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Teodolinda Mattson

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Jul 11, 2024, 2:34:20 PM7/11/24
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The Office of the University Registrar is dedicated to the service of students and faculty through scheduling, registration, record keeping and reporting as well as assisting other administrative offices. Our office builds a sense of community within the University.

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The Office of the University Registrar is now accepting appointments! Schedule some time to chat with any of our staff to discuss Cross-Registration, VA Benefits, Transfer Credits, Transcript Pick Ups, and more.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has implemented technology-based Pretreatment Standards under the Clean Water Act to reduce discharges of mercury from dental offices into municipal sewage treatment plants known as Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTWs). The Dental Office Point Source Category requires dental offices to utilize amalgam separators and implement Best Management Practices (BMPs) as recommended by the American Dental Association.

The Office of Student Financial Planning works diligently to assist students in their pursuit of post-secondary education at High Point University. We work not only to assist students, but also their parents and members of the University community. We are anxious to get to know each student well and to understand their unique needs and challenges in funding their college education. We will work with students each step of the way to maximize their resources, and help determine if other resources exist from which they might benefit.

Our office processes financial assistance according to last name, except for athletes and graduate/doctoral students which are processed by separate counselors, as outlined below.

As the Distribution Management Officer at MCAS Cherry Point, I understand the importance of meeting your Transportation needs. We will make every effort to ensure your requirements are handled professionally with all the courtesy you deserve as our valued customer. If you have any questions or to schedule an appointment please feel free stop by our office at Bldg. 6049 Lenoir Rd or contact at us CHPT.D...@usmc.mil. For Personal Property shipments call (252) 466-2345 and for Passenger Travel/Passport services call (252) 466-3968 / 7405.

Our hours of operation are Monday - Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. (except Federal Holidays) with limited services on Thursday afternoon from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. No Fee Passport applications are accepted by appointment only.

The Point-in-Time (PIT) Count is a count of sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January. HUD requires that CoCs conduct an annual count of people experiencing homelessness who are sheltered in emergency shelter, transitional housing, and Safe Havens on a single night. CoCs also must conduct a count of unsheltered people experiencing homelessness every other year (odd numbered years). Each count is planned, coordinated, and carried out locally.

The Housing Inventory Count (HIC) is a point-in-time inventory of provider programs within a CoC that provide beds and units dedicated to serve people experiencing homelessness (and, for permanent housing projects, where homeless at entry, per the HUD homeless definition), categorized by five Program Types: Emergency Shelter; Transitional Housing; Rapid Re-housing; Safe Haven; and Permanent Supportive Housing.

Data for the PIT count and HIC are submitted to HUD via the online data submission Homelessness Data Exchange (HDX). New users of the HDX should view the HUD HDX Training Modules, a series of six user-friendly HDX training modules to help communities use the HDX and gain the most out of their data.

This document provides information to CoCs on how to successfully submit their 2024 HIC and PIT Count data to HUD via HDX 2.0. Staff should review this guidance and use it as a reference when preparing their data for submission.

This Notice informs CoCs, or eligible entities intending to form a CoC (including Tribes and Tribally-Designated Housing Entities), of the information that must be collected to successfully complete the HIC and PIT Count for 2024 and future Counts this Notice applies to.

Conducting the PIT Counts requires coordinating a lot of people. During a pandemic, the gathering and intermixing of many people presents a risk of spreading the virus. However, this risk of virus spread can be minimized. This safety guidance strikes a balance between the need to maintain safety while collecting sufficient data to make life-saving decisions about serving people experiencing homelessness.

This guide describes how CoCs can use a sampling approach to estimate a total count of the number of people within their communities who are experiencing unsheltered homelessness on the night of the PIT Count.

This session focused on the 2024 HIC and PIT Count Data Collection Notice. Additionally, this session discussed changes to the HIC and PIT requirements for 2024 as well as the transition of HIC and PIT reporting from HDX 1.0 to HDX 2.0.

This session focused on Notice CPD-22-12: HIC and PIT Count data collection for CoC and ESG Programs that was posted on October 26, 2022. This Office Hours session also provided guidance on the 2023 PIT Count.

This session focused on the 2023 HIC and PIT Count data submission and discussed anticipated changes to the count requirements. The Office Hours also focused on lessons learned from counting while addressing COVID-19 concerns.

This session focused on the recently published CPD Memo: Availability of Waivers for the Biennial Point-in-Time Count of Unsheltered Homelessness in addition to Continuum of Care (CoC) questions about sampling and conducting the count.

This session focused on reminders for Joint Transitional Housing and Rapid Rehousing (TH-RRH) recipients and Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program (YHDP) recipients in preparation for the 2020 PIT Count and HIC.

In its April 2019 office hours session, HUD invited communities to bring any questions, solutions, and discussion topics related to PIT Count planning, implementation, data, and reporting. This 90-minute session was an open forum with no pre-selected topics.

During this inaugural PIT Count Office Hours session, all communities were invited to participate in a discussion related to implementing the PIT Count as well as an open forum for PIT Count questions and answers.

This guide provides CoCs with standards and guidance concerning acceptable methodologies and approaches to conducting PIT Counts of homeless people. This guide replaces the Guide to Counting Sheltered Homeless People and the Guide to Counting Unsheltered Homeless People.

Each community has unique circumstances impacting homeless populations. The CoC Analysis Tool draws on PIT Count and American Community Survey data to facilitate analysis of racial disparities among people experiencing homelessness. Such an analysis is a critical first step in identifying and changing racial and ethnic bias in our systems and services.

ESG program recipients are required to work with the CoCs in their jurisdiction to collect and report homeless data, including the PIT Count and HIC data. ESG recipients are required to report the PIT and HIC data as part of their Consolidated Plan to outline homelessness needs and resources. This resource outlines how ESG funds can be used to support the HIC and PIT Count efforts.

These data sets contain PIT estimates and national PIT estimates of homelessness as well as national estimates of homelessness by state and estimates of chronic homelessness from 2007 - Present. Estimates of homeless veterans are also included beginning in 2011. The accompanying HIC data is available as well from 2007 - Present. Finally, this page also includes the project-level HIC files beginning in 2012.

This training is intended for anyone involved in planning and implementing the PIT Count. Participants can expect to gain an understanding of key concepts including HUD's PIT Count minimum standards, the PIT Count Methodology Guide and its supplementary tools, and approved methodologies for conducting sheltered and unsheltered PIT Counts.

This guide provides CoCs and HMIS Leads with guidance concerning recording and reporting Rapid Rehousing (RRH) bed inventories for available and occupied RRH beds, both for HMIS Participating and non-HMIS Participating projects.

Individuals experiencing homelessness can now report multiple gender identities in the PIT Count but CoCs will only report one gender identity. This document provides CoCs with guidance for how to report multiple gender identities for the PIT Count data submission.

HUD created this resource based on its experience with its beta test of the HUD PIT Count Mobile Application (Mobile App). This document outlines how the process for implementing the Mobile App in communities and the lessons learned.

In order to collect PIT count data according to HUD standards, CoCs need to use high quality survey instruments. HUD is providing CoCs with a set of model surveys that they can use for the PIT count. These surveys reflect the review of best local practices and the input of leading survey and homeless methodology experts.

These tools help CoCs determine how to report the gender, race, and ethnicity data that they collected in the PIT Count in HDX 2.0, based on the updated gender and race categories detailed in the FY 2024 HMIS Data Standards.

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