PORTLAND, Maine — The city of Portland is considering a plan to set aside $50,000 to distribute to a developer willing to tackle a so-called “housing first” apartment project for homeless people.

The City Council on Monday night gave first reading to a measure that will designate the money from the city’s Housing Trust Fund to the cause. The council will need to approve the move with a second reading and vote at a future meeting.

There is currently just more than $724,000 in the fund.

If the allocation is approved, the city would issue a request for proposals from developers interested in pursuing the construction of one such facility, and the $50,000 would be in the form of a grant award to help offset predevelopment costs, such as site location.

A city task force charged with developing a strategy for reducing homelessness in Portland delivered a report in 2012 calling for, among other steps, the construction of three 35-unit apartment facilities for the homeless.

Mayor Michael Brennan reiterated plans to pursue more such housing in a multifaceted plan to combat homelessness unveiled last August.

The “housing first” model does not require tenants to agree to substance use or behavior standards and often is signified by on-site counseling and care services.

The model is built on the theory that at-risk homeless individuals are more likely to take their medications and adhere to counseling if they have stable housing. Many shelters or housing facilities require clients to be sober before being admitted, which “housing first” advocates say places too high a barrier for many struggling individuals to overcome.

According to a 2011 study by Thomas McLaughlin, University of New England associate professor of social work, a group of nearly 100 Greater Portland homeless individuals with disabilities cost taxpayers a total of $622,386 less while living in stable housing than they did while living on the streets — with cost avoidance coming primarily from more efficient use of medical care and fewer run-ins with law enforcement.

Two such facilities are currently operated in Portland by homeless service provider Preble Street and its partners from Avesta Housing. Those facilities are Logan Place and Florence House.

Preble Street and Portland Department of Health and Human Services officials have said when Logan Place opened in 2005, it ended three years of regular shelter overflows.

Since the recession began three years later, the city has again experienced an increase in homelessness, with as many as 470 people staying on the streets or in shelters now nightly. That represents a jump from less than 300 in 2009.

Seth Koenig

Seth has nearly a decade of professional journalism experience and writes about the greater Portland region.