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Panelist Speaker

Mr. Kevin Lindamood

President and CEO Health Care for the Homeless

Kevin Lindamood is President & CEO of Health Care for the Homeless and President of HCH Real Estate Co. He leads Maryland’s largest provider of integrated health services and supportive housing for people experiencing homelessness, guiding efforts to deliver wholeperson care, expand affordable housing, and strengthen a values-driven workforce. With more than 30 years of experience spanning outreach, clinical care, advocacy, and nonprofit leadership, Kevin works locally and nationally to address poverty and homelessness. He has served as Board President of the National Health Care for the Homeless Council, on the Boards of Baltimore’s Continuum of Care and Behavioral Health Systems Baltimore, on Maryland’s Interagency Council on Homelessness and for 17 years on the Maryland Medicaid Advisory Committee, including 14 years as Chair. A former adjunct professor at the University of Maryland School of Social Work, Kevin frequently speaks on issues of homelessness, housing, health and social justice.

Speaking at

Tours
Tue Mar 17 2:00 PM — 5:30 PM (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time

Homeless to Housed: Sojourner Place at Oliver & Hope Village

Type Tours

Exploring homeless to housed models in Baltimore—one model as a tax credit financed rental building that includes on-site supportive services and a second model that is privately funded for affordable home ownership. 

Mon Mar 16 3:30 PM — 4:30 PM (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time Baltimore Marriott Waterfront, Grand Ballroom 1-2, Floor 3

10 Principles for Addressing Homelessness by the Real Estate Community: Better Operations, Better Outcomes

Last year, the ULI Homeless to Housed Initiative released the publication, 10 Principles for Addressing Homelessness: A Guide for Commercial Real Estate and Finance. Developed by ULI members, the publication is intended to help professionals across the real estate industry understand their role—and take action—in addressing the homelessness crisis in the United States.

This panel will provide a brief overview of the 10 principles, with a particular focus on the tenth principle: Building operations and supportive services must be financially sustainable. Achieving sustainability is especially challenging, as operating costs and supportive services are expensive, yet they can have a profound and lasting impact on residents who rely on them, as well as on the property’s broader community.

Panelists will discuss what has and has not worked, the financial tools and partnerships they use, and how systems and processes can evolve to improve efficiency for existing owners while encouraging more developers and property owners to open housing opportunities to people experiencing homelessness.