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Newsweek: Vets on the Street (Hundreds of Iraq/Afghan War)

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RamboLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-25-07 02:34 AM
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Newsweek: Vets on the Street (Hundreds of Iraq/Afghan War)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17315490/site/newsweek/from/RSS/

Kevin Felty came back from Iraq in 2003 with nowhere to stay, and not enough money to rent an apartment. He and his wife of four years moved in with his sister in Florida, but the couple quickly overstayed their welcome. Jobless and wrestling with what he later learned was posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Felty suddenly found himself scrambling to find a place for himself and his wife, who was six-months pregnant. They found their way to a shelter for homeless veterans, which supported his wife during her pregnancy and helped Felty get counseling and find a job. A year later, he's finally thinking his future. "I don't want to say this is exactly where I want to be—it's really not," he says. "But it's what I can get at the moment."

Young, alienated and often living on their own for the first time, Iraq and Afghanistan veterans increasingly are coming home to find that they don't have one. Already, nearly 200,000 veterans—many from the Vietnam War—sleep on the streets every night, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. But young warriors just back from the Mideast—estimated around 500 to 1,000—are beginning to struggle with homelessness too. Drinking or using drugs to cope with PTSD, they can lose their job and the support of family and friends, and start a downward spiral to the streets. Their tough military mentality can make them less likely to seek help. Advocates say it can take five to eight years for a veteran to exhaust their financial resources and housing options, so they expect the number to rise exponentially in a few years. "Rather than wait for the tsunami, we should be doing something now," says Cheryl Beversdorf, president of the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans.

The problem is mainly a lack of resources, advocates say. There are only about 15,000 beds available in VA-funded shelters or hospitals nationwide, and nearly every one is taken. In some smaller cities there simply aren't many places for a homeless veteran to go. And as affordable housing units shrink nationwide, veterans living on a disability check of, say, $700 a month, (which means a 50-percent disability rating from the VA), are hard-pressed to find a place to live. Most shelters require veterans to participate in a rehabilitation program, but a "fair amount" of veterans just go back to the streets once they leave, says Ed Quill, director of external affairs at Volunteers of America, the nonprofit housing group for veterans that helped Felty.

The VA says it's making a concerted effort to reach out to vets before they hit bottom, says Pete Dougherty, the VA's coordinator for homeless programs. Intake counselors are trained to ask questions, especially of newer veterans, to seek out mental health or other problems that could lead to homelessness. "We're much more sensitive than we were 40 years ago for signs of problems," he says. And they have expanded some services. Last week, the VA approved $24 million to boost aid for the homeless, which will allow them to add about 1,000 more beds and increase the number of grants to help the growing population of homeless women veterans and those with mental illnesses.
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Erika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-25-07 02:45 AM
Response to Original message
1. Freepers are saying these lazy bastards
Edited on Sun Feb-25-07 02:50 AM by Erika
deserve their fate. Using a war as an excuse for their laziness is inexcusable. Let these dredges rot. That's how the freepers think. Next step is billing these good for nothings to improve Walter Reed. It's about time these veteran freeloaders carry their own weight.
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nadinbrzezinski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-25-07 03:54 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Freeps will ROT in hell
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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-25-07 08:57 AM
Response to Original message
3. We're well on the way to another generation of lost souls.
IMO this story belongs on the Greatest, if not the Home page.

:kick: & first rec
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