U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

09/24/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 09/24/2024 12:33

A beginner’s guide to Veteran homelessness

The Ending Veteran Homelessness podcast created a mini-series to introduce the basic facts on Veteran homelessness and how VA is working to solve it.

Expert guests from throughout VA's homeless programs join us to:

  • Provide a high-level overview, including the definition of homelessness, factors that increase the risk of becoming homeless and progress to date in part one.
  • Give information about the Veterans we serve, their demographic trends and which subpopulations may need particular attention, in the second installment.
  • Review all of VA's homeless programs and services to wrap up the series.

Part 1: Defining homelessness

We kicked off the series by diving into the definition of homelessness under the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act of 2009. A Veteran is considered homeless if:

  1. They lack a fixed nighttime residence and are living in emergency shelters, transitional housing, or places not meant for habitation.
  2. They or their family will lose their primary nighttime residence within 14 days.
  3. They're an unaccompanied youth under 25 or a family with children who are couch surfing and moving frequently.
  4. They're fleeing domestic violence or another life-threatening situation.

Listen to the episode and download the accompanying PDF guide.

Part 2: Individualizing services

Understanding the demographics of Veterans facing homelessness allows us to tailor our programs and provide services in an equitable, culturally competent way.

The second part of the mini-series focuses on demographic considerations, including:

  • Race. Our racial equity data is helping us to ensure that we're effectively serving all Veteran subpopulations.
  • Age. Veterans facing homelessness are older than ever before, with the number of homeless Veterans over 65 growing by 71% in the last 5 years.
  • Gender. The decline in homelessness among women Veterans is not keeping pace with the overall decline in Veteran homelessness.
  • Gender identity and sexual orientation. LGBTQ+ Veterans are also more likely to experience homelessness.
  • Geography. While most homeless Veterans are concentrated in urban areas, we need to make sure that resources are available to the 20% of homeless Veterans in rural areas.

Listen to the second episode of our mini-series.

Part 3: How we can help

The final part of the mini-series was a special guest bonanza with 12 experts dropping in to speak about the approach VA is taking to end Veteran homelessness and the various services we can provide.

The coordinated entry system goes hand-in-hand with One Team, explained Molly Batschelet, national program coordinator for coordinated entry systems integration.

"Coordinated entry eliminates the need for somebody to go from agency to agency to sign up for services. Instead, you can go to any agency that uses coordinated entry and get connected to every agency that uses it at the same time," she shared.

The remainder of the guests reviewed the various interventions that are available to help Veterans in need:

Listen to the podcast and download the episode'sPDF guide.

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