Better serving homeless veterans
Los Angeles County, with a population of more than 66,000 people, is at the forefront of a national homelessness crisis. But L.A. faces an additional, urgent challenge: more than 3,900 veterans are living on the streets, nearly 1 in 10 of all homeless veterans nationwide.
Fortunately, Los Angeles is also home to the West Los Angeles VA Campus, a 388-acre site dedicated to serving the needs of veterans that has enormous potential to create more supportive housing units.
The land was deeded to the federal government in 1888 and for decades thousands of veterans lived there. Unfortunately, following damage from the 1971 Sylmar Earthquake, the VA began transitioning the land away from housing.
In 2016, we joined former Sen. Barbara Boxer in securing passage of the West Los Angeles Leasing Act. This law led to the end of most non-veteran related leases on campus and helped spur the redevelopment of the property into a true home for veterans.
The VA is now implementing a plan to build at least 1,200 new subsidized apartments, which is composed of 23 projects that range from renovating existing structures to developing and building new units.
The challenge now is to secure the funding necessary to
Major portions of the Veterans Administration hospital in Sylmar lie in ruins following southern California earthquake in Los Angeles on Feb. 9, 1971. At least seven persons perished as buildings collapsed and authorities said another 54were missing.
build housing units and get veterans off the streets as soon as possible.
That’s why we introduced the West Los Angeles VA Campus Improvement Act. The bill would allow the VA to spend revenue generated through land-use agreements on campus to help fund housing, services and infrastructure upgrades. It’s a simple but necessary fix to current law, which only allows that money to be spent on maintenance.
Both the House and Senate have now passed slightly different versions of this bill. We’re both hopeful that the recently passed Senate version of the bill will receive a final vote in the House in coming weeks and the bill can be signed into law by President Biden.
We’re also exploring other ways the VA can contribute
more to the cost of retrofitting buildings to make them suitable for housing.
As important as housing is to address this crisis, we know that housing alone is not enough. As new housing units are built on the West LA VA campus, more low-barrier and wraparound support services such as job training, counseling and health care will be vital to help veterans transition out of homelessness — whether they’re residents on the campus or elsewhere in the community.
The anchor of these services is the VA hospital at the southern part of the campus. Among the 23 planned projects for the campus are efforts to build more outpatient clinics and a research center, solidifying the campus as a center for veteran medical care in Southern California.
Plans also include a hub for community engagement and reintegration services that are tailored to veterans’ specific needs, including employment counseling and programs directed toward those battling PTSD, substance abuse and other mental health conditions.
Congress and the new administration can certainly do more to support these efforts by providing resources to programs that pair housing with supportive services, such as the successful HUD-VASH program. This joint program between the VA and the Department of Housing and Urban Development provides veterans with vouchers to help them find permanent housing. HUDVASH, which began in 2008, has helped reduce the number of veterans experiencing homelessness in the United States by half.
With the Sylmar earthquake now 50 years behind us, it’s long past time to restore this campus as a home and community for veterans.
The West LA VA campus has the potential to serve as a model for the nation on how to address veteran homelessness. We just need to push these plans over the finish line. Final passage of the West Los Angeles VA Campus Improvement Act is the next logical step.