• Bridging the gap from homelessness to permanent housing for Veterans

    Moving a Veteran from homelessness into a permanent home should ideally be a quick process. Yet the reality is that it sometimes takes a few weeks, or months, to transition a Veteran to an identified housing unit.

  • Partnerships pay off in effort to end Veteran homelessness

    “Our goal is to provide the tools and support necessary for homeless Veterans to transition successfully into healthier and more stable lives,” said Mary Morgan, director of the Elks National Veterans Service Commission.

  • Thanking Our Veterans: Part three

    I am speaking of the volunteer individuals and organizations that […]

  • Coordinated Entry system to end Veteran and chronic homelessness in Tucson

    Sonia Niznik was taking shelter from Arizona’s dry summer heat at a “cooling center” provided by a local church when a team of outreach workers began conducting screenings using the Vulnerability Index-Service Prioritization and Decision Assistance Tool (VI-SPDAT). At the time, Sonia had been without a home for about three years.

  • Force multipliers in the fight against Veteran homelessness

    During the late night of Jan. 25, into the early morning of January 26, I participated in the Point-in-Time Count, an annual count on a single night of individuals in a community who are experiencing homelessness, led by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) local continuum of care. These one-night snapshot counts provide VA, HUD and communities with data they need to understand the number Veterans who are homeless so localized plans can be developed to address homelessness. As part of a small team, I headed out on foot with local volunteers to identify individuals, including Veterans, who were experiencing homelessness – unsheltered - on the streets of the City of Baltimore, Maryland.

  • Rapid rehousing helps San Diego Veteran get back on track

    In June, Jaramillo participated in a Vulnerability Index and Service Prioritization Decision Assistance Tool (VI-SPDAT) survey during a 25 Cities Street Outreach week. VI-SPDAT is one tool the San Diego community is using as part of its Coordinated Assessment and Housing Placement (CAHP) System. The following week he was assigned a Housing Navigator, who helped him understand the resources available to him and collect necessary documents for permanent housing. Soon after, he was matched to a Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) rapid rehousing program through Veterans Community Services, a division of Community Catalysts of California and a partner in the San Diego 25 Cities Effort. The Veterans Community Services SSVF program assisted Ben in finding and staying in permanent housing and provided him with financial assistance to help him pay his rent.

  • Combining forces to put an end to Veteran homelessness

    SOAR is a Substance Abuse and Metal Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) initiative that helps states increase access to mainstream benefits for people with disabilities who are experiencing homeless or at risk of homelessness. The SOAR initiative helps to improve access to SSI/SSDI among Veterans through training of case managers and providing technical assistance to states and communities. By using the SOAR model, SSVF grantees help connect eligible Veterans to SSA benefits, income which can lead to sustained housing for persons who had formerly experienced homelessness and can prevent evictions for disabled Veterans.

  • One Veterans perspective on homelessness, PTSD and VA’s H-PACT teams

    In 2000, I ran. I was still running away from the guilt, shame, and anger of what I went through in the war. Chronic homelessness and life on the streets became my new reality until I found out about the VA Leeward CBOC in 2013. Another homeless Veteran friend of mine saw me on the streets and said he had been getting help from the H-PACT team. He told me to go get help.

  • Counting every Veteran on the way to ending homelessness

    This week, I am joining volunteers across the country to […]

  • Veterans Matter helps their 500th homeless Veteran

    Veterans Matter, a Toledo, Ohio, based Veterans service organization was […]

  • Housing First: Veteran centered care helping to end Veteran homelessness

    When it comes to homeless programs, VA’s policy is “Housing […]

  • “Team AMVETS’ Welcome Home Program” helps the homeless

    By the end of 2014, Team AMVETS will have served over 1,500 Veterans and families. Through 2015, they will continue to work towards their goal of providing furnishings for every Veteran in California who receives housing vouchers through the HUD-VASH program. As these men and women begin to rebuild their lives, Team AMVETS is there, with many others, when help is needed most.