The Day

R.I. latest state poised to end vets’ homelessne­ss

- By MICHELLE R. SMITH

Providence — For more than two years, Don Perrault lived without a home as the Vietnam veteran struggled with depression and personal setbacks that at one point left him with nothing to do but take a therapeuti­c seven-day walk to New Jersey — then walk back.

Now, after living out of a shelter where he shared a room with six other men, he has a home of his own under an ambitious push to wipe out homelessne­ss among veterans in Rhode Island.

“It helps a little bit with your mind, your mental aspect,” Perrault, 60, said. “It’s hard for a person who is homeless to have dignity.”

The efforts that have secured Perrault a newly renovated one-bedroom apartment — complete with new furniture and even a TV — for a rental voucher and $25 per month for rent and utilities are part of a national push to end homelessne­ss among veterans by the end of the year. The goal has been spurred by both President Barack Obama’s administra­tion and Zero: 2016, a campaign run by the nonprofit group Community Solutions

In August, the federal government declared Connecticu­t the first state to end chronic homelessne­ss among veterans. New Orleans, Houston and a handful of other communitie­s have also reached the goal.

Nearly 50,000 veterans were homeless nationwide before the effort began, Community Solutions estimated.

Rhode Island, Connecticu­t and New Mexico, all part of the campaign, are on track to reach the veterans goal, said Community Solutions spokesman Adam Gibbs. One strategy all three states are using is a list of names, he said.

In Rhode Island, every person who comes into the homeless system is given a “vulnerabil­ity survey,” which asks a series of questions about their history and assigns them a score based on how likely they are to die on the street. Then, advocates create a list of all the people who are homeless with the most vulnerable people listed on top, by name.

A committee meets weekly and goes down the list to try to find housing for each person. If a person has a problem that’s standing in the way of getting an apartment, such as a criminal record, the committee tries to come up with a solution.

The state is also using a “housing first” strategy, which prioritize­s getting people into permanent housing, said Eric Hirsch, a professor of sociology at Providence College, who chairs the Zero: 2016 campaign in Rhode Island. In the past, people would be placed in temporary housing and have to get substance abuse or mental health counseling or jump through other hoops before getting a permanent place to live, Hirsch said.

Now, they get the apartment first and are then “surrounded” with services that they can then choose to use. Many decide on their own they want the help, he said. Hirsch said research shows 85 to 95 percent of people placed in permanent housing were there a year later using this approach.

A big help has also been dedicated money from the state, and more set aside for things like rental subsidies, said Jim Ryczek, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless.

Advocates say they don’t expect to eliminate homelessne­ss completely, but that their goal is to make sure if people become homeless, they have a permanent home within weeks. Rhode Island advocates last year estimated that 4,067 Rhode Islanders used a homeless shelter at some time in 2014, out of a population of around 1 million people.

The Zero: 2016 program’s next goal is to end chronic homelessne­ss in a several states and cities by the end of next year.

 ?? DAVE COLLINS/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Luis Vazquez, a Navy veteran who was homeless off and on for 10 years, sits Aug. 27 outside his home in a veterans’ housing complex in Newington, Conn.
DAVE COLLINS/AP FILE PHOTO Luis Vazquez, a Navy veteran who was homeless off and on for 10 years, sits Aug. 27 outside his home in a veterans’ housing complex in Newington, Conn.

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