Stockton’s Caregiver Program:
This is Thinking Outside of the Box!

Stockton faces ongoing challenges in addressing homelessness, with existing efforts focused on
low-barrier shelters, rapid rehousing, and workforce development. While these programs provide immediate assistance, long-term reintegration remains an obstacle, especially for individuals who struggle with structured programs or institutional settings.
A Community-Based Reintegration Initiative Proposed by Shelter Outline: The Network
This Stockton Proposed Caregiver Program proposes an alternative reintegration pathway, one rooted in mentorship, stability, and gradual independence. By pairing homeless individuals with trained caregivers who are Stockton residents that will be providing housing and using community-led transitions that will guide them back into society.
How This Will Fit Within Stockton’s Homelessness Strategy
Stockton has prioritized employment-based solutions and individualized support systems, which makes this caregiver initiative highly compatible with current reintegration efforts. Specifically:
Building on Rapid Rehousing, Stockton’s rapid rehousing model provides short-term rental assistance. The caregiver approach extends housing stability by ensuring mentorship alongside shelter.
– Complementing Workforce Development – Stockton has pushed for employment-driven reintegration. Caregivers would mentor participants in financial management, job preparedness, and schedule structuring to strengthen workforce reintegration efforts.
– Reducing Strain on Institutional Shelters – Traditional shelters often struggle with overcrowding. The caregiver approach decentralizes aid, using residential homes to foster gradual reintegration without adding pressure on facilities.
How the Stockton Caregiver Model Works
This voluntary, government-funded program provides monthly stipends to Stockton residents willing to mentor a homeless individual for six months to a year.
Participant Structure:
– Housing Support – Caregivers provide temporary housing, ensuring safety and stability.
– Workforce Readiness – Individuals learn financial literacy, budgeting, and workplace skills under caregiver guidance.
– Personal Growth & Autonomy – The program encourages self-sufficiency, ensuring each participant accumulates the necessary documents, clothing, and life experience for independent living.
Case Studies That Support This Approach
Existing mentorship-driven reintegration programs demonstrate that personalized guidance fosters long-term success:
– Friends and Families Center (in Stockton, CA) – Helps formerly incarcerated individuals reenter society via case management, employment support, & housing aid.
– Community First! Village (in Austin, TX) – Provides tiny homes and mentorship-driven employment opportunities, proving that small-scale residential reintegration works.
– The Doe Fund (in New York) – Blends workforce training with transitional housing, a model that closely aligns with this caregiver approach.
Pilot Program Framework: Testing in Stockton
To demonstrate viability, the Stockton Caregiver Program could begin as a pilot with an initial small-scale rollout, testing effectiveness before broader adoption.
1. Selection of caregiver participants – Eligible Stockton residents volunteer, undergo training, and receive stipends.
2. Targeted homeless outreach – Candidates with high reintegration potential are paired with caregivers.
3. Structured mentorship plans – Caregivers guide individuals in budgeting, employment training, and stability-building.
4. Success metrics evaluation – Data tracking ensures the program effectively transitions individuals into independent living.
If proven successful, Stockton could expand the program city-wide, utilizing government funding while leveraging nonprofit partnerships to maximize impact.
By the Street Sentinel
