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Help Veterans Get Back On Their Feet
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Sponsor: The Veterans Site
Demand an increase in funding for the HUD VASH program and help our veterans still on the streets!
On any night in the United States, more than 40,000 veterans are homeless1.
Those veterans account for 11% of all homeless adults in the US. A joint study between Yale University and the VA Connecticut Health Care System in 2015 found that veterans have a higher risk of going homeless than non-veterans, and there are many reasons for that disparity2.
Veterans must navigate the lack of affordable housing and economic hardship like everyone else, but also face challenges brought on by multiple and extended deployments, all which can threaten housing stability3.
Social isolation and lack of support are strongly related to increases in the risk of vets going homeless. Veterans have low marriage and high divorce rates; 1 out of 5 live alone. Without proper social support after discharge, the risk of going homeless is extremely high among vets4.
Often making matters difficult, more than half of veterans experiencing sheltered homelessness have a disability5, as well. VA data maintains that at least a quarter of homeless veterans received diagnoses of chronic medical conditions, more than one in four received a diagnosis of depression, one in eight received a diagnosis of PTSD, about one in five received a diagnosis of alcohol abuse, and about one in five received a diagnosis of drug abuse6.
Veterans returning from deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq are still coming home with greater rates of traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder, both of which correlate with homelessness3.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and VA Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program combines HUD housing vouchers with VA services to help homeless veterans and their families find permanent housing. VA case managers work to connect veterans with support services such as health care, mental health treatment and substance use counseling to help them in their recovery process and with their ability to maintain housing in the community. Among VA homeless continuum of care programs, HUD-VASH enrolls the largest number and largest percentage of veterans who have experienced long-term or repeated homelessness. At the end of FY 2019, there were 90,749 Veterans with active HUD-VASH vouchers and 83,684 vouchers in use7.
The HUD-VASH program was designed to address the needs of the most vulnerable homeless veterans and Congress has appropriated funding for new HUD-VASH vouchers every year since 2008, but the amount has decreased by $35 million in that time8. Sign the petition below and demand an increase in funding for the HUD-VASH program and give all our homeless veterans the support they need.