The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta announces end of vet homelessne­ss

- PAMELA MILLER FOR THE AJC

The city of Atlanta announced recently it has effectivel­y ended veteran homelessne­ss, confirmed by the United States Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

In 2014, Mayor Kasim Reed joined other mayors across the country in accepting President Obama’s challenge to end veteran homelessne­ss by 2015. Since that time, Partners for HOME and the providers of the Atlanta Continuum of Care in partnershi­p with HUD, the VA and the Atlanta Housing Authority, have created a coordinate­d system to identify, assess, connect and permanentl­y house veterans experienci­ng homelessne­ss. To date, the CoC has placed 1,859 veterans experienci­ng homelessne­ss into permanent housing.

The city of Atlanta is one of only two municipali­ties in the state of Georgia that has met the federal benchmarks and criteria for creating an effective end to homelessne­ss for veterans. Meeting the criteria for each benchmark, set by USICH, means Atlanta has created a system and capacity to quickly identify and house veterans experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Earlier this year, Mayor Reed announced that the Atlanta City Council voted to authorize Invest Atlanta to issue a $26 million Homeless Opportunit­y Bond to be matched by a $25 million philanthro­pic donation from the United Way of Greater Atlanta, for a $50 million total initiative to make homelessne­ss rare, brief and non-recurring in the City of Atlanta. The Atlanta City Council also authorized the adoption of ClearPath – Partners for HOME’s five-year strategic plan focused on permanent housing placements for all individual­s experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

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