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VA's
Homeless Providers Grant and Per Diem
Program
The Grant and Per Diem
program is offered annually (as funding permits) by the
VA to fund community-based agencies providing
transitional housing or service centers
for homeless Veterans. Under the Capital Grant
Component VA may fund up to 65% of the project for
the construction, acquisition, or renovation of
facilities or to purchase van(s) to provide outreach and
services to homeless Veterans. Per Diem is available to
grantees to help off-set operational
expenses. Non-Grant programs may
apply for Per Diem under a separate announcement, when
published in the Federal Register, announcing the
funding for “Per Diem Only.”
HUD-VASH
The
Department of Housing and Urban Development and
Department of Veterans Affairs Supported Housing
(HUD-VASH) Program provides permanent housing and
ongoing case management treatment services for homeless
Veterans who require these supports to live
independently. HUD has allocated over 20,000 “Housing
Choice” Section 8 vouchers to Public Housing Authorities
(PHAs) throughout the country for eligible homeless
Veterans. This program allows Veterans and their
families to live in Veteran-selected apartment units.
The vouchers are portable, allowing Veterans to live in
communities where VA case management services can be
provided. This program provides for our most vulnerable
Veterans, and is especially helpful to Veterans with
families, women Veterans, recently returning Veterans
and Veterans with disabilities. Evaluation of an
earlier, similar program demonstrated that most Veteran
participants remained permanently housed.
VA
Assistance to Stand
Downs VA programs and staff have
actively participated in each of the Stand Downs for
Homeless Veterans run by local coalitions in various
cities each year. In wartime Stand Downs, front line
troops are removed to a place of relative safety for
rest and needed assistance before returning to combat.
Similarly, peacetime Stand Downs give homeless Veterans
1-3 days of safety and security where they can obtain
food, shelter, clothing, and a range of other types of
assistance, including VA provided health care, benefits
certification, and linkages with other
programs.
Compensated Work
Therapy
In VA's
Compensated Work Therapy/Transitional Residence (CWT/TR)
Program, disadvantaged, at-risk, and homeless Veterans
live in CWT/TR community-based supervised group homes
while working for pay in VA's Compensated Work Therapy
Program (also known as Veterans Industries). Veterans in
the CWT/TR program work about 33 hours per week, with
approximate earnings of $732 per month, and pay an
average of $186 per month toward maintenance and up-keep
of the residence. The average length of stay is about
174 days. VA contracts with private industry and the
public sector for work done by these Veterans, who learn
new job skills, relearn successful work habits, and
regain a sense of self-esteem and
self-worth.
CHALENG The
Community Homelessness Assessment, Local Education, and
Networking Groups (CHALENG) for Veterans is a nationwide
initiative in which VA medical center and regional
office directors work with other federal, state, and
local agencies and nonprofit organizations to assess the
needs of homeless Veterans, develop action plans to meet
identified needs, and develop directories that contain
local community resources to be used by homeless
Veterans. As the role of women in the military
continues to expand, CHALENG seeks to better
understand the needs of women and families through
several measures. In 2008, women's health, child care,
family reunification, family counseling, and legal
assistance for child support issues were among
the measures assessed by 11,711 survey participants
(6,613 of whom are current or former homeless
Veterans).
More than 10,000 representatives from
non-VA organizations have participated in Project
CHALENG initiatives, which include holding conferences
at VA medical centers to raise awareness of the needs of
homeless Veterans, creating new partnerships in the
fight against homelessness, and developing new
strategies for future action.
DCHV
The Domiciliary
Care for Homeless Veterans (DCHV) Program provides
biopsychosocial treatment and rehabilitation to homeless
Veterans. The program provides residential treatment to
approximately 5,000 homeless Veterans with health
problems each year and the average length of stay in the
program is 4 months. The domiciliaries conduct outreach
and referral; vocational counseling and rehabilitation;
and post-discharge community
support.
Supported
Housing
Like the
HUD-VASH program identified above, staff in VA's
Supported Housing Program provides ongoing case
management services to homeless Veterans. Emphasis is
placed on helping Veterans find permanent housing and
providing clinical support needed to keep veterans in
permanent housing. Staff in these programs operate
without benefit of the specially dedicated Section 8
housing vouchers available in the HUD-VASH program but
are often successful in locating transitional or
permanent housing through local means, especially by
collaborating with Veterans Service
Organizations.
Drop-In
Centers
These programs provide a
daytime sanctuary where homeless Veterans can clean up,
wash their clothes, and participate in a variety of
therapeutic and rehabilitative activities. Linkages with
longer-term assistance are also
available.
VBA-VHA Special Outreach
and Benefits
Assistance
VHA has
provided specialized funding to support twelve Veterans
Benefits Counselors as members of HCMI and Homeless
Domiciliary Programs as authorized by Public Law
102-590. These specially funded staff provide dedicated
outreach, benefits counseling, referral, and additional
assistance to eligible Veterans applying for VA
benefits. This specially funded initiative complements
VBA's ongoing efforts to target homeless Veterans for
special attention. To reach more homeless Veterans,
designated homeless Veterans coordinators at VBA's 58
regional offices annually make over 4,700 visits to
homeless facilities and over 9,000 contacts with non-VA
agencies working with the homeless and provide over
24,000 homeless Veterans with benefits counseling and
referrals to other VA programs. These special outreach
efforts are assumed as part of ongoing duties and
responsibilities. VBA has also instituted new procedures
to reduce the processing times for homeless Veterans'
benefits claims.
VBA's
Acquired Property Sales for Homeless
Providers
This program makes all the
properties VA obtains through foreclosures on VA-insured
mortgages available for sale to homeless provider
organizations at a discount of 20 to 50 percent,
depending on time of the market.
VA
Excess Property for Homeless Veterans
Initiative
This
initiative provides for the distribution of federal
excess personal property, such as hats, parkas,
footwear, socks, sleeping bags, and other items to
homeless Veterans and homeless veteran programs. A
Compensated Work Therapy Program employing formerly
homeless Veterans has been established at the Medical
Center in Lyons, NJ to receive, warehouse, and ship
these goods to VA homeless programs across the
country.
Program Monitoring
and Evaluation
VA has built
program monitoring and evaluation into all of its
homeless Veterans' treatment initiatives and it serves
as an integral component of each program. Designed,
implemented, and maintained by the Northeast Program
Evaluation Center (NEPEC) at VAMC West Haven, CT, these
evaluation efforts provide important information about
the Veterans served and the therapeutic value and cost
effectiveness of the specialized programs. Information
from these evaluations also helps program managers
determine new directions to pursue in order to expand
and improve services to homeless
Veterans.
Sites
of Interest:
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