CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — The Corpus Christi Stand Down, took place on November 2, 2018, in downtown Corpus Christi, and for the third year in a row members of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and several community organizations were once again there to lend a hand to Veterans in need of a helping hand.
“Events like the Stand Down serve as a testament of the caring spirit of the Corpus Christi community,” said Carrie Myers, Homeless Veterans Program manager for VA Texas Valley Coastal Bend Health Care System (VCB). “All these different organizations and people would not be here today if that wasn’t so. We all play a role in helping our Homeless Veterans get a hand up, not a hand out.”
Myers was one of more than a dozen representatives from the VA to take part in the outreach event designed to help homeless Veterans.
Approximately 200 people attended the three-hour long event. Twenty-seven out of the approximately 70 Veterans who registered were categorized as homeless Veterans.
According to Myers, the Stand Down provided a great opportunity for the 27 homeless Veterans to be screened by the VA Homeless Veterans Program team.
In addition to warm a plate of food, these Veterans were then connected with resources to assist them with obtaining housing, medical care, haircuts, employment, VA benefits, substance abuse services, mental health services, temporary shelter placements, and Veteran peer assistance.
The VA offers a wide array of special programs and initiatives specifically designed to help homeless Veterans live as self-sufficiently and independently as possible.
In fact, the VA is the only U.S. federal agency that provides substantial hands-on assistance directly to homeless persons.
Although limited to Veterans and their dependents, VA’s major homeless-specific programs constitute the largest integrated network of homeless treatment and assistance services in the country.
For all information about programs and services for homeless Veterans, please go to http://www.va.gov/homeless/ and utilize the links to specific information.
[carousel ids=”53814, 53815, 53816, 53817, 53819, 53820″]Topics in this story
More Stories
During this International Fraud Awareness Week, VA aims to arm Veterans and their loved ones with the resources they need to protect themselves from common scams that target their benefits.
VA permanently housed 47,925 homeless Veterans in fiscal year 2024, exceeding its goals for the third year in a row.
An important part of financial planning is life insurance, which VA offers through a variety of whole life programs to Veterans, service members and their families.