Not only is he qualified, but after a two-decade-long boom in group home construction he'll have multiple competing offers. Group homes are desperate to rack up more clients so they can keep siphoning off their share of the hundreds of billions of dollars America spends annually on its least fortunate citizens. The days of a spare, regimented life in group homes are over - today, they compete avidly on amenities and lifestyle. Single rooms are now de rigeur, and amenities such as hot tubs are now quite common. Nor have the culinary offerings been neglected - institutional fare like corned beef and cabbage has long since given way to thoughtfully curated forays into modernist cuisine, in addition to homemade versions of traditional comfort food favorites.
What's more, the modern group home is a feast for the mind as well as the body. On top of the fully-stocked entertainment center and media library that is the sine qua non of intellectual life in the group home, most facilities will also offer a range of educational speakers, programs, and classes to encourage the development of people at all points on the social spectrum. Chris would literally be able to get the Date Ed he dreamed of for so long.
So the answer is: yes. Chris can, should, and will enter a group home.