any individual or family who: <br /> shelter or place not meant for human habitation (i) Is fleeing, or is attempting to flee, <br /> immediately before entering that institution; domestic violence, dating violence, sexual <br /> (2) An individual or family who will imminently assault, stalking, or other dangerous or life- <br /> lose their primary nighttime residence, provided threatening conditions that relate to violence <br /> that. against the individual or a family member, <br /> (i) The primary nighttime residence will be including a child, that has either taken place <br /> lost within 14 days of the date of application for within the individual's or family's primary <br /> homeless assistance, nighttime residence or has made the individual <br /> (ii) No subsequent residence has been or family afraid to return to their primary <br /> identified; and nighttime residence; <br /> (iii) The individual or family lacks the (ii) Has no other residence, and <br /> resources or support networks, e.g . , family, (iii) Lacks the resources or support <br /> friends, faith-based or other social networks, networks, e.g . , family, friends, and faith-based <br /> needed to obtain other permanent housing; or other social networks, to obtain other <br /> (3) Unaccompanied youth under 25 years of permanent housing . <br /> age, or families with children and youth, who do 8, A new § 583. 301 is added to read as <br /> not otherwise qualify as homeless under this follows: <br /> definition, but who . <br /> (i) Are defined as homeless under section § 583. 301 Recordkeenina. <br /> 387 of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act <br /> (42 U .S.C. 5732a), section 637 of the Head (a) [Reserved .] <br /> Start Act (42 U .S.C. 9832), section 41403 of the (b) Homeless status. The recipient must <br /> Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (42 U .S.C. maintain and follow written intake procedures <br /> 14043e- 2), section 330(h ) of the Public Health to ensure compliance with the homeless <br /> Service Act (42 U .S.C. 254b(h )), section 3 of the definition in § 583 . 5.. The procedures must <br /> Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 (7 U .S .C. 2012), require documentation at intake of the evidence <br /> section 17(b) of the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 relied upon to establish and verify homeless <br /> (42 U .S .C. 1786(b)), or section 725 of the status. The procedures must establish the <br /> McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 order of priority for obtaining evidence as third- <br /> U .S .C. 11434x); party documentation first, intake worker <br /> (ii) Have not had a lease, ownership observations second, and certification from the <br /> interest, or occupancy agreement in permanent person seeking assistance third . However, lack <br /> housing at any time during the 60 days of third-party documentation must not prevent <br /> immediately preceding the date of application an individual or family from being immediately <br /> for homeless assistance; admitted to emergency shelter, receiving street <br /> (iii) Have experienced persistent instability outreach services, or being immediately <br /> as measured by two moves or more during the admitted to shelter or receiving services <br /> 60-day period immediately preceding the date provided by a victim service provider, as defined <br /> of applying for homeless assistance; and in section 401(32) of the McKinney-Vento <br /> (iv) Can be expected to continue in such Homeless Assistance Act, as amended by the <br /> status for an extended period of time because HEARTH Act. Records contained in an HMIS or <br /> of chronic disabilities, chronic physical health or comparable database used by victim service or <br /> mental health conditions, substance addiction, legal service providers are acceptable evidence <br /> histories of domestic violence or childhood of third-party documentation and intake worker <br /> abuse (including neglect), the presence of a observations if the HMIS retains an auditable <br /> child or youth with a disability, or two or more history of all entries, including the person who <br /> www.hud.gov espanol.hud.gov Page 24 <br /> I <br />