Scott County approves $41,750 match for Emergency Solutions Grant to support low-barrier shelter and rapid rehousing

Scott County Fiscal Court · February 13, 2026

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Summary

The court approved a county match of $41,750 to renew an Emergency Solutions Grant that funds a low-barrier shelter and rapid rehousing/move-in assistance programs; county staff reported program outcomes and noted the HUD point-in-time count is set for Feb. 25.

The Scott County Fiscal Court voted to provide a county match of $41,750 to renew an Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) that funds the county's low-barrier shelter and rapid rehousing programs.

Candace Whitehouse, speaking on behalf of the programs operated with The Gathering Place and partners, told the court the ESG's emergency-shelter portion funds a low-barrier shelter (previously called "white flag" shelter) and that the rapid-rehousing funds support short-term rental assistance and move-in costs. She reported that the emergency shelter served 267 unduplicated clients since July 1, 2024; the rapid rehousing program served 36 unduplicated clients, including seven households receiving ongoing rental assistance. The move-in assistance program served 15 households.

Candace emphasized differences between HUD point-in-time (PIT) counting rules and local definitions of homelessness: HUD's PIT guidelines are narrow (shelter beds, unsheltered locations, or third-party-paid motel rooms) and will not capture people in other forms of unstable housing such as some McKinney‑Vento cases or sober-living arrangements. She said the PIT count was rescheduled to Feb. 25 and the county will coordinate volunteers and partners to capture the HUD-defined count that night.

Court members asked whether funds could be used to support other shelters; Candace replied ESG emergency-shelter funds are restricted to the low-barrier shelter model and cannot be reallocated to separate facilities. The court approved the county match by voice vote.

Why it matters: The county match keeps federal ESG funding available for shelter operations, rapid rehousing and move-in assistance that local agencies use to house people who are literally homeless or otherwise eligible under HUD rules.

Next steps: The programs will continue operations under the renewed grant; the county and city partners will complete match paperwork and the PIT count will be conducted on Feb. 25.