State aims to end vet homelessness by 2014
By Holly Ramer - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Jun 28, 2010 14:52:33 EDT
CONCORD, N.H. — New Hampshire could eliminate homelessness among
veterans in four years with a plan that emphasizes moving beyond housing
to focus on other support services, according to report released
Monday.
The state created a committee last year to identify the
needs of homeless veterans and improve collaboration among the state
health and human services department, community groups and the two VA
medical centers that serve New Hampshire residents. The plan it released
Monday outlines nearly a dozen goals grouped in six categories, from
outreach and education to housing and employment.
Last year, 9
percent of those served by state and federally funded homeless
assistance programs in New Hampshire were veterans. Those programs
counted 428 veterans, but officials estimate another 200 didn’t seek
help. Nationally, veterans make up about 10 percent of the general
population but 15 percent of the homeless population.
The plan
released Monday recommends that besides helping veterans find permanent
housing, the state should put more effort into expanding services that
can help prevent them from becoming homeless. That includes medical and
mental health treatment, along with substance abuse treatment and other
support services. For example, the VA medical center in Manchester
doesn’t provide inpatient detoxification and relies on other programs in
the community or the medical center in White River Junction, Vt.
The
committee also recommends creating mental health and drug courts
specifically for veterans, as numerous states have done in recent years,
and expanding programs that help with job training and job searches.
The
number of homeless veterans in New Hampshire has declined in the last
several years, in large part through the success of transitional and
permanent housing programs that incorporate many of the committee’s
recommendations.
Harbor Homes, which provides affordable housing
and support to people living with long-term mental illness or
homelessness, recently opened Dalianis House in Nashua, which includes
40 transitional apartments for veterans. It opened a similar apartment
building with 20 apartments in 2007. In both places, residents can stay
for up to two years while they receive job training and any needed
mental health and substance abuse services.
Cynthia Andreola, a
spokeswoman for Harbor Homes, said the 2014 target date for ending
homelessness among veterans is ambitious but doable, given the success
she has seen in the Nashua area. The organization is in the early stages
of planning for similar apartments in Manchester, she said.
“The
reality is there are some programs out there, but because they’re not as
intensive, they’re a little bit of a Band-Aid solution,” she said. “But
when we see programs of this sort that provide the tools — not just the
housing, but the other supports they need to address whatever those
issues were that led them to homelessness — we definitely see success,”
she said.
However, those programs don’t help if veterans aren’t
aware of them. The committee said veterans often don’t know where to
turn for help, and the service providers themselves don’t always know
what else is out there.
“Because some providers are having
difficulty recognizing what resources might be available, we can assume
that veterans are having the same difficulty,” the committee said in
recommending that the state create a resource guide for both providers
and veterans.
In its report, the committee notes that its
recommendations come at a crucial time: The New Hampshire National Guard
and Reserves is preparing for its largest deployment in its history,
with more than 700 Army and Air National Guard personnel and 600
reservists to be deployed in the coming months.