Posted on Dec 17, 2015
Did you know that another city Philadelphia hits milestone in ending vet homelessness?
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Did you know that another city Philadelphia hits milestone in ending vet homelessness?
RP Members it looks like this challenge across American Cities is taking on a life of its own. Now we have Philadelphia, Houston, Mobile, Syracuse, Las Vegas, and New Orleans — as well as the entire state of Virginia.
The results have been dramatic: Since 2010, veteran homelessness has decreased by 36 percent, and we’ve housed nearly 230,000 veterans and their family members through government housing vouchers and homelessness programs.
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/thinktank/362701621.html
We all know that the vast majority of America’s veterans return home and go on to find good jobs, build strong families, and keep on serving our country in their workplaces, congregations, and communities. But we also know that today, in cities and towns across this nation, there are men and women who wore America’s uniform in wars as far back as Vietnam and Korea — and as recent as Iraq and Afghanistan — but don’t have a roof over their heads.
For too many years, the conventional wisdom has been that veterans’ homelessness is an impossible problem — too big and entrenched to ever really solve.
We disagree stated: First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden, as do our husbands. That’s why, in 2014, we launched the Mayors Challenge to End Veteran Homelessness, and since then, more than 800 city and county officials have committed to ending veteran homelessness in their communities. Here in Philadelphia, officials and advocates have worked for months to track down every homeless veteran in this city, get to know each of them by name, and collaborate with landlords to quickly find permanent housing for them. And today, Philadelphia has fulfilled its commitment, proudly announcing that this city has ended veteran homelessness and can quickly provide permanent housing for any veteran who becomes homeless in the future.
MAJ Jim Guthrie CPT (Join to see) MSG Kevin Burrill Sgt Mike Williams SFC (Join to see) SSgt (Join to see) TSgt Gil Mendez SGM David Simpson 1SG David Eastabrooks Jr CPT (Join to see) SSgt (Join to see) SPC Todd Ehringer LT (Join to see) SFC Juan Wilkerson, MIT,BIT LTC Donald Lee Hackle SSG Robert Bramlett PFC Michael Robert Lawrence LCDR Anthony Montague ] LTC (Join to see)
RP Members it looks like this challenge across American Cities is taking on a life of its own. Now we have Philadelphia, Houston, Mobile, Syracuse, Las Vegas, and New Orleans — as well as the entire state of Virginia.
The results have been dramatic: Since 2010, veteran homelessness has decreased by 36 percent, and we’ve housed nearly 230,000 veterans and their family members through government housing vouchers and homelessness programs.
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/thinktank/362701621.html
We all know that the vast majority of America’s veterans return home and go on to find good jobs, build strong families, and keep on serving our country in their workplaces, congregations, and communities. But we also know that today, in cities and towns across this nation, there are men and women who wore America’s uniform in wars as far back as Vietnam and Korea — and as recent as Iraq and Afghanistan — but don’t have a roof over their heads.
For too many years, the conventional wisdom has been that veterans’ homelessness is an impossible problem — too big and entrenched to ever really solve.
We disagree stated: First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden, as do our husbands. That’s why, in 2014, we launched the Mayors Challenge to End Veteran Homelessness, and since then, more than 800 city and county officials have committed to ending veteran homelessness in their communities. Here in Philadelphia, officials and advocates have worked for months to track down every homeless veteran in this city, get to know each of them by name, and collaborate with landlords to quickly find permanent housing for them. And today, Philadelphia has fulfilled its commitment, proudly announcing that this city has ended veteran homelessness and can quickly provide permanent housing for any veteran who becomes homeless in the future.
MAJ Jim Guthrie CPT (Join to see) MSG Kevin Burrill Sgt Mike Williams SFC (Join to see) SSgt (Join to see) TSgt Gil Mendez SGM David Simpson 1SG David Eastabrooks Jr CPT (Join to see) SSgt (Join to see) SPC Todd Ehringer LT (Join to see) SFC Juan Wilkerson, MIT,BIT LTC Donald Lee Hackle SSG Robert Bramlett PFC Michael Robert Lawrence LCDR Anthony Montague ] LTC (Join to see)
Edited 9 y ago
Posted 9 y ago
Responses: 8
Great news! All the help that can come together for Veterans is well deserved and definitely earned. Another city is Anchorage, Alaska. Along with the Red Cross, who attends to countless Veteran needs, they help homeless Vets by linking them up with HUD to get proper housing. Now that is a great example of agencies working together to help Vets, as I'm sure the other cities mentioned are doing as well.
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