The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

New VA head: It’ll take longer to end veteran homelessne­ss

- By Jennifer Mcdermott

Homelessne­ss among veterans has been effectivel­y ended in Virginia, Connecticu­t and Delaware and in more than 40 communitie­s.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. The new Veterans Affairs chief shares the goal set by former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion of ending homelessne­ss among veterans, but he says it will take longer than his predecesso­r predicted.

Reducing the number of homeless veterans nationwide from roughly 40,000 to 10,000 or 15,000 is an “achievable goal” for President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, VA Secretary David Shulkin told The Associated Press during a visit to Rhode Island last week.

“This is a continuous problem of people finding themselves in economical­ly difficult situations and then being out on the street or going from shelter to shelter,” Shulkin said.

Homelessne­ss among veterans has been effectivel­y ended in Virginia, Connecticu­t and Delaware and in more than 40 communitie­s. The outgoing head of the VA, Robert McDonald, said in January that “we should be there” nationwide within a couple of years.

Shulkin, who formerly was VA undersecre­tary of health under Obama, said on Friday, “We’re still looking at a multi-year process.”

While advocates are encouraged to hear Shulkin’s commitment, some wish he was more ambitious.

“My personal take is, the VA secretary is being cautiously optimistic about what can be achieved and not wanting to kind of set the administra­tion up for a missed goal,” said Lisa Vukov, who works to prevent and end homelessne­ss in the Omaha, Nebraska, area. “I’m a firm believer in setting your goals big because you achieve more that way.”

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticu­t Democrat, said veteran homelessne­ss can be ended during the Trump administra­tion.

“There’s no reason we can’t achieve it if enough resources are dedicated to the fight,” said Blumenthal, a member of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.

Shulkin said some veterans offered housing by the VA prefer other alternativ­es and high real estate prices and a shortage of available housing in some parts of the country make it hard to house veterans there. He sees the biggest challenge in Los Angeles.

Democratic Mayor Eric Garcetti said that homelessne­ss in Los Angeles is a long-term crisis, but that the city has housed more than 8,000 veterans since 2014 and he’s fighting to ensure all veterans have a safe place to call home. Los Angeles voters approved a bond in November to raise $1.2 billion for up to 10,000 permanent units.

Navy veteran Chris N. Cardenas said there are some veterans who refuse help or have trouble accessing benefits because of mental illness or substance abuse issues, but 40,000 homeless veterans is far too many.

“That’s a very high number,” Cardenas said. “It can get down to zero for the ones that want the help.”

Cardenas, 52, said he stopped working as a deliveryma­n in Santa Fe because of problems with his right knee in 2013 and became homeless after he used up his savings. He moved into an apartment in the Santa Fe area in 2016 with the help of a VA grant program and is now a student at the University of New Mexico-Los Alamos.

“I’m at a loss for words because it’s so great,” he said. “It makes you feel like a functionin­g person in society.”

To get homeless veterans into permanent homes, the Obama administra­tion used a program that was created in 2008 and combines rental assistance from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t with case management and clinical services from the VA, so-called HUD-VASH vouchers. Some areas of the country currently have a waiting list for a voucher, including Los Angeles.

While programs for helping homeless veterans received funding increases in fiscal 2017, there’s less money for new HUD-VASH vouchers. There’s $40 million available, compared to $60 million for new HUDVASH vouchers in 2016 and $75 million in 2015, according to HUD.

“We urge the VA to prioritize finishing the job and I have absolute confidence the new secretary has that commitment,” said Chris Ko, director of homeless initiative­s for the United Way of Greater Los Angeles. “We need to see that commitment exercised in additional federal resources.”

Shulkin said he’s committed to maintainin­g the voucher program and continuing strategies that are working, such as housing people first and then pointing them toward help to confront the root cause of their homelessne­ss.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin, addresses a House Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. In a May 5 interview with the Associated Press, Shulkin said he thinks reducing the number of homeless veterans...
CLIFF OWEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin, addresses a House Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. In a May 5 interview with the Associated Press, Shulkin said he thinks reducing the number of homeless veterans...

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