Where Do They Go Foundation

Our Mission is to successfully transition individuals into safe housing with supportive services who are discharging from hospitals, emergency rooms, detoxes, or treatment centers who are homeless or at risk of being homeless.


Where Do They Go Foundation’s 10-90 Program operates both in spirit and in purpose to help recreate lives. When an individual suffering from homelessness is treated for emergency medical services and requires subsequent treatment, they’re most often released back to the streets with no plan or established care services. The average time between emergency medical services and treatment ranges from 5 to 10 days if they have treatment arranged, and many never make it to treatment and end up returning to drugs and alcohol. Most will cycle back through the hospitals the next time they require emergency medical services with no long-term solution creating a never-ending cycle.

The 10-90 Program receives individuals from hospitals and detox facilities to provide fully-funded safe and secure recovery temporary, low boundary Harm Reduction Housing to aid in the transition from emergency medical services to in-patient treatment.

In addition to providing safe housing and intensive case management, the 10-90 Program coordinates drug and alcohol assessments, bed dates for in-patient treatment, transportation to and from immediate medical/social service appointments, assistance with health insurance, and set-up of critical social services. 

It is abundantly clear that the current lapse in care between emergency medical services and in-patient treatment is prohibitive to the rehabilitation of these individuals. The 10-90 Program helps to establish a firm footing in a safe environment while providing a solution to the critical gap in services that currently exist, enabling individuals to have a higher chance of success at rebuilding their lives.

In addition to the Harm Reduction solution, the 10-90 Program also offers After-Care Housing to further set individuals up for successful re-acclimation into society.

With the implementation of After-Care Housing, the 10-90 Program can better prepare individuals for permanent, independent housing. The 10-90 Program will bring back the people who came through Harm Reduction Housing for an additional 90-day After Care Housing program that provides the opportunity to develop the skills a person needs to go into independent living. 

In conjunction with community partners, the 10-90 Program is able to offer a wide variety of services including, but not limited to, educational opportunities, job skills training, substance abuse outpatient services, peer support, life skills training, financial literacy training, and driver licensing/state ID support.  
The 10-90 Program believes in the extreme importance and necessity of these services as a solution to bridge the critical gap in care that will aid in the rehabilitation of many.


For more information, please contact Kenneth Moultry at