Chicago Sun-Times

Outreach Program of Illinois faces closure

- Mike Nolan

After 28 years of helping military veterans find work, the Veterans Outreach Program of Illinois is close to finding itself out of a job.

The Alsip-based nonprofit has been told there’s no money in this year’s state budget to fund its work, and cash reserves are close to exhaustion, according to James Jazo, executive director.

He’s laid off six full-time staffers who work with veterans, helping them craft resumes and drumming up job leads, and cut back hours at the organizati­on’s offices in Alsip, Joliet and Cicero. Without a promise of state funding, the nonprofit might be forced to close its doors within a few weeks, Jazo said.

“We will continue to hold out as long as we can,” Jazo said.

He and other directors of the group are working to spread the word through area American Legions and Veterans of Foreign Wars posts, hoping that, in turn, their members can lobby legislator­s to restore funding. In fiscal year 2012, which ended June 30, Veterans Outreach received $325,000 through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunit­y, Jazo said.

“It’s the first time we have never been funded,” he said.

Beyond job-placement services at its three offices, Veterans Outreach holds job fairs — including one this past February in Orland Park that was attended by more than 300 veterans.

In April, more than 300 veterans, many of them homeless, received free clothing, meals, medical attention and temporary shelter during a stand-down the organizati­on held at the National Guard Armory in Crestwood.

Jazo said Veterans Outreach has cash reserves set aside to anticipate glitches in funding from the state, but that even with reducing staff and limiting operating hours to three days each week, the organizati­on will likely have to close its doors before the end of September.

“We don’t want to go away,” he said.

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