Veterans Matter Program, VA Announce Milestone Of Helping 1,500 Homeless Veterans Secure Stable Housing

In providing these security deposits, Veterans Matter removes a major barrier to securing stable housing for homeless Veterans.

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department Veterans Affairs (VA) and Veterans Matter — a program that provides security deposits to homeless Veterans in 14 states and the District of Columbia — today announced that, through their joint efforts, they have helped 1,500 Veterans exit homelessness and move into permanent housing.

Veterans Matter, supported by John Mellencamp, Dusty Hill, Katy Perry, Kid Rock and many others in the entertainment industry, was established in 2012 by the Toledo, Ohio-based nonprofit 1Matters.org, and focuses exclusively on providing security deposits to homeless Veterans who qualify for rental subsidies from the joint U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development-VA Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program.

In providing these security deposits, Veterans Matter removes a major barrier to securing stable housing for homeless Veterans.

“VA can’t end Veteran homelessness alone,” said Anthony Love, senior adviser and director of community engagement for the Veterans Health Administration Homeless Programs Office. “Partnerships with innovative, community-oriented groups, such as Veterans Matter, have played a major role in the decline in Veteran homelessness in recent years.”

“In collaboration with VA, we are able to make a greater impact for homeless Veterans than we could on our own,” said Ken Leslie, who founded Veterans Matter and was once homeless himself.

Once Veterans are housed through the HUD-VASH program, VA case managers can connect them to other supportive services — such as employment assistance, health care, mental health treatment and substance use counseling — to help them recover and improve their ability to stay housed.

Based on data released by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in 2016, since 2010, there has been an estimated 47 percent reduction in homelessness among Veterans across the country.

Further, HUD said, between 2015 and 2016 alone, the number of homeless Veterans decreased by 17 percent.

In addition, of all VA homeless programs that assist Veterans, HUD-VASH assists the largest number of Veterans who have experienced long-term or repeated homelessness. And of those Veterans in the program, 91 percent remain housed.

The program has allocated more than 88,000 housing vouchers nationwide to date.


 

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2 Comments

  1. Being a veteran myself, HUD-VASH does not help all homeless veterans. I know first hand because I’ve been denied assistance from HUD-VASH many times over. A lot of homeless veterans are still being neglected,

  2. If you do not receive help from the VA VASH program there are other agencies that can help.The VA is not an answer all or problem solver for everything. You may want to look into non profits such as volunteers of America which have transitional housing programs which can help you until you can get yourself on your feet and provided you follow their program. You must learn to advocate for yourself.I became homeless after losing a job shortly after discharging. It was then that I decided to take charge of what will happen to me and learn what services are out there. I have not been homeless since.

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