
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Curious about innovative approaches to address housing insecurity for older adults? You won't want to miss this discussion!
I sit down with Dr. Katie Calhoun (Assistant Professor, OSU College of Social Work) and Marisa Sheldon (Director, Age Friendly Columbus & Franklin County and the Age Friendly Innovation Center) to talk about the regional Shallow Subsidy Pilot Program and what we've learned about housing instability among older adults in Central Ohio.
We kick things off by exploring Dr. Calhoun's background in Denver, where she researched housing stability and worked on the Denver Basic Income Project, which tested guaranteed income as a tool for reducing homelessness. Bringing these experiences to Columbus, she joined forces with our Age-Friendly Innovation Center team and leveraged new data from the Central Ohio Regional Assessment on Aging, revealing a concerning rise in housing cost burdens among adults 50 and older in our region.
We discuss the creation of the Shallow Subsidy Pilot: a program offering a modest but sustained rent subsidy to low-income older renters, aiming to help them remain housed while they await long-term support, such as housing vouchers.
I walk you through the careful process of designing and launching this pilot—including the crucial role of our COAAA housing staff, collaboration across community organizations, and a randomized controlled evaluation to truly measure the impact.
Together, we unpack findings from both quantitative data and powerful participant interviews. The trends show improvements in housing affordability, financial well-being, and mental health, with a notable reduction in emergency department visits among subsidy recipients. At the same time, we underline the unique challenges older adults face, especially those paying far more than half their income on housing, and highlight the importance of choice, dignity, and "aging in the right place." We also reflect on learnings from the staff-focused implementation analysis and discuss how community-driven projects can shape next steps.
Moments
00:00 "Income Support to Combat Homelessness"
05:36 "PhD Research on Elder Homelessness"
07:39 Housing & Homelessness Conversations
11:49 Randomized Trial Evaluating Subsidy Impact
15:41 Randomized Trial Participant Process
17:46 Measuring Housing Intervention Outcomes
21:18 "Shallow Subsidies Empower Housing Choice"
23:03 Housing Costs and Financial Well-Being
28:27 "Shuttle Subsidy Cuts ED Visits"
31:05 Refining Housing Cost Burden Insights
34:16 Implementation Assessment Using CFIR Framework
38:21 "Tension for Change Drives Action"
39:45 "Overhauling Housing Support Systems"
42:47 "Money as Community Support"
Here are 5 keys you’ll pick up from this episode:
Let me know what you think of this podcast, as well as any ideas you have for an episode. Email me at [email protected]!
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/
Copyright 2025 Central Ohio Area Agency On Aging
By Central Ohio Area Agency On Aging5
11 ratings
Curious about innovative approaches to address housing insecurity for older adults? You won't want to miss this discussion!
I sit down with Dr. Katie Calhoun (Assistant Professor, OSU College of Social Work) and Marisa Sheldon (Director, Age Friendly Columbus & Franklin County and the Age Friendly Innovation Center) to talk about the regional Shallow Subsidy Pilot Program and what we've learned about housing instability among older adults in Central Ohio.
We kick things off by exploring Dr. Calhoun's background in Denver, where she researched housing stability and worked on the Denver Basic Income Project, which tested guaranteed income as a tool for reducing homelessness. Bringing these experiences to Columbus, she joined forces with our Age-Friendly Innovation Center team and leveraged new data from the Central Ohio Regional Assessment on Aging, revealing a concerning rise in housing cost burdens among adults 50 and older in our region.
We discuss the creation of the Shallow Subsidy Pilot: a program offering a modest but sustained rent subsidy to low-income older renters, aiming to help them remain housed while they await long-term support, such as housing vouchers.
I walk you through the careful process of designing and launching this pilot—including the crucial role of our COAAA housing staff, collaboration across community organizations, and a randomized controlled evaluation to truly measure the impact.
Together, we unpack findings from both quantitative data and powerful participant interviews. The trends show improvements in housing affordability, financial well-being, and mental health, with a notable reduction in emergency department visits among subsidy recipients. At the same time, we underline the unique challenges older adults face, especially those paying far more than half their income on housing, and highlight the importance of choice, dignity, and "aging in the right place." We also reflect on learnings from the staff-focused implementation analysis and discuss how community-driven projects can shape next steps.
Moments
00:00 "Income Support to Combat Homelessness"
05:36 "PhD Research on Elder Homelessness"
07:39 Housing & Homelessness Conversations
11:49 Randomized Trial Evaluating Subsidy Impact
15:41 Randomized Trial Participant Process
17:46 Measuring Housing Intervention Outcomes
21:18 "Shallow Subsidies Empower Housing Choice"
23:03 Housing Costs and Financial Well-Being
28:27 "Shuttle Subsidy Cuts ED Visits"
31:05 Refining Housing Cost Burden Insights
34:16 Implementation Assessment Using CFIR Framework
38:21 "Tension for Change Drives Action"
39:45 "Overhauling Housing Support Systems"
42:47 "Money as Community Support"
Here are 5 keys you’ll pick up from this episode:
Let me know what you think of this podcast, as well as any ideas you have for an episode. Email me at [email protected]!
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/
Copyright 2025 Central Ohio Area Agency On Aging