Jay S. Levy has spent more than thirty years working with individuals who experience homelessness. He is the author of the highly acclaimed book Pretreatment Guide for Homeless Outreach & Housing First (2013), which is now available as a newly revised edition. Jay edited and wrote several chapters in two collaborative efforts with several authors from the US and UK. They are entitled Cross-Cultural Dialogues on Homeless-ness: From Pretreatment Strategies to Psychologically Informed Environments (2018) and Pretreatment Across Multiple Fields of Practice: Trauma Informed Approach to Homelessness and Beyond (2024).Jay developed Pretreatment as an approach for helping people with¬out homes who are often deemed ""not ready"" and excluded from housing and/or recovery-oriented services and treatment. While working with Eliot CHS Homeless Services, Jay has helped to create new Housing First programs such as the Regional Engagement and Assessment for Chronically Homeless program (REACH).Jay has achieved formal recognition from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Mental Health for his past efforts to help under-served homeless individuals through his direct service, clinical supervision of staff, and program development. Jay received his MSW degree in clinical social work from Columbia University in 1988.Jay lives in Western MA with his wife, Louise, who recently celebrated retirement after more than thirty years of teaching high school science, and was kind enough to provide valuable assistance in editing this book. Jay is very proud and excited for his daughters, Talia and Sara, who have both graduated college and have embraced journeys into career-related activities and beyond.More information on Jay's consultative work, presentations, and publications can be found at www.jayslevy.com
""As with his earlier works, Jay Levy engages the reader with poignant narratives of this extremely vulnerable group of people then, in this latest work, chapter by chapter, builds an effective framework for truly solving this decades-old social dilemma. I strongly recommend this book to anyone truly vested in ending chronic homelessness."" -- Jerry Ray, Director of Homeless Services, Mental Health Association Inc. (Springfield, MA) ""Jay Levy has now advanced his work with the chronically homeless into a comprehensive book. His Pretreatment Guide for Homeless Outreach & Housing First codifies his previous efforts and expands the knowledge base by providing new insights into help¬ing and housing chronically homeless couples, unaccompanied youth and adults. Through Jay Levy's work, a cadre of social service workers and housing providers have come to better understand and adopt the principles of a housing first strategy and the importance of Pretreatment model in the continuing struggle to end homelessness."" -- David W. Modzelewski, Housing Coordinator, Western Massachusetts Regional Network to End Homelessness ""The issues that Levy addresses in this short book, reviewed here by Lynn Vickery, go to the heart of the issue-the centrality of trusting relationships; and here Levy stresses the power of narratives and the subtleties of engagement. Levy does not just assert, but shows by example the role of shared language in creating relationships. These cameo accounts are not merely anecdotal, for educa¬tional purposes; this approach can also be deeply rooted in a fully elaborated theoretical background--in this case, linguistic analysis and social constructionism--and in turn this approach can start to form the foundations of a new intermediate level theoretical vocabulary of more immediate use to the pragmatist in frontline services."" -- Robin Johnson, Editor, Excerpted from Housing, Care and Support ""Working with chronically homeless people is a vocation. It is challenging, at times frustrating and under-recognised by housing, social work and health care and not always appreciated by the professionals working at strategic and policy levels. Occasionally, a voice is heard to validate the very best of best practice and to give a theoretical underpinning to ensure that practitioners and policy makers alike can see that their actions can assist in literally recreating lives. Jay S. Levy is such a voice. In his book Pretreatment Guide for Homeless Outreach & Housing First, Levy can speak to those involved in front-line street homelessness and say that it is possible to underpin strong processes of engagement with homeless people with a sense of purpose and humanity. Levy uses the narrative to develop a set of frameworks that can be used in supervision, evaluation and social work/housing support training. There are no lists of sterile statistics to detract from homeless people and the possibilities of turning lives around, but there are extensive references to authoritative work and theory which enable the reader, especially a busy practitioner, to feel assured that there is a sound theoretical basis for Levy's approach to compassionate practice."" -- Lynn Vickery, Retired Senior Lecturer and Visiting Fellow at London South Bank University. Excepted from Housing, Care and Support