ATTACHMENT F: BASELINE INFORMATION AND SURVEY DETAILED ITEM JUSTIFICATION
BASELINE INFORMATION FORM
Q # |
Question |
Source |
Research Question/ Hypothesis |
Justification |
Household Roster (HR) |
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|
|
To collect name and DOB to track participants. Collected prior to consent process in order to check individual has not previously enrolled in the demonstration |
HRQ1 |
PHA Name |
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|
[Pre-filled response for MIS, no burden to respondent] |
HRQ2 |
Is the family an existing voucher family or a new voucher family? |
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Do the impacts of the CMRS and SMRS offers vary based on being an existing or new voucher holder? |
Main subgroup classification for the study. Study will use separate random assignment lists for existing and new voucher holders to ensure balance within each subgroup. |
HRQ3
|
Head of Household Information A. Head of household’s first name B. Head of household’s middle name C. Head of household’s last name D. Head of household’s suffix E. Head of household’s date of birth F. Head of household’s SSN G. PHA household ID number |
|
|
For contact, tracking, and collecting outcome data from PHA/HUD administrative records
|
HRQ4 |
How many children age 17 or younger are in your household? |
New question |
What is the effect of an offer of CMRS on the outcomes of children in the household? |
Collect children’s information to link to children’s outcomes in the future. Collect names and ages prior to consent process in order to populate parental consent form. |
HRQ5 A.-D. |
A. Loop: First name B. Loop: Last name C. Loop: Age in years D. Loop: Are you the parent or guardian of this child? |
D.: CMTO |
Same as HRQ4. |
Same as HRQ4. |
HRQ6 |
How many adults are there in your household other than yourself? |
New question |
What is the effect of an offer of CMRS on the outcomes of adults in the household? |
Collect adults’ information to link to adults’ outcomes in the future. Collect names and ages prior to consent process in order to prepare non-household head adult consent forms. |
HRQ7 A.-C. |
A. Loop: First name B. Loop: Last name C. Loop: Age in years |
|
Same as HRQ6. |
Same as HRQ6. |
HRQ8 |
What is the primary (or main) language your family speaks at home? |
CMTO-modified |
Which site- and household-level factors affect the success of CMRS and SMRS in facilitating moves to opportunity areas? (Hypothesis: English fluency) |
Examine hypothesis about what affects the success of mobility-related services. May be used to create subgroups and may increase the statistical power of analyses. To facilitate future qualitative and survey data collection. |
HRQ9 |
Which language would you prefer for the consent form and baseline survey form? |
New question |
|
Collected in order to have consent form and survey be in appropriate language |
Baseline Information Form (BIF) |
|
|
|
To collect contact information and information about each household member that is not available in PHA administrative records |
BIFQ10 |
What is your cell phone number? |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ11 |
If you have an additional phone number, please tell me that number: |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ12 |
May we send text messages to your cell phone? Message and data rates may apply. |
CMTO-modified |
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ13 |
May we leave you voice messages? |
CMTO |
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ14 |
What is your email address? |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ15 |
May we send you email messages? |
CMTO |
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ16 |
What is the best method for the study to contact you, phone, email, or text? |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ17 |
Head of household’s physical address Street Address – 1 Street Address – 2 Apt. No. City State Zip Code |
|
Does impact of CMRS offer vary based on the characteristics of the households’ origin neighborhood? |
For contact and tracking, and for linking to neighborhood indicators. Physical address is the key data field for this phase of the study. |
BIFQ18 |
Is this address the best address to mail something to you? |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ19 |
If not, what address should we use if we mail something to you? |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ20 A.-M. |
Could you tell us the name of a person who does not live with you but who will always know how to contact you?
|
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ21 A.-M. |
Could you tell us the name of a second person who does not live with you but who will always know how to contact you? (Same fields as BIFQ20) |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ22 A.-M. |
Could you tell us the name of a third person who does not live with you but who will always know how to contact you? (Same fields as BIFQ20) |
|
|
For contact and tracking |
BIFQ23A |
[Loop of all other adults.] A. How is [Name of Adult #] is related to you? |
ACS-modified |
Which site- and household-level factors affect the success of CMRS and SMRS in facilitating moves to opportunity areas? (Hypothesis: family structure) |
Examine hypothesis about what affects the success of mobility-related services. May be used to create subgroups and may increase the statistical power of analyses. Less distinct relation codes are collected on HUD Form 50058. More detailed relation codes will provided better information on family structure. |
BIFQ23B-E |
[Loop of all other adults.] B. What is the cell phone number of [Name of Adult #]? C. What is the email address of [Name of Adult #]? D. Is he or she currently working for pay? E. What zip code does he or she currently work in, or does he or she work in multiple neighborhoods? [If zip code not known] Street address and city: |
CMTO-modified |
What is the effect of an offer of CMRS on the outcomes of adults in the household? Which site- and household-level factors affect the success of CMRS and SMRS in facilitating moves to opportunity areas? (Hypothesis: set of opportunity areas that can be considered is constrained by work location of adults) |
B.-C. Facilitate obtaining informed consent from non-head of household adults. D.-E. Examine hypothesis about what affects the success of mobility-related services. May be used to create subgroups and may increase the statistical power of analyses. |
BIFQ24 A.-P. |
[Loop of all children.]
|
A.: ACS-modified; MTO response categories B., D., G., I.: CMTO C. : CMTO-modified E.: PFI-NHES-modified F., H.: MTO-modified J., K.: New question L., O., P.: NHIS M., N.: WG/ UNICEF CFM
|
What is the effect of an offer of CMRS on the outcomes of children in the household? Which site- and household-level factors affect the success of CMRS and SMRS in facilitating moves to opportunity areas? (Hypothesis: satisfaction with current school[s]) |
Collecting information will allow for examination of several hypothesis about household-level factors that affect the success of mobility-related services in facilitating moves to opportunity areas. These items may be used to create subgroups and may predict future outcomes and so have value in increasing the statistical power of analyses, especially on children’s long-term outcomes. Less distinct relation codes are collected on HUD Form 50058. More detailed relation codes will provided better information on family structure. The MTO items were used as covariates in the long-term analysis presented in Chetty, Hendren, and Katz (2016). Health items on asthma and body mass index (BMI) capture hypothesized mechanisms for neighborhood effects. |
BASELINE SURVEY
Sources for Questions Referenced in Item-by-Item Justification
Acronym |
Full Source Name |
Questionnaire URL |
ACS |
American Community Survey |
https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/methodology/questionnaires/2020/quest20.pdf |
CMTO |
Baseline survey from the Creating Moves To Opportunity Demonstration |
https://opportunityinsights.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/CMTOBaselineSurvey.pdf |
CPSFSS |
Current Population Survey Food Security Supplement |
https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/99282/err-275.pdf?v=4548.4 |
GSS |
General Social Survey |
https://gss.norc.org/Documents/quex/GSS2018%20Ballot%201%20-%20English.pdf |
FTHB |
Baseline survey from the HUD First-Time Homebuyer Education and Counseling Demonstration |
|
HFSSM:Six-Item |
U.S. Household Food Security Survey Module: Six-Item Short Form, Economic Research Service, USDA (September 2012) |
|
HPQ |
World Health Organization Health and Work Performance Questionnaire |
https://www.hcp.med.harvard.edu/hpq/ftpdir/HPQ%20Employee%20Version%2081810.pdf |
K6 |
Kessler-6 items for psychological distress (Kessler et al., 2003) |
https://www.hcp.med.harvard.edu/ncs/ftpdir/k6/Self%20admin_K6.pdf |
MTO |
Baseline survey from HUD’s Moving to Opportunity for Fair Housing Demonstration |
[Available from Abt Associates] |
MCSUI |
Multi-City Study of Urban Inequality |
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/2535/datadocumentation# |
NHIS |
National Health Interview Survey |
https://ftp.cdc.gov/pub/Health_Statistics/NCHS/Survey_Questionnaires/NHIS/2021/EnglishQuest.pdf |
PFI-NHES |
2019 Parent and Family Involvement in Education Survey – National Household Education Surveys Program |
|
Rent Reform (baseline) |
Baseline information form from HUD’s Rent Reform Demonstration |
|
WG/UNICEF CFM |
Washington Group/UNICEF Child Functioning Module |
|
WTWV |
Baseline survey of HUD’s Effects of Housing Vouchers on Welfare Families Evaluation (Mills et al., 2006; also known as the Welfare-to-Work Voucher Evaluation) |
[Available from Abt Associates] |
References:
Chetty, R., Hendren, N., & Katz, L. F. (2016). The Effects of Exposure to Better Neighborhoods on Children: New Evidence from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment. American Economic Review, 106(4), 855-902. https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.20150572
DeLuca, S., Rhodes, A., & Young, A. (2020). How parents and children adapt to new neighborhoods: Considerations for future housing mobility programs. In L. Tach, R. Dunifon, & D. L. Miller (Eds.), APA Bronfenbrenner series on the ecology of human development. Confronting inequality: How policies and practices shape children's opportunities (p. 187–218). American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/0000187-009
Kessler, R. C., Barker, P. R., Colpe, L. J., Epstein, J. F., Gfroerer, J. C., Hiripi, E., Howes, M. J., Normand, S.-L. T., Manderscheid, R. W., Walters, E. E., & Zaslavsky, A. M. (2003). Screening for Serious Mental Illness in the General Population. Archives of General Psychiatry, 60(2), 184-189. https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.60.2.184
Ludwig, J., Duncan, G. J., Gennetian, L. A., Katz, L. F., Kessler, R. C., Kling, J. R., & Sanbonmatsu, L. (2012). Neighborhood Effects on the Long-Term Well-Being of Low-Income Adults. Science, 337(6101), 1505-1510. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1224648
Mills, G., Gubits, D., Orr, L., Long, D., Feins, J., Kaul, B., Wood, M., Jones, A., Cloudburst Consulting, & the QED Group. (2006). Effects of Housing Vouchers on Welfare Families: Final Report. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research. https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/hsgvouchers_1_2011.pdf , https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/hsgvouchers_2_2011.pdf
Shroder, M. (2002). Locational Constraint, Housing Counseling, and Successful Lease-up in a Randomized Housing Voucher Experiment. Journal of Urban Economics, 51(2), 315-338. https://doi.org/10.1006/juec.2001.2247
Orr, L., Feins, J. D., Jacob, R., Beecroft, E., Sanbonmatsu, L., Katz, L. F., Liebman, J. B., & Kling, J. R. (2003). Moving to Opportunity: Interim Impacts Evaluation. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research. https://www.huduser.gov/portal//Publications/pdf/MTOFullReport.pdf
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