WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has made 80 new awards to public and private nonprofit organizations to support their efforts to assist homeless veterans.
“VA continues to play — and must play — a key role in providing health care to homeless veterans, through its own facilities and programs and through partnerships with community-based providers,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony J. Principi.
Currently, an estimated 6,000 veterans sleep each night in beds already funded under VA’s Homeless Providers Grants and Per Diem Program. Over 1,580 community-based beds, provided by public and private nonprofit organizations in 29 states and the District of Columbia, will be available with this new round of per diem awards.
“These are the men and women who served our nation during its greatest times of need and who now live without shelter or food or medical care,” Principi added. “They are our country’s forgotten heroes, who have every right to live the American dream.”
While there is no definite measure of the number of homeless veterans, it has been estimated that approximately 200,000 veterans may be homeless on any given night and twice as many veterans experience homelessness over the course of a year. It is estimated that one-third of the adult homeless male population and nearly one-quarter of all homeless adults have served in the armed forces.
“We want to take the lead in providing health care and benefits for homeless veterans,” said Pete Dougherty, who serves as VA’s homeless coordinator. “Throughout my travels I have seen firsthand programs that are helping in a meaningful way to reconstruct veterans’ lives and reunite families. It takes a network of partnerships to provide a full range of services.”
To combat veterans’ homelessness, VA initiated the Grants and Per Diem Program in 1994, and since then has provided more than $171 million in grants and per diem payments. More than 180 organizations applied this year for VA’s per diem funding.
VA has the largest integrated network of homeless assistance programs in the country and is the only federal agency that provides substantial one-on-one contact with the homeless. In many cities and rural areas, VA social workers and other clinicians conduct extensive outreach programs, clinical assessments, medical treatment, alcohol and drug abuse counseling and employment assistance.
For more information on VA’s homeless programs see http://www.va.gov/homeless/.
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VA’s Homeless Per-Diem-Only Grants |
(April 2004)
Alabama: | Birmingham — Aletheia House |
California | Bakersfield — California Veterans Assistance Foundation |
Colorado: | Denver — Colorado Coalition for the Homeless |
District of Columbia: | Washington — Diane’s House Ministries |
Florida | Gainesville — Volunteers of America of Florida, Inc. |
Georgia | Atlanta — United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta, Inc. |
Iowa | Clinton — Victory Center Ministries, Inc |
Illinois | Bloomington — Home Sweet Home Ministries, Inc. |
Indiana: | Indianapolis — Partners in Housing Development Corporation |
Kansas: | Leavenworth — Dwight D. Eisenhower Reveille Homes, Inc. |
Louisiana: | New Orleans — Resources for Human Development, Inc |
Massachusetts: | New Bedford — Southeastern Massachusetts Veterans Housing Program |
Maryland: | Baltimore — Maryland Center for Veterans Education and Training, Inc |
Michigan: | Ann Arbor — Salvation Army of Washtenaw County |
Minnesota: | Minneapolis & Columbia Heights — Salvation Army Northern Division |
Mississippi | Hattiesburg — Pine Belt Mental Healthcare Resources |
Montana: | Kalispell — Samaritan House, Inc. |
Nevada: | Reno — Sierra Recovery Center |
North Carolina: | Asheville — Asheville Buncombe Community Christian Ministry, Inc |
New Jersey : | Plainfield & Fords – – Middlesex County Economic Opportunities Corp. |
New Mexico: | Albuquerque — Albuquerque Mental Health Housing Coalition, Inc. |
New York: | Albany — Albany Housing Coalition, Inc. |
Ohio: | Cincinnati — Joseph House, Inc. |
Oregon: | Ashland & Medford — Interfaith Care Community of Jackson County |
Pennsylvania: | Bethlehem — Victory House of Lehigh Valley |
South Carolina: | Charleston — Crisis Ministries |
South Dakaota: | Rapid City — Cornerstone Rescue Mission |
Tennessee: | Nashville — Campus for Human Development |
Texas: | Dallas — Salvation Army, A Georgia Corporation |
Utah: | Ogden — Homeless Veterans Fellowship |
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Reporters and media outlets with questions or comments should contact the Office of Media Relations at vapublicaffairs@va.gov
Veterans with questions about their health care and benefits (including GI Bill). Questions, updates and documents can be submitted online.
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