The blueprint? Wow.
The issue for me is that I think the voices of those people who are serving people in housing programs are not heard as often as they need to be. I think that the integration of housing and health and income is critical to ensuring that housing programs, whatever they end up looking like, are successful.
Warehousing people in inexpensive housing does not work. We know that if that's what happens, as landlords of non-profit and social-housing-type programs we end up managing those social issues in very large, dense population situations.
I think that the integration of supports within housing is a big piece of it. I'm not able to respond to your question at an academic or policy-planning level, which may be what you were looking for.