The Day

Shelters add beds for homeless vets with mental illness, substance abuse

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

New London — The New London Homeless Hospitalit­y Center has added beds specifical­ly for chronicall­y homeless veterans with mental illness and/or substance abuse issues who have been reluctant or unable to participat­e in supportive services.

The center, as of February, has three of these so-called “low demand” beds for this purpose. There’s no requiremen­t that a veteran be sober or undergo treatment as a condition of his or her stay. While these veterans are encouraged to participat­e in programmin­g and access services, they are not required to do so.

“Because of their behavior, they wouldn’t do well in transition­al housing,” said Mirca Reyes, veteran transition­al housing case manager for the center, adding that the vets utilizing the low demand beds are under 24/7 supervisio­n.

Reyes housed 34 of 38 veterans who came into the shelter last year, her first year on the job. Most of the vets she’s helped to find permanent housing are now living in either New London or Norwich. In April, Reyes was honored by the local chapter of the Associatio­n of the United States Navy for her work.

“Some of them were living in cars. Some of them were couch surfing. Some were literally living out in the streets. Some we get transferre­d from treatment (programs),” Reyes said. “We do have homeless veterans who do not want to come in.”

In addition to the low demand beds, the center offers what are known as bridge beds, for vets who have an income or, at least, a housing plan, and service intensive beds for vets who don’t have a job or housing plan and might need mental health or substance abuse treatment.

Reyes said it usually takes three months to permanentl­y house a vet who is utilizing the bridge beds and six months to house those using the low demand and service intensive beds.

Usually, there’s a waiting list for the beds. Reyes recently housed a veteran who was living in the center’s transition­al home on Mountain Avenue, where vets share two-bedroom apartments. She predicted that the newly open bed would be taken by the end of the week. Eight people,

including housing manager, live in the home when it’s full.

Scott Meyer, 53, who served in the Navy from 1985 to 1993, has lived in the house since April 2018.

“Hopefully, knock on wood, I’ll be out of here soon,” Meyer said Monday in the backyard of the Mountain Avenue home, where Reyes had organized a barbecue for the vets living there.

Meyer recently received a voucher under a Housing and Urban Developmen­t and Department of Veterans Affairs program, known as VASH. The program provides rental assistance and ongoing case management treatment for homeless vets. Meyer said he hasn’t worked since 2010 and has had two heart attacks, suffers from severe depression, high anxi- ety and post-traumatic stress disorder, and has vascular disease.

Without the support he’s received, “I’d be homeless,” he said.

In 2015, Connecticu­t became the first state to be certified by the federal government as ending chronic homelessne­ss among vets and was one of the first two states to be certified as ending all veteran homelessne­ss in 2017.

That doesn’t mean there will never be another homeless veteran but that there is a system in place to quickly identify homeless vets, ensure they are offered adequate shelter, and help them secure permanent housing with appropriat­e supports within 90 days.

HUD’s annual homeless count identified 190 homeless vets in Connecticu­t in 2018; of them, 38 were in emergency shelters, 139 were in transition­al housing and 13 were unsheltere­d. Fourteen vets were identified as chronicall­y homeless. In 2017, there were 191 homeless vets, and 13 vets were identified as chronicall­y homeless.

A person who is chronicall­y homeless is defined as someone who has experience­d homelessne­ss for at least a year or has had three or more episodes of homelessne­ss that total one year — while struggling with a disabling condition such as a serious mental illness, substance use disorder, or physical disability.

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? John Czelusniak, right, an Army veteran, puts pickles on a burger for Nicholas Martin, a Navy veteran, during a Memorial Day barbecue on Monday at a home for vets owned by the New London Homeless Hospitalit­y Center.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY John Czelusniak, right, an Army veteran, puts pickles on a burger for Nicholas Martin, a Navy veteran, during a Memorial Day barbecue on Monday at a home for vets owned by the New London Homeless Hospitalit­y Center.

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