Filter
21 - 30 of 359 results
Results for
How Can State Housing Finance Agencies Improve Energy Efficiency?
Publication
Two reports provide insight on ways state housing finance agencies can advance affordable housing through energy efficiency efforts.
His baby daughter melts his heart. Scientists say she's changing his brain, too.
News
The SNAP-Hybrid Model Can Increase Summer EBT Benefit Use
Blog
Co-loading Summer EBT benefits on the same card with Supplemental Nutrition Assistant Program benefits results in high Summer EBT redemption rates.
My Kids Deserve the World: How Children in the Southeast Benefit from Guaranteed Income
Publication
This brief provides early insights from parents into how guaranteed income pilot programs improving outcomes for their families.
3 Questions To Promote Head Start Attendance
Blog
This blog asks how we can promote attendance in Head Start, which expands access to early care and education for children from low-income households.
Developing a Successful Brand: The Summer EBT Story
Blog
Read more about how branding amplified the story of our evaluation work for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Summer Electronic Benefit Program demonstration project.
How do renters survive unaffordability? Household-level impacts of rent burden in Los Angeles
Publication
Abt was part of a team that examined how housing affordability affects renters, and the tactics that people use to survive.
Abt Conversations: Implementing Summer EBT—Tips from the Chickasaw Nation
Podcast
Abt’s René Nutter talks with Tyra Shackleford, Chickasaw Nation’s Summer EBT Manager, about what it takes for a successful Summer EBT implementation.
From Pilot to Policy: Five Things to Know about Summer EBT
Blog
States can roll out summer grocery programs in 2024 for students eligible for subsidized school lunches, and here are five things states need to know.
When Compassion Calls: Addressing the Well-Being of Child Welfare Workers
Blog
"We don’t have any food. They are going to take my kids! Can you help me?" The desperate plea of a mother came through my voicemail. It was dinner time; I had already left the office for the day. I had been working with this family for months to address several safety risk factors. It was a tough case, and my job as a Prevention Specialist with the Department of Social Services (DSS) was to keep this family safely intact. I felt the weight of this responsibility every day. I knew if I did not intervene, foster care would be imminent for the children. However, the call came during the few hours I slept between jobs. I made less than $30,000 per year at DSS and, to make ends meet, worked a second full-time job at a residential program for youth aging out of foster care.