A New Generation of Homeless Veterans?
Published November 14, 2008 @ 07:32AM PT

We knew this was coming.
Today, one in four homeless people in America is a veteran. Untreated PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) is a known factor that could lead to homelessness and recent studies have proven there is a causal link between traumatic brain injury and homelessness.
So it shouldn't come as any surpirse that veterans from the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are becoming homeless. The San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday that California, like many other states, is seeing an increase in homeless veterans.
It's no wonder: after the constant stress and terror of living in a war zone, how can anyone return to life in America and function normally?
As the article illustrates, many veterans are not. Here are three examples from the SF Chronicle:
Ethan Kreutzer joined the Army at the age of 17 and fought with the 19th Airborne in Jalalabad, Afghanistan. When he retuned home, he had no money, no education and no civilian job experience. He soon became homeless. He slept in an alley off Haight Street, behind two trash cans.
June Moss drove from Kuwait to Iraq as an Army engineer in a truck convoy. When she returned to the United States, she lost her home, and drove her two young children from hotel to hotel across Northern California.
Sean McKeen, a hardy, broad-shouldered 21-year-old with a wide smile, went to Iraq to clear land mines, and to get money for college. When he returned home, he became homeless in less than a week. He found himself sleeping in a cot in a crowded homeless shelter in San Francisco.
Joel John Roberts, who blogs at LA's Homeless Blog, picked up on this story yesterday. He writes:
Although the Veterans Administration is trying hard to address mental health issues among veterans-they have hired 17,000 mental health workers-many are worried that when the 2 million active service members return home, they will overwhelm the system.
Many homeless advocates echo the sentiment.
Once again, the system to end homelessness needs a much more significant proactive approach to preventing homelessness.
As a colleague of mine told me yesterday, if our country doesn't recognize how today's current economic crisis is increasing homelessness, we may very well see homeless numbers dramatically spike like in the 1980s.
He makes a great point: could this be a repeat of the 1980s? If so, why haven't we learned from our past?
Why are we allowing history to repeat itself?
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Comments (3)
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I believe we are allowing it to become like the 80's is because, wait a minute, weren't there Republicans in the White House then too? There is the answer in a nutshell. Now I'm not saying all Republican's are built the same, but they do seem to have "interchangeable' parts! I believe the change that's coming to the White House is taken a long time coming.
Emily S.
Belgrade, MT.
Posted by emily shepard on 11/15/2008 @ 11:07AM PT
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The best way to eliminate homelessness especially for war
veterans is to stop our young people who are very vulnerable
from being recruited into the military in the first place. We
have spent billions of our tax dollars for war and weapons
and what do we have to show for it? Nothing but more
human misery and poverty. The billions of our tax dollars being
spent for war and weapons could be spent to educate our
young people to fight global warming by training them for
green jobs. Instead they are trained to kill, bomb and
create more human misery not only for them selves but
for millions of innocent civilians throughout the world. Until
we work to bring about change and set our priorities right
when it comes to creating peace in this world nothing will
change. We need a Pentagon for Peace ! Yes indeed history
does repeat itself. We as humans never learn the easy way!
Posted by pat dressler on 01/07/2009 @ 08:10PM PT
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Once the VA labels a veteran as "Mentally Ill" it's all downhill for the veteran. The VA's treatment model is : nasty jammed-packed shelters with no privacy, forced 12-step religious conversion, never-ending "How do you feel?" group therapy, handfuls of mind frying meds not even approved for animals, dead-end jobs sorting clothes at Goodwill or twisting crate-paper around a wire to make flowers to peddle for a buck. And after years of the VA's nonsense the suffering veteran gets a letter in the mail: CLAIM DENIED!
Posted by August Jones on 02/14/2009 @ 07:51AM PT
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