Veterans

Ending veterans' homelessness will require an investment in permanent supportive housing, discharge services, and affordable housing.
The federal government has recently taken on homelessness among veterans as a top priority. In fact, Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA) General Eric Shinseki has committed to substantially reducing the number of homeless veterans in five years. This is a tall order – at present, an order that would end homelessness for 76,000 veterans. In order to achieve this goal, VA must invest in permanent supportive housing, discharge services, and increased affordable housing options.

Many veterans experiencing homelessness could exit homelessness with rental assistance and a few additional services.

However, many homeless veterans face some of the same challenges as people experiencing chronic homelessness: mental illness, substance abuse and addiction, and physical disability. For veterans, many of these ailments may be the result of service-induced trauma. As such, the first step to successfully ending homelessness among veterans is to address vulnerability factors when soldiers are discharged; VA must be prepared to assess the housing status of veterans as they leave active service and be able to follow-up afterwards.

After that initial assessment, VA should be prepared to address homelessness though permanent supportive housing, rapid re-housing strategies, service-intensive interventions, and prevention policies for at-risk veterans.

Spotlight

Library Resources

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Report  |  November 10, 2009
In association with Veterans Day 2009, the Alliance released an update to the veterans report: Vital Mission: Ending Homelessness Among Veterans. New data from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) shows that while the number of homeless veterans seems to have decreased, the need for more proactive intervention and action grows.
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Federal Policy Brief  |  July 28, 2009
As VA’s only permanent supportive housing intervention, HUD-VASH must be an integral part of ending homelessness for veterans. This document provides advocates and policymakers with a number of specific areas for improvement and recommendations to improve targeting and administration of HUD-VASH in the service of homeless veterans.
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Federal Policy Brief  |  November 12, 2008
The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) has recently launched the "America's Heroes at Work" initiative. This one-pager explains the initiative and provides an overview of resources that can be found on the initiative's website.
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Report  |  November 8, 2007
Homeless veterans can be found in every state across the country and live in rural, suburban, and urban communities. This report analyzes data from the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Census Bureau to examine homelessness and severe housing cost burden among veterans.
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Audio  |  June 14, 2007
This audio conference covered the HUD-VA Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program.