12 Percent of all Sheltered Homeless Adults are Veterans
July 11, 2009 by John Allen · 3 Comments
HUD Releases 4th Annual Homeless Assessment Report
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has issued its 2008 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress, a national study that explores changes in homelessness nationwide. HUD’s assessment concludes that while overall homelessness in America held fairly steady from 2007 to 2008, the number of homeless families, particularly those living in suburban and rural areas, increased.
In addition to the annual report, HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan announced that HUD will, for the first time ever, begin measuring homelessness on a quarterly basis to gain a better understanding of the impact of the current economic crisis on homelessness. The first "Homeless Pulse Project" for the first quarter of 2009 is now available.
"The annual report tells us a great deal but it also begs many questions about how today’s housing crisis and job losses are playing out in our shelters and on our streets," said Secretary Donovan. "The Administration’s aggressive approach to economic recovery recognizes that during these difficult times, families in certain areas of the country are at extreme risk of falling into homelessness. With our new Quarterly Homeless Pulse Report, we will be able to better understand the impact of the current economic crisis on homelessness across the country."
According to the 2008 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, between 2007 and 2008, the number of sheltered homeless individuals remained virtually the same while the number of homeless families seeking shelter increased by nine percent overall, and by nearly 56 percent in suburban and rural areas.
HUD measures homelessness through the Annual Homeless Assessment Report in two ways:
- Point-In-Time ‘Snapshots’ – these data account for sheltered and unsheltered homeless persons on a single night, usually at the end of January. Comparing point-in-time counts over time can reveal important trends about the seasonality of homelessness (see summary of findings).
- Homeless Management Information Systems – these data provide more detailed information on persons who access a shelter over the course of a full year. In the 2008 AHAR, 222 local communities contributed HMIS data to produce national estimates of sheltered homeless. HUD estimates that approximately 1.6 million persons experienced homelessness and found shelter between October 1, 2007 and September 30, 2008.
The changing patterns of homelessness between 2007 and 2008 also provide potential indicators of how the economic crisis may be affecting homelessness in America. For example, many more sheltered homeless persons are coming from housed living arrangements just prior to entering the shelter system and most of these persons appear to be wearing out their welcome with family and friends. The report also demonstrates that many more people are coming from stable living arrangements, or places where they lived for one year or more.
HUD’s year-long sample of HMIS data found the following characteristics of all sheltered homeless persons (see p. 25):
- Veteran Status – 12 percent of all sheltered homeless adults are veterans.
- Geographic – 68 percent are in principal cities – 32 percent are in suburban and rural areas.
- Household Type – 68 percent are individuals – 32 percent are persons in families with children.
- Race – 62 percent are members of minorities.
- Gender – 64 percent of all sheltered homeless adults are men and 36 percent are women.
- Age – 40 percent of all homeless individuals are 31-to-50 years old.



























As a Case Manager for the United States Veterans Initiative in Long Beach Calif. I am noticing a few trends of my own. The homeless Vets that are now coming to us for housing and employment are of the Vietnam era and due to their age have lost their jobs, their families, their homes, and their self esteem. We are the last hope for the hopeless. When they come to us they tend to succeed (95% success rate) and seem not to ever leave which has caused us to open more programs and build more long term housing so the program can continue to help those still on the streets. In Los Angeles county it is so bad that one in four homeless individuals served honorably in the military so we have an outreach team for each site going to where we know the homeless go for services to intice them into a new life by allowing us to help them. We (with the help of Boeing) have opened a new building on our 23 acre site where we concentrate on the needs of just the Iraq and Afghanistan vets coming home. We opened the doors to the program two months ago and it is full already! If this trend continues I see a Tidal wave of recently discharged Veterans in need of assistance and placing even more of a drain on the already problematic issue of housing our Nations Heroes. The CDVA has stepped up to the plate and is now building 3 new sites to house the older Vets with SSI, NSC Pensions /and S/C comphensation checks which will do much to ease the overburdened program in Calif. I hope the rest of the Nation can do the same for our Vets in their individual states. We have 11 sites across the Nation and are one of the leaders in helping Veterans, but there are a lot of great new programs out there doing the same job in different locations. To all of you I wish you well and keep up the fight for those who fought for us. To our Congress, Senators, and new President Please do not forget that without those men and women swearing to give their lives if needed, we would be a different country all together.
Dear Vethelper,
I am touched and moved by your expression of outreach for veterans around the country; I too, am inspired to do more for veterans in my home state of North Carolina. I would am interested in contacting you and learning more about your program–you can contact me by email at 23psalm@excite.com.
The world aint all sunshine and rainbows. Its a very rough mean place. And no matter how tough you think you are it will always bring you to your knees and keep you there. Permanently. If you let it.
You or nobody aint ever gonna hit as hard as life.
But it aint about how hard you hit. Its about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.
How much you can take. And keep movin.
Forward..
If you know what your worth, go out and get what your worth.
But you gotta be willing to take the hit.