“You can’t heal without a home. You can’t work without a foundation.”

Shelter & Soul Recovery Act – FAQ

Housing is a human right. Healing requires a home.


What is the Shelter & Soul Recovery Act?

The Shelter & Soul Recovery Act is the housing justice centerpiece of the Green Budget Framework. It guarantees housing as a human right, ends chronic homelessness, expands access to dignified shelter, and builds a trauma-informed support system around unhoused individuals, families, and communities. This act recognizes that lasting recovery—economic, emotional, and spiritual—requires both shelter and stability.


Why is this act necessary?

The U.S. is in a housing crisis:

Over half a million people are unhoused on any given night

Tens of millions are rent-burdened or facing eviction

Many cities criminalize homelessness instead of addressing its causes

Survivors of trauma, veterans, LGBTQ+ youth, disabled individuals, and formerly incarcerated people are especially vulnerable

This act confronts the crisis at its root—by prioritizing housing, not punishment, and care, not condemnation.


What does the act do?

Declares housing a federally protected right

Establishes a National Housing First Guarantee—unconditional housing before services

Launches a Federal Rapid Shelter Expansion Program to immediately create safe, temporary, and transitional housing in every state

Funds massive construction and retrofitting of affordable, accessible, and energy-efficient housing

Expands supportive housing for people with mental health conditions, disabilities, and recovery needs

Ends federal funding for the criminalization of homelessness (e.g., sweeps, hostile architecture, anti-camping laws)


How does the Housing First Guarantee work?

It ensures that:

Every person in the U.S. has access to safe, stable shelter without preconditions

Services like addiction treatment, mental health care, or job training are available after housing is secured, not required in advance

Local governments are supported (and required) to adopt housing-first policies backed by federal funding

This model has been proven to work in cities and countries around the world.


How many homes will this act build?

The act commits to building or rehabilitating:

12 million units of deeply affordable housing over 10 years

Prioritized for extremely low-income renters, seniors, veterans, disabled individuals, foster youth, and domestic violence survivors

Includes public housing, community land trusts, cooperatives, and permanently affordable homes

Projects are tied to local employment, union labor, and green construction standards.


What happens to people currently experiencing homelessness?

The act funds:

Street outreach and emergency intake centers

Trauma-informed navigation teams led by service providers and lived-experience experts

Guaranteed access to low-barrier shelter, transitional housing, and permanent homes

Mobile services and transportation assistance for remote or underserved areas

Legal protections against harassment, sweeps, or destruction of personal property


What supportive services are included?

The act integrates:

Mental health care, addiction recovery, and peer support

Job training, placement, and microenterprise support

Childcare, transportation, and food assistance

Community healing spaces and culturally relevant care models

Services are optional, voluntary, and community-based.


Does this only help urban homelessness?

No. The act specifically includes:

Rural and tribal housing development grants

Mobile shelter units and modular housing for low-density areas

Restoration of shuttered buildings, motels, and schools in small towns for housing purposes

State-level equity reviews to ensure funding reaches both urban and rural unhoused populations


How is this different from past housing policies?

This act:

Ends the cycle of shelters → jail → street

Builds permanently affordable housing, not temporary band-aids

Treats housing as a form of healthcare and dignity, not just market commodity

Makes federal housing investments permanent and protected by law, not subject to yearly budget cuts


How is the act funded?

Funding is generated through:

Reallocation of subsidies from luxury developers and speculative landlords

Savings from criminal legal system reforms (policing, incarceration, court fees)

Public land usage and federal land trust programs

Green Budget revenues from tax fairness, military drawdown, and cannabis revenue

Housing justice becomes a top-tier national investment—not an afterthought.


What is the long-term vision?

A country where everyone has a place to rest, recover, and rebuild—without judgment, fear, or displacement.
The Shelter & Soul Recovery Act redefines safety, dignity, and healing by starting with home.

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