Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Finally, hope for homeless vets

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It was heartening to hear Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough recently announce an ambitious but doable goal: to house — in permanent homes, not just temporary motel rooms — 500 homeless veterans in the Los Angeles area by the end of the year. He also pledged to get temporary housing, at least, for the 40-some people, mostly veterans and their partners, living in a tent encampment along a stretch of San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood that borders the West L.A. campus of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Timelines for housing veterans have come and gone before. In 2015, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti vowed to house every homeless veteran in the city but backed off when the count that year showed that veteran homelessne­ss had risen 6%. We welcome the renewed urgency and hope that this time, the promise is kept.

Since then, the rise in veteran homelessne­ss in L.A. County has abated — but even as veterans get housed, others become unhoused. About 3,900 veterans in L.A. County remain unhoused, according to the most recent count, in 2020. The VA says it housed 1,283 veterans from Oct. 1, 2020, to Sept. 30, 2021. Which raises the question of just how many veterans remain unhoused in L.A. County? No one has an up-to-date answer, but it’s certainly more than 500.

Now there are enormous resources on hand for veterans, including more than 1,300 rental vouchers, according to officials of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority. And that doesn’t count the veterans with vouchers in hand who can’t find an apartment they can afford or a landlord willing to take them.

But the hurdles are still high. Service providers must help veterans collect important documents, and VA social workers must assess veterans’ mental and physical well-being as well as help with their paperwork. LAHSA even got Department of Motor Vehicles staff to visit the encampment last week to work with vets on getting IDs. And service providers or VA staff must take veterans to visit potential temporary and permanent housing sites.

Some service providers working alongside VA staff say the agency’s peer support specialist­s do a good job of intensivel­y engaging veterans — but they say the VA social workers aren’t doing enough field work, instead spending a lot of time working remotely, contacting people by phone. (Yes, homeless people have phones, but they get lost or stolen or don’t always work.) The VA disputes that, saying its social workers have been back in the field for six months. However, the agency is plagued by a 20% shortage in social workers.

Well, here’s the bottom line — this work can’t be done over the phone by a shortstaff­ed crew. The VA has contracted with service providers to assist, but to get the veterans in the encampment temporaril­y settled and another 500 veterans permanentl­y housed by the end of the year will take, well, an army of people. If the VA needs to hire more social workers, the secretary should see that it gets done quickly.

At the Brentwood encampment, some campers have been reluctant to leave. “You can’t overstate the community of the encampment,” one service provider observed. But most are moving on.

“I’m grateful for anything,” said camp resident Coco Garcia on Wednesday, as she speedily packed up belongings to go off to a motel in Lakewood — not her first-choice location. But, she said, “it is what it is.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Luis Sinco AMERICAN FLAGS decorate an encampment of homeless veterans in Brentwood in 2020.
Los Angeles Times Luis Sinco AMERICAN FLAGS decorate an encampment of homeless veterans in Brentwood in 2020.

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