UC Law SF Team Wins Hack Homelessness Competition
A marketplace app where users can sell services to one another and get paid in crypto. A digital wishing tree used by unhoused people to request money for an umbrella or help toward their monthly grocery bill. A kiosk that dispenses clean needles and opioid overdose reversal medication. And a platform that educates tenants of their rights. These were among the ideas that came out of the third annual competition hosted by UC Law SF鈥 LexLab.
Working in teams, participants spent a week identifying and innovating solutions for addressing some of the most pressing legal issues related to housing insecurity in the Bay Area. Underscoring the notion that there is no silver bullet for remedying the homelessness crisis, the contest challenged participants to find bite-sized solutions to problems such as inadequate tenant protections, lack of affordable housing, and limited access to support services.
Four teams, comprised of current and former UC Law SF students plus members of the public, rose to the challenge.
Led by second- and third-year students Aashi Patel and Angeline Brom, the winning team, Home2Stay, created a web and mobile platform to facilitate legal aid and to educate tenants on the cusp of eviction of their rights. Employing a trauma-informed approach, the app allows tenants to complete a questionnaire and upload a comprehensive timeline and documents supporting their case.
鈥淭enants often show up to see their attorneys for intake interviews with shoeboxes and binders of information that鈥檚 often not relevant. Legal aid attorneys don鈥檛 have the time or resources to sort through that kind of information and conduct multi-hour interviews,鈥 says Patel. 鈥淭enants deserve鈥攁nd attorneys need鈥攁 solution. With Home2Stay you don鈥檛 need a lawyer to know what protections you have as a tenant.鈥
As part of their research, Patel and Brom traveled to Los Angeles to interview tenants facing eviction and harassment.
鈥淏efore we even got to their story, they showed up with a huge white binder with rent notices and papers from, like, five years ago detailing how their landlord has harassed them,鈥 says Patel. 鈥淎nd that struck us that people鈥檚 lives, people鈥檚 stories, are reduced to a binder. That鈥檚 all they have to stand up for themselves.鈥
The experience reinforced the team鈥檚 desire to find a way to use technology to alleviate issues commonly faced by overwhelmed tenants, Patel says. The duo plan on creating a legal tech company to take the app from idea to product.
鈥淸The team] identified a clear issue that is experienced by tenants around organizing their case documentation, an issue that鈥檚 experienced by the legal aid community,鈥 says Megan Abell, director of advocacy at TechEquity Collaborative and member of the panel judging the competition.
LexLab cofounder Alice Armitage, who created the Hack Homelessness initiative and teaches an accompanying design thinking class at UC Law SF, said the initiative sprang from her desire to teach law students how to better address complex real-world problems by adding design thinking, technology, and collaboration skills to the critical thinking skills they have already developed in law school.
鈥淚 chose the problem of homelessness to set my course within because it has been a growing crisis for years, and one that is very evident to all members of the UC Law SF community due to our location in the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco,鈥 Armitage says.
Kevin Thomason, a UC Law SF graduate and director of the , returned to his alma mater to participate in the hackathon, introducing an idea he described as 鈥渁 little crazy,鈥 but not so crazy that it couldn鈥檛 be done. In fact, he pointed out, a similar initiative is already .
鈥淏asically you use crypto to create a labor-bidding for people experiencing homelessness and people experiencing poverty,鈥 Thomason says. He explained that you combine a second idea in that 鈥渢he money in that parallel economy is also shared with them, similar to how Miami鈥攁nd soon NYC鈥攗se crypto to generate real cash.鈥
Say a business owner needs window cleaning. He or she can use the app to solicit bids. The bidder is compensated in tokens or cash upon completing the task.
Guiding Thomason鈥檚 idea development is a philosophical belief that poverty and wealth inequality are at the root of all social ills. 鈥淵ou fix those,鈥 he said, 鈥渁ll the other ones start to fade.鈥
For 2L Sasha Madani, a photo of smiling young professionals walking past a homeless encampment in San Francisco inspired the 鈥淰illage.鈥 Based on the model and a Seattle-based program called 鈥淪amaritan,鈥 Village is a platform Madani developed with teammates Sam Elias and Derrick Moon that enables unhoused people to share their stories and request help directly from their community.
Maybe someone needs money to renew their driver鈥檚 license. Or they need a new sleeping bag to protect them from the elements. They make the request on the app, which can be accessed by a passerby via a QR code strategically placed in highly trafficked areas such as grocery checkout counters and bus stops.
The idea is to 鈥渆ncourage people to walk with鈥攏ot by鈥攑eople in their community,鈥 Madani says. 鈥淎ll it takes is one act of kindness to help someone rebuild the world around them.鈥
Jillian MacLeod, Jameelah Najieb, Olivia Zacks, and Leaf McCrum of the Second Chance team offered a solution in the form of 鈥渉arm reduction kiosks鈥 to address San Francisco鈥檚 growing overdose crisis.
Citing a troubling statistic that more people in San Francisco died last year from drug overdose than from the coronavirus, the Second Chance team shared its proposal for kiosks placed in neighborhoods with the highest homeless populations. The machines would provide easy access to drug kits and Narcan, also known as naloxone, allowing drug users and good Samaritans to quickly treat overdose emergencies and potentially save lives.
Martina Cucullu Lim, executive director of the and member of the judging panel, praised the team for identifying one barrier for individuals who are experiencing homelessness: passerby not knowing how to help or not knowing whether they can help.
鈥淪ome of the reasons that people don鈥檛 help are because they鈥檙e worried about the liability issues,鈥 Lim says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 true. It鈥檚 real.鈥
The weeklong Hack Homelessness design competition culminated in a final showcase on Nov. 6. Contestants were judged on problem identification, feasibility, impact, and presentation. The winner of the competition, Home2Stay, received $1,000 to donate to a housing and homeless service provider of their choice.