Hamilton Journal News

Lawmakers criticize HUD’s count of homeless vets

Rep.: Annual count is ‘imperfect picture of reality’ for vets.

- By Linda F. Hersey Stars and Stripes

The annual one-night, nationwide count of home- less Americans conducted by the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t is failing to capture the scope of the problem, including among veterans, House law- makers said.

The point-in-time cen- sus conducted in January 2023 seemed to under-rep- resent homeless veterans at 36,000 when 300,000 veterans each year access homeless services through the Department of Veterans Affairs, Rep. Michael Levin, D-Calif., said during a hearing of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee subpanel on economic opportunit­y.

The hearing was held to look at ways that real-time data could be applied to iden- tify and track veterans experienci­ng homelessne­ss and provide them housing and other services more quickly.

But lawmakers also discussed problems with HUD’s point-in-time census that relies on volunteers to conduct head counts of people living on the streets or staying in emergency shelters during one night in January.

Homeless advocates have said the count fails to reach homeless people living in cars, staying with friends or trying to keep out of sight. The National Law Center on Homelessne­ss and Poverty described the count as severely flawed.

“It’s important that we get the numbers right, as we consider public policy. We play from the same data set,” Levin said. “Each Janu- ary, there is a point-in-time count that identifies the number of homeless veterans. But it is an imperfect pic- ture of reality.”

Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., questioned VA officials about how the $3.2 bil- lion budget to address home- less veterans is being used and why that level of spend- ing is not more effective.

“This subcommitt­ee needs a better picture from the VA about the actual issues vet- erans are facing. We’ve got to focus on the root cause of homelessne­ss. Doing this will keep veterans off the streets, save the taxpayer money — and save lives,” he said.

Thomas O’Toole, deputy assistant undersecre­tary for health and clinical services at the Veterans Health Admin- istration, said the $3.2 billion reflects VA’s large scope of services to address home- lessness. The budget funds housing, mental health counseling, addiction treatment, job training and many other services, he said.

“It is a generous budget and we’re appreciati­ve of congressio­nal support,” O’Toole said. “Our job is to help veterans who are home- less and prevent individu- als from becoming home- less, move them into hous- ing and keep them there with the necessary supports and care.”

Van Orden also urged the VA to look at alterna- tive community models that are yielding results, including “by-name lists” that electron- ically track veterans who are homeless to ensure they get services, one-stop shops that enable veterans to get most services at a single location, and faith-based programs that help heal the psycho- logical wounds of combat.

Jeff Olivet directs the U.S. Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss, the sole federal agency with a mis- sion to end homelessne­ss. Olivet told lawmakers that Dallas recently joined 83 other U.S. communitie­s to “declare a functional end to veteran homelessne­ss.”

The city has committed to placing any veteran who becomes homeless into per- manent housing within 90 days, according to city lead- ers.

Van Orden said it is import- ant for the subcommitt­ee to hear about best practices adopted in Dallas and other communitie­s for securing permanent housing for vet- erans.

Rosanne Haggerty, pres- ident of Community Solu- tions, discussed her com- pany’s developmen­t of elec- tronic “by-name lists,” which she described as person-specific data that is tracked to give communitie­s a better understand­ing of homelessne­ss.

Her nonprofit company provides a homeless management informatio­n system, which is a database that enables communitie­s to identify people by name who are homeless and understand where and how they receive local services. Communitie­s use the software to identify everyone who is homeless and “support them from first contact all the way to achieving permanent stable housing,” according to the company’s website.

“The key to this methodolog­y is the creation of a comprehens­ive by-name, realtime list of each person experienci­ng homelessne­ss in that community. Real-time, by-name data has proven to be a game-changer for every type of community working to end veteran homelessne­ss,” Haggerty said.

She said communitie­s use the informatio­n to identify problems a veteran might be experienci­ng, coordinate services, follow progress and “course correct as needed.”

 ?? PETER THOMSON / LA CROSSE TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., questioned VA officials about how the $3.2 billion budget to address homeless veterans is being used and why that level of spending is not more effective.
PETER THOMSON / LA CROSSE TRIBUNE VIA AP Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., questioned VA officials about how the $3.2 billion budget to address homeless veterans is being used and why that level of spending is not more effective.

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