Veterans and Homelessness
Libby Perl
Specialist in Housing Policy
November 13, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL34024


Veterans and Homelessness

Summary
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan brought renewed attention to the needs of veterans, including
the needs of homeless veterans. Researchers have found both male and female veterans to be
overrepresented in the homeless population, and, as the number of veterans increased due to these
conflicts, there was concern that the number of homeless veterans could rise commensurately.
The 2007-2009 recession and the subsequent slow economic recovery also raised concerns that
homelessness could increase among all groups, including veterans.
Congress has created numerous programs that serve homeless veterans specifically, almost all of
which are funded through the Veterans Health Administration of the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA). These programs provide health care and rehabilitation services for homeless
veterans (the Health Care for Homeless Veterans and Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans
programs), employment assistance (Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program—a Department of
Labor program—and Compensated Work Therapy program), and transitional housing (Grant and
Per Diem program) as well as supportive services (the Supportive Services for Veteran Families
program). The VA also works with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to
provide permanent supportive housing to homeless veterans through the HUD-VA Supported
Housing Program (HUD-VASH). In the HUD-VASH program, HUD funds rental assistance
through Section 8 vouchers while the VA provides supportive services. In addition, the VA and
HUD have collaborated on a homelessness prevention demonstration program.
Several issues regarding veterans and homelessness have become prominent, in part because of
the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. One issue is ending homelessness among veterans. In November
2009, the VA announced a plan to end homelessness within five years. Both the VA and HUD
have taken steps to increase housing and services for homeless veterans. Funding for VA
programs has increased in recent years (see Table 4), Congress has appropriated funds to increase
available units of permanent supportive housing through the HUD-VASH program (see Table 5),
and the number of veterans served in many programs has increased (see Table 6). Congress has
appropriated a total of $500 million to support initial funding of HUD-VASH vouchers in each
year from FY2008 through FY2014, enough to fund approximately 68,000 vouchers. Since the
VA announced its plan, the HUD and VA point-in-time estimates of the number of veterans
experiencing homelessness has fallen from 74,050 in 2009 to 49,933 in 2014 (see Table 1).
Another issue is the concern that veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan who are at risk of
homelessness may not receive the services they need. In addition, concerns have arisen about the
needs of female veterans, whose numbers are increasing. Women veterans face challenges that
could contribute to their risks of homelessness. They are more likely to have experienced sexual
trauma than women in the general population and are more likely than male veterans to be single
parents. Historically, few homeless programs for veterans have had the facilities to provide
separate accommodations for women and women with children. In recent years, Congress and the
VA have made changes to some programs in an attempt to address the needs of female veterans,
including funding set asides and efforts to expand services.

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Contents
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Overview of Veterans and Homelessness ........................................................................................ 1
Definition of “Homeless Veteran” ............................................................................................. 2
Estimates of the Number of Homeless Veterans ........................................................................ 4
Demographic Characteristics of Homeless Veterans ................................................................. 8
Overrepresentation of Veterans in the Homeless Population ......................................................... 10
Overrepresentation of Male Veterans ................................................................................ 11
Overrepresentation of Female Veterans ............................................................................ 12
Why Are Veterans Overrepresented in the Homeless Population? .......................................... 14
Risk Factors Based on Data Collected in 2005-2006 ........................................................ 15
Risk Factors Based on Data Collected in 1984-1988 ........................................................ 16
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)............................................................................ 17
Federal Programs that Serve Homeless Veterans ........................................................................... 18
The Department of Veterans Affairs ........................................................................................ 19
Health Care for Homeless Veterans ................................................................................... 19
Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans .......................................................................... 20
Compensated Work Therapy/Transitional Residence Program ......................................... 20
Grant and Per Diem Program ............................................................................................ 21
Supportive Services for Veteran Families ......................................................................... 24
Dental Care for Homeless Veterans ................................................................................... 24
Enhanced Use Leases ........................................................................................................ 25
Acquired Property Sales for Homeless Veterans ............................................................... 25
VA and HUD Collaborations ................................................................................................... 26
HUD-VASH ...................................................................................................................... 26
Demonstration Program to Prevent Homelessness Among Veterans ................................ 28
The Department of Labor ........................................................................................................ 30
Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program (HVRP) ......................................................... 30
Funding for Homeless Veterans Programs ..................................................................................... 32
Issues Regarding Veterans and Homelessness ............................................................................... 35
The VA Plan to End Veteran Homelessness ............................................................................. 35
Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan .......................................................................... 37
Women Veterans ...................................................................................................................... 38

Tables
Table 1. HUD Estimates of Homeless Veterans, 2009-2014 ........................................................... 7
Table 2. Information About Sheltered Homeless Veterans in the HUD Annual Homeless
Assessment Report (AHAR) ........................................................................................................ 9
Table 3. Results from Five Studies: Veterans as a Percentage of the Homeless Population
and Likelihood of Experiencing Homelessness .......................................................................... 13
Table 4. Funding for Selected Homeless Veterans Programs, FY1988-FY2014 ........................... 32
Table 5. Funding for HUD-VASH ................................................................................................. 34
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Table 6. Veterans Served in Select VA Homeless Programs .......................................................... 37

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 41

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Introduction
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan brought renewed attention to the needs of veterans, including
the needs of homeless veterans. Homeless veterans initially came to the country’s attention in the
1970s and 1980s, when homelessness generally was becoming a more prevalent and noticeable
phenomenon. The first section of this report defines the term “homeless veteran,” discusses
attempts to estimate the number of veterans who are homeless, and presents the results of studies
regarding the demographic characteristics of homeless veterans as well as those surveyed as part
of HUD’s Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress.
At the same time that the number of homeless persons began to grow, it became clear through
various analyses of homeless individuals that homeless veterans were overrepresented in the
homeless population. The second section of this report summarizes research regarding the
overrepresentation of both male and female veterans, who have been found to be present in
greater percentages in the homeless population than their percentages in the general population.
This section also reviews research regarding possible explanations for why homeless veterans
have been overrepresented.
In response to the issue of homelessness among veterans, Congress has created numerous
programs to fund services, transitional housing, and permanent housing specifically for homeless
veterans. The third section of this report discusses these programs. The majority of programs are
funded through the Department of Veterans Affairs. Within the VA, the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA), which is responsible for the health care of veterans, operates all but one
of the programs for homeless veterans. The Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA), which is
responsible for compensation, pensions, educational assistance, home loan guarantees, and
insurance, operates the other. In addition, the Department of Labor (DOL) and the Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) operate programs for homeless veterans.
Several issues regarding homelessness among veterans have become prominent since the
beginning of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. The fourth section of this report discusses
three of these issues. The first is the VA’s plan to end homelessness among veterans. A second
issue is ensuring that an adequate transition process exists for returning veterans to assist them
with issues that might put them at risk of homelessness. Third is the concern that adequate
services might not exist to serve the needs of women veterans. This report will be updated when
new statistical information becomes available and to reflect programmatic changes.
Overview of Veterans and Homelessness
Homelessness has always existed in the United States, but only in recent decades has the issue
come to prominence. In the 1970s and 1980s, the number of homeless persons increased, as did
their visibility. Experts cite various causes for the increase in homelessness. These include the
demolition of single room occupancy dwellings in so-called “skid rows” where transient single
men lived, the decreased availability of affordable housing generally, the reduced need for
seasonal unskilled labor, the reduced likelihood that relatives will accommodate homeless family
members, the decreased value of public benefits, and changed admissions standards at mental
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hospitals.1 The increased visibility of homeless persons was due, in part, to the decriminalization
of actions such as public drunkenness, loitering, and vagrancy.2
Homelessness occurs among families with children and single individuals, in rural communities
as well as large urban cities, and for varying periods of time. Depending on circumstances,
periods of homelessness may vary from days to years. Researchers have created three categories
of homelessness based on the amount of time that individuals are homeless.3 First, transitionally
homeless people are those who have one short stay in a homeless shelter before returning to
permanent housing. In the second category, those who are episodically homeless frequently move
in and out of homelessness but do not remain homeless for long periods of time. Third,
chronically homeless individuals are those who are homeless continuously for a period of one
year or have at least four episodes of homelessness in three years. Chronically homeless
individuals often suffer from mental illness and/or substance use disorders. Although veterans
experience all types of homelessness, some evidence exists that they may be chronically homeless
in higher numbers than nonveterans.4
Homeless veterans began to come to the attention of the public at the same time that
homelessness generally was becoming more common. News accounts chronicled the plight of
veterans who had served their country but were living (and dying) on the street.5 The commonly
held notion that the military experience provides young people with job training, educational and
other benefits, as well as the maturity needed for a productive life, conflicted with the presence of
veterans among the homeless population.6
Definition of “Homeless Veteran”
In order to qualify for assistance under the homeless veteran programs governed by Title 38 of the
U.S. Code, veterans must meet the definition of “homeless veteran.” The term contains two layers
of definition.7 First, the definition of “veteran” for purposes of Title 38 benefits (the Title of the
United States Code that governs veterans benefits) is a person who “served in the active military,
naval, or air service, and who was discharged or released therefrom under conditions other than
dishonorable.”8 For a detailed discussion of the criteria required to receive veterans benefits, see

1 Peter H. Rossi, Down and Out in America: The Origins of Homelessness (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press,
1989), 181-194, 41. See, also, Martha Burt, Over the Edge: The Growth of Homelessness in the 1980s (New York:
Russell Sage Foundation, 1992), 31-126.
2 Down and Out in America, p. 34; Over the Edge, p. 123.
3 See Randall Kuhn and Dennis P. Culhane, “Applying Cluster Analysis to Test a Typology of Homelessness by
Pattern of Shelter Utilization: Results from the Analysis of Administrative Data,” American Journal of Community
Psychology
26, no. 2 (April 1998): 210-212.
4 For example, see U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Veteran Homelessness: A Supplemental
Report to the 2010 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress
, October 2011, p. 4,
https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2010AHARVeteransReport.pdf.
5 Marjorie J. Robertson, “Homeless Veterans, An Emerging Problem?” in The Homeless in Contemporary Society, ed.
Richard J. Bingham, Roy E. Green, and Sammis B. White (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1987), 66.
6 Ibid., pp. 64-65.
7 The United States Code defines the term as “a veteran who is homeless” as defined by the McKinney-Vento
Homeless Assistance Act. 38 U.S.C. §2002(1).
8 38 U.S.C. §101(2).
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CRS Report R42324, “Who is a Veteran?”—Basic Eligibility for Veterans’ Benefits, by Umar
Moulta-Ali.
Second, veterans are considered homeless if they meet the definition of “homeless individual”
codified as part of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (P.L. 100-77).9 Specifically, the
statute defining homeless veteran refers to Section 103(a) of McKinney-Vento. McKinney-Vento
lays out several ways in which someone may be considered homeless.
Literal Homelessness: An individual or family is homeless if they lack a fixed, regular, and
adequate nighttime residence, defined to mean:
• Having a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not
designed for, nor ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for
human beings. These may include a car, park, abandoned building, bus or train
station, or campground.
• Living in a supervised publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide
temporary living accommodations. These include transitional housing and hotels
or motel rooms paid for by charitable institutions or government entities.
• Exiting an institution (such as a jail or hospital) after a stay of 90 days or fewer,
and having resided in an emergency shelter or place not meant for human
habitation prior to entering the institution.
Imminent Loss of Housing: Individuals and families who meet all of the following criteria are
considered homeless:
• They will “imminently lose their housing,” whether it be their own housing,
housing they are sharing with others, or a hotel or motel not paid for by a
government entity. Imminent loss of housing is evidenced by an eviction notice
requiring an individual or family to leave their housing within 14 days; a lack of
resources that would allow an individual or family to remain in a hotel or motel
for more than 14 days; or credible evidence that an individual or family would
not be able to stay with another homeowner or renter for more than 14 days.
• They have no subsequent residence identified.
• They lack the resources or support networks needed to obtain other permanent
housing.
Other Federal Definitions: Unaccompanied youth and homeless families with children who are
defined as homeless under other federal statutes are considered homeless if they meet all of the
following criteria:
• They have experienced a long-term period (defined in regulation as 60 days10)
without living independently in permanent housing.

9 The definition of “homeless veteran” is at 39 U.S.C. §2002. The McKinney-Vento definition of homeless individual
is codified at 42 U.S.C. §11302(a).
10 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to
Housing: Defining “Homeless”,” 76 Federal Register 75996, December 5, 2011.
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• They have experienced instability as evidenced by frequent moves (two moves or
more during the 60-day period).
• They can be expected to continue in unstable housing due to factors such as
chronic disabilities, chronic physical health or mental health conditions,
substance addiction, histories of domestic violence or childhood abuse, the
presence of a child or youth with a disability, or multiple barriers to employment.
Domestic Violence: Note that the domestic violence provision of the McKinney-Vento definition
does not apply to VA programs. When the McKinney-Vento statute was amended in 2009, Section
103(b) was added to the law. The section includes as homeless anyone who is fleeing a situation
of domestic violence or some other life-threatening condition. The VA definition of homeless
veteran only refers to subsection 103(a) of McKinney-Vento. As a result, unless the reference to
“homeless veteran” in Title 38 is changed to include subsection (b), this part of the definition is
not part of the definition of homeless veteran. At least two bills in the 113th Congress, S. 287 and
H.R. 897, would update the definition of homeless veteran to include Section 103(b) of
McKinney-Vento.
Estimates of the Number of Homeless Veterans
The exact number of homeless veterans is unknown, although the methods used to estimate their
numbers have been improving in recent years. Through 2009, both the VA and HUD conducted
separate assessments of the number and percentage of homeless veterans over a period of years
(the VA beginning in 1998, and HUD in 2006). However, beginning in 2011, the two agencies
announced that they would coordinate their efforts to produce estimates.11 HUD produces two
types of estimates, with the VA collaborating on those involving veterans. The first is a point-in-
time count and the second is an estimate of the total number of people who experience
homelessness at some point during the year.
The point-in-time counts began in 2005, with HUD requiring local jurisdictions called
“Continuums of Care” (CoCs)12 to conduct a count of sheltered and unsheltered homeless persons
on one night during the last week of January every other year (though many CoCs conduct counts
every year). As part of these point-in-time counts, CoCs are to collect information about homeless
individuals, including veteran status. For the last six years, from 2009 through 2014, HUD has
released point-in-time counts of homeless veterans.13

11 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Guidance for Counting Veterans During 2011 Point-in-Time
Counts of Homeless People
, p. 2, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2011PITVetGuidance.pdf.
12 Continuums of Care are typically formed by cities, counties, or combinations of both. Representatives from local
government agencies and service provider organizations serve on CoC boards, which conduct the business of the CoC.
13 The 2009 and 2010 counts were published as part of HUD’s Veterans Supplements to the Annual Homeless
Assessment Reports to Congress. See U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs, Veteran Homelessness: A Supplemental Report to the 2009 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to
Congress
, January 2011, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2009AHARVeteransReport.pdf
(hereinafter 2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR) and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Veteran Homelessness: A Supplemental Report to the 2010 Annual Homeless
Assessment Report to Congress
, October 2011, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/
2010AHARVeteransReport.pdf (hereinafter 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR). The 2011 through 2014 point-in-
time counts are available at U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2011 Point-in-Time Estimates
of Homelessness: Supplement to the Annual Homeless Assessment Report
, December 2011,
https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/PIT-HIC_SupplementalAHARReport.pdf (hereinafter 2011 Point-
(continued...)
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The estimates of people who experience homelessness at some point during the year are released
as part of HUD’s Annual Homeless Assessment Reports (AHARs) to Congress. HUD uses a
sample of homelessness data from CoCs across the country to arrive at an estimate. HUD and the
VA have issued two Veteran-Specific AHARs to Congress, for 2009 and 2010, which contain
estimates of the number of veterans who experienced homelessness at any point during the year.14
The 2011 and 2012 AHARs contain separate sections with estimates of homeless veterans.15
Each of the estimates―point-in-time and full year―has caveats and limitations in what they
represent. These include differences in the time periods in which estimates are made, the living
situations of those who are considered homeless, and the method used to arrive at a number.
Point-in-Time Count:
Time Period: The point-in-time counts generally occur on one day during the
last week of January. Therefore the counts are a snapshot of the number of people
who are homeless on a given day, and they are not meant to represent the total
number of people who experience homelessness over the course of a year.
Living Situation: The point-in-time estimates are meant to capture all homeless
individuals and families who are unsheltered (living on the street or other place
not meant for human habitation), as well as those living in emergency shelters
and transitional housing. Note that until 2011, communities were not required to
count unsheltered individuals, although most communities did (approximately
84% conducted both a sheltered and unsheltered count in 2010).16 Beginning in
2011, all communities were required to count those living on the streets or other
places not meant for human habitation.17
Method of Arriving at a Number: In general, the point-in-time count is meant
to capture all individuals who are homeless and is not an estimate based on a
sample. However, HUD has adjusted the number to account for (1) cases where
beds for homeless veterans were missing from HUD’s inventory of service

(...continued)
in-Time Count); U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2012 Point-in-Time Estimates of
Homelessness: Volume I of the 2012 Annual Homeless Assessment Report
, November 2012,
https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2012AHAR_PITEstimates.pdf (hereinafter 2012 Point-in-Time
Count
); U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2013 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, Part 1
Point-in-Time Estimates of Homelessness
, November 2013, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/
AHAR-2013-Part1.pdf (hereinafter 2013 Point-in-Time Count); and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, The 2014 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress, PART 1 Point-in-Time Estimates of
Homelessness
, October 2014, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/AHAR-2014-Part1.pdf (hereinafter
2014 Point-in-Time Count).
14 2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR and 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR. See footnote 13 for full
citations.
15 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2011 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress,
Revised
, November 2012, p. 55, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2011AHAR_FinalReport.pdf
(hereinafter 2011 AHAR) and The 2012 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress, Volume II, September 2013,
p. 4-7, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2012-AHAR-Volume-2.pdf (hereinafter 2012 AHAR).
16 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2010 Annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress,
June 2011, p. 5, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2010HomelessAssessmentReport.pdf.
17 Guidance for Counting Veterans During 2011 Point-in-Time Counts of Homeless People, p. 2. See footnote 11 for
full citation.
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providers, (2) instances where data on sheltered veteran status were missing, (3)
instances where CoCs did not count sheltered veterans, and (4) instances of
missing data on unsheltered veterans or reports of zero unsheltered veterans.18
Estimate of the Number of People Homeless at Any Point During the Year:
Time Period: The second HUD estimate is an ongoing process to produce an
annual estimate of the number of people who are homeless, including homeless
veterans, through Homeless Management Information Systems (HMIS). As part
of the HMIS initiative, local jurisdictions collect and store information about
homeless individuals they serve, and the information is aggregated in computer
systems at the community level. The estimates based on HMIS data differ from
point-in-time estimates in that they are based on a full year’s worth of
information (rather than one day).
Living Situation: The estimates only include individuals who were residing in
emergency shelters or transitional housing during the relevant time periods (i.e.,
estimates do not include those persons living on the street or in similar places not
meant for human habitation).
Method of Arriving at a Number: The estimates are based on a sample of
communities (rather than an aggregation of all communities). Data may be
excluded for providers with low reporting rates, may be adjusted for missing
data, and finally, the data are weighted.19
Table 1, below, contains estimates of homeless veterans from 2009 through 2014. The first
columns of the table contain results of the annual point-in-time counts of homeless veterans and,
using that number, the percentage of homeless adults who are homeless veterans. The last
columns of the table contain the results of the HMIS estimates of homeless veterans from
FY2009 through FY2012 (as of the date of this report, estimates have not been released for
FY2013 or FY2014), as well as the percentage in the adult homeless population.

18 As part of the 2009 and 2010 point-in-time counts, HUD described the way in which it adjusted the data. See 2009
Veterans Supplement to the AHAR
, Appendix A and 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, Appendix A. The point-
in-time counts for FY2011 through FY2014 were not released as part of HUD’s Annual Homeless Assessment Reports,
and do not go into the same level of methodological detail, so it is unclear whether the same adjustments were made.
19 For more information, see U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2012 Annual Homeless
Assessment Report to Congress: Data Collection and Analysis Methodology
, October 2013,
https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2012-AHAR-Volume-2-Data-Collection-and-Analysis-
Methodology.pdf.
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Table 1. HUD Estimates of Homeless Veterans, 2009-2014

Point-in-Time Count
Full-Year Estimate
One-Day Count of Veterans
Living in Shelter, on the Street,
Estimate of Veterans Living in
or Other Place Not Meant for
Shelter at Some Point During

Human Habitation
the Fiscal Year
% of Adult
% of Adult
# of Homeless
Homeless
# of Homeless
Homeless
Year
Veteransa
Population
Veterans
Population
2009 74,050b 16%c 136,334d 10%c
2010 74,770e 16%f 144,842g 13%f
2011 65,645h 14%
141,449j
i
2012 60,769k 13%l 137,995m 12%l
2013 55,779n 12%
o o
2014 49,933p 11%
o o
Source: 2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR; 2011 Revised AHAR; 2012
AHAR, Volume II;
2011 Point-in-Time Count; 2012 Point-in-Time Count; 2013 Point-in-Time Count; and 2014 Point-in-
Time Count
. See footnote 13 and footnote 15 for complete citations.
a. The reported number of homeless veterans in the 2009-2013 point-in-time counts were revised in the
FY2014 point-in-time count. HUD reported that reductions reflect “an adjustment to the estimates of
unsheltered homeless veterans submitted by the Los Angeles City and County CoC” during those years,
and an increase in homeless veterans reported by the Phoenix/ Mesa/Maricopa County Regional CoC in
2013. See 2014 Point-in-Time Count, p. 40.
b. The number of homeless veterans originally reported in the 2009 point-in-time count was 75,609. Of the
75,609 homeless veterans counted in 2009, a reported 57% were sleeping in emergency shelter or
transitional housing and 43% were on the street or in other places not meant for human habitation. See
2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 5.
c. In both the 2009 point-in-time and ful -year estimates, veterans were overrepresented in the homeless
population. According to the point-in-time estimate, veterans represented 16% of the adult homeless
population (compared to 8% of the total adult population), and in the full-year estimate veterans were about
10% of the homeless population. See 2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 6.
d. The 2009 estimate is from the time period October 1, 2008, through September 30, 2009. The 95%
confidence interval is 78,765 to 193,901. See 2009 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 6.
e. The number of homeless veterans originally reported in the 2010 point-in-time count was 76,329. Of the
76,329 homeless veterans in the 2010 point-in-time count, a reported 57% were sleeping in emergency
shelter or transitional housing and 43% were on the street or in other places not meant for human
habitation. See 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 3.
f.
In both the 2010 point-in-time and ful -year estimates, veterans were overrepresented in the homeless
population. According to the point-in-time estimate, veterans represented 16% of the adult homeless
population (compared to 9.5% of the total adult population), and in the full-year estimate veterans were
about 13% of the adult homeless population. See 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 4.
g. The 2010 estimate is from the time period October 1, 2009, through September 30, 2010. The 95%
confidence interval is 111,476 to 178,208. See 2010 Veterans Supplement to the AHAR, p. 4.
h. The number of homeless veterans originally reported in the 2011 point-in-time count was 67,495. Of the
67,495 veterans who were homeless in the 2011 point-in-time count, an estimated 59% were living in
shelter and 41% on the street or other place not meant for human habitation. See 2011 Point-in-Time Count,
p. 6.
i.
The 2011 AHAR did not appear to include a figure for veterans as a percentage of the adult homeless
population in the full-year estimates.
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j.
The 2011 estimate is from the time period October 1, 2010, through September 30, 2011. The 95%
confidence interval is 110,320 to 172,578. See 2011 AHAR p. 55.
k. The number of homeless veterans originally reported in the 2012 point-in-time count was 62,619. Of the
62,619 homeless veterans counted in the 2012 point-in-time count, a reported 56% were sleeping in
emergency shelter or transitional housing and 44% were on the street or in other places not meant for
human habitation. See 2012 Point-in-Time Count, p. 15.
l.
In both the 2012 point-in-time and ful -year estimates, veterans were overrepresented in the homeless
population. According to the point-in-time estimate, veterans represented 13% of the adult homeless
population (compared to 12% of the total adult population), and in the ful -year estimate veterans were
about 13% of the adult homeless population. See 2012 AHAR, pp. 4-2 and 4-6.
m. The 2012 estimate is from the time period October 1, 2011, through September 1, 2012. The 95%
confidence interval is 115,288 to 160,702. See 2012 AHAR, p. 4-7.
n. The number of homeless veterans originally reported in the 2013 point-in-time count was 57,849. Of the
57,849 homeless veterans counted in the 2013 point-in-time count, a reported 60% were sleeping in
emergency shelter or transitional housing and 40% were on the street or in other places not meant for
human habitation. See 2013 Point-in-Time Count, p. 38.
o. As of the date of this report, HUD had not released full-year estimates for 2013 or 2014.
p. Of the 49,933 homeless veterans counted in the 2014 point-in-time count, 64% were reported to be
sleeping in emergency shelter or transitional housing and 36% were on the street or in other places not
meant for human habitation. See 2014 Point-in-Time Count, p. 40.
Demographic Characteristics of Homeless Veterans
Until recently, the best data available regarding the demographics of homeless veterans preceded
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. However, HUD and the VA, in the Veterans Supplements to the
Annual Homeless Assessment Reports to Congress, include demographic data about veterans
living in shelter (the data don’t include information about those living on the streets or other
places not meant for human habitation).20
The 2012 AHAR presented demographic information about veterans experiencing homelessness
who were living in shelter, and who were included in local Homeless Management Information
Systems (HMIS) efforts to learn more about those who are homeless.21 See Table 2.
Gender: Homeless veterans are predominantly men (92.2%), with women
making up 7.8% of homeless veterans. These percentages closely tracked the
overall percentages of men and women veterans (92.7% and 7.3% respectively).
Race and Ethnicity: African American veterans make up 35.5% of the homeless
veteran population, compared to 11.0% of all veterans.22 Hispanic veterans
represent 7.0% of homeless veterans compared to 5.6% of all veterans. Non-
Hispanic White veterans make up 52.0% of homeless veterans (compared to
80.3% of all veterans).

20 Until FY2012, the VA published comprehensive reports to Congress about veterans served in each program. More
recently, however, the VA has issued only one report summarizing these programs, the Congressionally Mandated
Annual Report on Specialized Programs Offering Assistance to Homeless Veterans
, and available data are limited. As a
result, information in this section of the report is not as detailed as it might have been in previous versions.
21 2012 AHAR, pp. 4-8 to 4-15.
22 The 2012 AHAR used American Community Survey data to arrive at total veterans.
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Age: While more than half of all veterans are age 62 and older (53.2%), veterans
in the 31-50 and 51-61 age groups have the greatest percentages of homelessness.
They represent 37.1% and 43.4% of the homeless veteran population,
respectively. Veterans between 18 and 30 make up 8.5%, and veterans age 62 and
older make up 11.1% of the homeless veteran population.
Table 2. Information About Sheltered Homeless Veterans in the HUD Annual
Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR)
(FY2012)
Homeless
Veterans in
Characteristic
Shelter All
Veterans
Gender
% Male
92.2
92.7
% Female
7.8
7.3
Age
% 18-30
8.5
5.4
% 31-50
37.1
21.7
% 51-61
43.4
19.7
% 62 and older
11.1
53.2
Racea
% White, Non-Hispanic
52.0
80.3
% African American
35.5
11.0
% Hispanic
7.0
5.6
% Other Race
4.1
3.2
% Multiple Races
3.5
1.6
Disability Statusb
% With a Disability
51.3
26.9
% Without a Disability
48.7
73.1
Living Arrangement Prior to Entering Shelter
% Already Homeless
48.3

% Own Housing
9.6

% Family or Friend
20.8

% Institutionalized
12.8

Substance Abuse
4.3

Treatment Center
Correctional Facility
3.3

Hospital 3.2

Psychiatric Facility
2.0

% Hotel/Motel
3.6

% Other
4.8

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Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, The 2012 Annual Homeless Assessment Report
(AHAR) to Congress
, September 2013, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2012-AHAR-Volume-
2.pdf.
a. Percentages do not sum to 100 because Hispanic status is reported separately and is included in one or
more racial categories. In addition, the AHAR included the category “white, Hispanic” which is not included
here.
b. Disability status is self-reported.
Overrepresentation of Veterans in the
Homeless Population

Until the advent of the Veterans Supplement to the Annual Homeless Assessment Report, research
that captures information about homeless veterans had not been conducted on a regular,
systematic basis. However, in addition to HUD’s ongoing efforts to collect information about
homeless individuals, the VA’s relatively new National Center for Homelessness Among Veterans
is conducting a variety of research studies. One of the studies released by the VA research center
builds on earlier research about whether veterans are overrepresented in the homeless population
using 2009 data from Homeless Management Information Systems (HMIS). This section
discusses previous studies regarding the overrepresentation of veterans in the homeless
population and the VA’s more recent findings.
There are several prominent homelessness surveys from which much of the data regarding
homeless veterans is drawn.
• Possibly the most comprehensive national data collection effort regarding
persons experiencing homelessness prior to HMIS took place in 1996 as part of
the National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients (NSHAPC),
when researchers interviewed thousands of homeless assistance providers and
homeless individuals across the country.23
• Prior to the NSHAPC, in 1987, researchers from the Urban Institute surveyed
nearly 2,000 homeless individuals and clients in large cities nationwide as part of
a national study.24 The data from the NSHAPC and Urban Institute surveys
served as the basis for more in-depth research regarding homeless veterans, but
did not include veterans of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
• In 2012, the VA released research using 2009 HMIS data from seven
communities, called “Continuums of Care,” which included veterans from the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.25

23 Martha R. Burt, Laudan Y. Aron et al., Homelessness: Programs and the People They Serve: Findings of the
National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients, Technical Report
, December 1999,
http://www.huduser.org/publications/homeless/homeless_tech.html.
24 Martha R. Burt and Barbara E. Cohen, America’s Homeless: Numbers, Characteristics, and Programs that Serve
Them
(Washington, DC: The Urban Institute Press, July 1989).
25 See Jamison Fargo, Stephen Metraux, and Thomas Byrne et al., “Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S.
Veterans,” Preventing Chronic Disease, vol. 9 (January 26, 2012), http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2012/11_0112.htm
(hereinafter Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans). In addition, preliminary information had
been made available on the National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans website, http://www.va.gov/
HOMELESS/docs/Center/Prevalence_Final.pdf.
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Results from a total of five studies using these and other data are presented here. The studies all
looked at veterans as a percentage of the general population compared to veterans as a percentage
of the homeless population and determined the likelihood of veterans to be homeless compared to
non-veterans. The data in each of the studies relied on samples of homeless individuals, and
adjustments were made for such factors as age and race.
In each of the studies, both male and female veterans were more likely to be homeless than their
nonveteran counterparts.26 This was not always the case, however. Although veterans have always
been present among the homeless population, the studies from the 1980s and 1990s found that
cohorts serving in the Vietnam27 and post-Vietnam eras were overrepresented while veterans of
World War II and Korea were less likely to be homeless than their nonveteran counterparts.28 The
VA study using 2009 HMIS data also found that Vietnam and post-Vietnam veterans were
overrepresented.
Overrepresentation of Male Veterans
Two earlier national studies—one published in 1994 using data from the 1987 Urban Institute
survey (as well as data from surveys in Los Angeles, Baltimore, and Chicago), and the other
published in 2001 using data from the 1996 NSHAPC—found that male veterans were
overrepresented in the homeless population. In addition, researchers in both studies determined
that the likelihood of homelessness depended on the ages of veterans.29 During both periods of
time, the odds of a veteran being homeless were highest for veterans who had enlisted after the
military transitioned to an all-volunteer force (AVF) in 1973. These veterans were age 20-34 at
the time of the first study, and age 35-44 at the time of the second study.
In the first study, researchers found that 41% of adult homeless men were veterans, compared to
just under 34% of adult males in the general population. Overall, male veterans were 1.4 times as
likely to be homeless as nonveterans.30 Notably, though, veterans who served after the Vietnam
War were four times more likely to be homeless than nonveterans in the same age group.31
Vietnam era veterans, who are often thought to be the most overrepresented group of homeless
veterans, were barely more likely to be homeless than nonveterans (1.01 times). (See Table 3 for
a breakdown of the likelihood of homelessness based on age.)
In the second study, researchers found that nearly 33% of adult homeless men were veterans,
compared to 28% of males in the general population. Once again, the likelihood of homelessness
differed among age groups. Overall, male veterans were 1.25 times more likely to be homeless

26 See Gail Gamache, Robert Rosenheck, and Richard Tessler, “The Proportion of Veterans Among Homeless Men: A
Decade Later,” Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 36, no. 10 (October 2001): 481 (hereinafter, “The
Proportion of Homeless Veterans Among Men: A Decade Later”). “Overrepresentation of Women Veterans Among
Homeless Women,” p. 1134; and Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans, Table 2.
27 Generally, the Vietnam era is defined as the period from 1964 to 1975. 38 U.S.C. §101(29)(B).
28 Alvin S. Mares and Robert A. Rosenheck, “Perceived Relationship Between Military Service and Homelessness
Among Homeless Veterans with Mental Illness,” The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 192, no. 10 (October
2004): 715.
29 See Robert Rosenheck, Linda Frisman, and An-Me Chung, “The Proportion of Veterans Among Homeless Men,”
American Journal of Public Health 84, no. 3 (March 1994): 466 (hereinafter, “The Proportion of Homeless Veterans
Among Men”); “The Proportion of Veterans Among Homeless Men: A Decade Later,” p. 481.
30 “The Proportion of Homeless Veterans Among Men,” p. 467.
31 Ibid.
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than nonveterans.32 However, the same post-Vietnam cohort as that in the 1994 study was most at
risk of homelessness; those veterans in the cohort were more than three times as likely to be
homeless as nonveterans in the same cohort. Younger veterans, those age 20-34 in 1996, were two
times as likely to be homeless as nonveterans. And Vietnam era veterans were approximately 1.4
times as likely to be homeless as their nonveteran counterparts. (See Table 3.)
The study produced by the VA using 2009 HMIS data from seven jurisdictions similarly found
higher rates of homelessness for male veterans than their presence in the general population
would indicate (13.6% of homeless adult men were veterans compared to 13.4% of the general
population), and that they were 1.3 times more likely to be homeless than males generally. In
addition, the study noted similar cohort effects to the earlier research. Veterans age 45-54, those
who served in the early years of the AVF, were generally at a higher risk of homelessness
compared to male veterans in other cohorts—African American veterans age 45-54 were 1.4
times more likely to be homeless, and non-Black veterans were 2.0 times as likely to be homeless
as their nonveteran counterparts.33 Table 3 contains results from the VA study, broken down by
age, race, and gender.
Overrepresentation of Female Veterans
As with male veterans, research has shown that women veterans are more likely to be homeless
than women who are not veterans. A study published in 2003 examined two data sources, one a
survey of mentally ill homeless women, and the other the NSHAPC, and found that 4.4% and
3.1% of homeless persons surveyed were female veterans, respectively (compared to
approximately 1.3% of the general population).34 Although the likelihood of homelessness was
different for each of the two surveyed populations, the study estimated that female veterans were
between two and four times as likely to be homeless as their nonveteran counterparts.35 Unlike
male veterans, all birth cohorts were more likely to be homeless than nonveterans. However, with
the exception of women veterans age 35-55 (representing the post-Vietnam era), who were
between approximately 3.5 and 4.0 times as likely to be homeless as nonveterans, cohort data
were not consistent between the two surveys. (See Table 3 for a breakdown of likelihood of
homelessness by cohort.)
The VA study that used 2009 HMIS data to determine the likelihood of homelessness among
veterans contains more detailed data on women veterans, including risk of homelessness broken
down by age and race (Black and non-Black). All women veterans, regardless of age or race, face
an increased risk of homelessness, according to the study. Overall, women veterans are 2.1 times
more likely to be homeless than their nonveteran counterparts.36 While women veterans of older
ages were more likely to be homeless than their age-group counterparts, researchers found that, in
general, younger women veterans, especially African American women, were more likely to be
homeless than older women veterans.37

32 “The Proportion of Homeless Veterans Among Men: A Decade Later,” p. 483.
33 Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans, Table 2.
34 “Overrepresentation of Women Veterans Among Homeless Women,” p. 1133.
35 Ibid., p. 1134.
36 Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans, Table 2.
37 Ibid., Discussion section.
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Table 3. Results from Five Studies: Veterans as a Percentage of the Homeless
Population and Likelihood of Experiencing Homelessness
Odds Ratio (Likelihood
Veterans as a
Veterans as a
of Homelessness
Percentage of the
Percentage of the
among Veterans vs.
Veteran Group
General Populationa
Homeless Population
Nonveterans)
Men (data 1986-1987)b 33.6 41.2 1.38
Age
20-34
10.0
30.6
3.95
Age
35-44
36.9
37.2
1.01
Age
45-54
44.8
58.7
1.75
Age
55-64
69.9
61.7
0.69

Age 65 and Older
46.3
37.4
0.71
Men (data 1996)c
28.0 32.7 1.25
Age
20-34
7.7
14.5
2.04
Age
35-44
13.8
33.7
3.17
Age
45-54
38.4
46.5
1.39
Age
55-64
48.7
45.8
0.89f

Age 65 and Older
62.6
59.5
0.88f
Non-Black Men (data 2009)g 13.6
13.4
1.3
Age
18-29
2.1
2.7
1.3
Age
30-44
5.9
7.6
1.3
Age
45-54
9.8
19.6
2.0
Age
55-64
27.6
30.6
1.1

Age 65 and Older
45.4
33.7
0.7
Black Men (data 2009)g 11.8 13.7 1.4
Age
18-29
1.9
3.8
2.0
Age
30-44
7.3
8.2
1.1
Age
45-54
14.7
21.0
1.4
Age
55-64
23.0
31.9
1.4

Age 65 and Older
33.2
32.3
1.0
Women (data 1994-1998)d 1.3
4.4
3.58
Age
20-34


3.61
Age
35-44


3.48
Age
45-54


4.42

Age 55 and Older


1.54f
Women (data 1996)e 1.2 3.1 2.71
Age
20-34


1.60f
Age
35-44


3.98
Age
45-54


2.00f
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Odds Ratio (Likelihood
Veterans as a
Veterans as a
of Homelessness
Percentage of the
Percentage of the
among Veterans vs.
Veteran Group
General Populationa
Homeless Population
Nonveterans)

Age 55 and Older


4.40
Non-Black Women (data 2009)g
0.9 1.6 2.1
Age
18-29
0.5
1.0
2.0
Age
30-44
0.8
1.3
1.6
Age
45-54
1.2
3.1
2.5
Age
55-64
1.0
3.1
3.1

Age 65 and Older
1.1
2.4
2.1
Black Women (data 2009)g
1.1 2.0 1.9
Age
18-29
0.6
1.0
1.7
Age
30-44
1.6
3.2
1.9
Age
45-54
1.7
2.7
1.6
Age
55-64
0.9
1.8
1.9

Age 65 and Older
0.6
1.4
2.6
Sources: Robert Rosenheck, Linda Frisman, and An-Me Chung, “The Proportion of Veterans Among Homeless
Men,” American Journal of Public Health 84, no. 3 (March 1994): 466-469; Gail Gamache, Robert Rosenheck, and
Richard Tessler, “The Proportion of Veterans Among Homeless Men: A Decade Later,” Social Psychiatry and
Psychiatric Epidemiology
36, no. 10 (October 2001): 481-485; Gail Gamache, Robert Rosenheck, and Richard
Tessler, “Overrepresentation of Women Veterans Among Homeless Women,” American Journal of Public Health
93, no. 7 (July 2003): 1132-1136; and Jamison Fargo, Stephen Metraux, and Thomas Byrne, et al., “Prevalence and
Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans,” Preventing Chronic Disease, vol. 9 (January 26, 2012),
http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2012/11_0112.htm.
a. Data are from the Current Population Survey.
b. Data are from the Urban Institute Study and three community surveys conducted between 1985 and 1987.
c. Data are from the National Survey of Homeless Assistance Providers and Clients (NSHAPC).
d. Data are from the Access to Community Care and Effective Services and Supports sample of women with
mental illness.
e. Data are from the NSHAPC.
f.
Not statistically significant.
g. Data are from the American Community Survey and from seven Continuums of Care: New York City; San
Jose/Santa Clara County, CA; Columbus/Franklin County, OH; Denver, CO; Tampa/Hillsborough County,
FL; Phoenix/Maricopa County, AZ; and Lansing/Ingham County, MI.
Why Are Veterans Overrepresented in the Homeless Population?
While data collection regarding the number and prevalence of veterans in the homeless
population has improved, information about why homeless veterans are more likely to be
homeless than nonveterans has been less investigated. The recent VA report about the risk and
prevalence of homelessness among veterans noted that
[t]he presence of additional risk for homelessness specifically associated with Veteran status
is puzzling in that it occurs among a population that shows better outcomes on almost all
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socioeconomic measures and that has exclusive access to an extensive system of benefits that
include comprehensive healthcare services, disability and pension assistance, and homeless
services. Explanations to account for this risk go beyond the basic demographic factors
explained here, and underscore the need for identifying other correlates of homelessness
among the Veteran population as the basis for prevention efforts.38
Until recently, most of the evidence about factors associated with homelessness among veterans
came from The National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study (NVVRS), conducted from 1984
to 1988, and did not include veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.39 However, in 2013
researchers from the VA released an examination of risk factors for homelessness among veterans
separated from service between July 1, 2005, and September 30, 2006.40
The first two subsections below discuss the findings from the 2005-2006 separation data and
NVVRS data. The third subsection specifically addresses Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
as a risk factor.
Risk Factors Based on Data Collected in 2005-2006
The VA examined outcomes of 310,685 veterans aged 17 to 64 who were separated from the
military in 2005 and 2006, did not have evidence of a homeless episode in Department of
Defense (DOD) or VA records, and who used DOD or VA services after separation. The sample
included those in the Reserves and National Guard who did not serve on active duty. In a five-
year period, 1.8% of veterans in the sample experienced a homeless episode (indicated either by
lack of stable housing or receiving homeless services from the VA).
Researchers broke down risk factors for homelessness by gender and whether veterans had served
as part of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF)
in Iraq. Following is a list of a number of factors that had a statistically significant relationship to
homelessness for at least one of the four groups (OEF/OIF male veterans, OEF/OIF female
veterans, non-OEF/OIF male veterans, and non-OEF/OIF female veterans).41
Military Pay Grade: There was a statistically significant relationship between
pay grade and risk of homelessness for all categories of veterans, male and
female with and without OEF/OIF service; those in the lowest pay grades were at
greater risk of homelessness than those in higher pay grades.

38 The quote appeared in preliminary VA research using the 2009 HMIS data. See Jamison Fargo, Stephen Metraux,
and Thomas Byrne, et al., Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans: A Multisite Investigation, U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs , August 2011, p. 24, http://www.va.gov/HOMELESS/docs/Center/
Prevalence_Final.pdf (hereinafter Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans: A Multisite
Investigation
).
39 The NVVRS was undertaken at the direction of Congress as part of P.L. 98-160, the Veterans Health Care
Amendments of 1983.
40 Stephen Metraux, Limin X. Clegg, and John D. Daigh et al., “Risk Factors for Becoming Homeless Among a Cohort
of Veterans Who Served in the Era of the Iraq and Afghanistan Conflicts,” American Journal of Public Health, vol.
103, no. S2 (December 2013), pp. S248-S254.
41 The study also reported statistically significant risks of homelessness based on character of service (e.g., honorable
discharge, etc.), branch of service, and age. The results in these categories were reported for multiple subcategories and
were not easily summarized. As a result, they are not reported here.
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Active Duty Service: OEF/OIF male and female veterans who were in the
Reserves or National Guard had a reduced risk of homelessness compared to
those who served on active duty.
Traumatic Brain Injury increased the risk of homelessness for male non-
OEF/OIF veterans.
Psychotic Disorders42 and Substance Use increased the risk of homelessness
for all four veteran categories.
Adjustment Disorders and Mood Disorders increased the risk of homelessness
for both categories of male veterans (those with and without OEF/OIF service)
and non-OEF/OIF female veterans.
Anxiety Disorders increased the risk of homelessness among non-OEF/OIF
male veterans, while Personality Disorders increased risk for male veterans in
both categories.
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder increased the risk of homelessness for male
and female OEF/OIF veterans.
Risk Factors Based on Data Collected in 1984-1988
Researchers for the NVVRS surveyed 1,600 Vietnam theater veterans (those serving in Vietnam,
Cambodia, or Laos) and 730 Vietnam era veterans (who did not serve in the theater) to determine
their mental health status and their ability to readjust to civilian life. The NVVRS did not
specifically analyze homelessness. However, a later study, published in 1994, used data from the
NVVRS to examine homelessness specifically.43 Findings from both studies are discussed below.
Factors Present During and After Military Service
The 1994 study of Vietnam era veterans (hereinafter referred to as the Rosenheck/Fontana study)
evaluated 18 variables that could be associated with homelessness. The study categorized each
variable in one of four groups according to when they occurred in the veteran’s life: pre-military,
military, the one-year readjustment period, and the post-military period subsequent to
readjustment.44 Variables from each time period were found to be associated with homelessness,

42 Behavioral health disorders, including psychotic disorders, substance use, adjustment disorders, mood disorders, and
anxiety disorders are based on definitions in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. For example,
psychotic disorders include Schizophrenia and psychosis, adjustment disorders involve response to a distressing event,
mood disorders include major depression and bipolar disorder, and anxiety disorders include generalized anxiety
disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder, among others.
43 Robert Rosenheck and Alan Fontana, “A Model of Homelessness Among Male Veterans of the Vietnam War
Generation,” The American Journal of Psychiatry 151, no. 3 (March 1994): 421-427 (hereinafter, “A Model of
Homelessness Among Male Veterans of the Vietnam War Generation”).
44 The first category consisted of nine factors: year of birth, belonging to a racial or ethnic minority, childhood poverty,
parental mental illness, experience of physical or sexual abuse prior to age 18, other trauma, treatment for mental
illness before age 18, placement in foster care before age 16, and history of conduct disorder. The military category
contained three factors: exposure to combat, participation in atrocities, and non-military trauma. The readjustment
period consisted of two variables: accessibility to someone with whom to discuss personal matters and the availability
of material and social support (together these two variables were termed low levels of social support). The final
category contained four factors: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), psychiatric disorders not including PTSD,
substance abuse, and unmarried status.
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although their effects varied. The two military factors—combat exposure and participation in
atrocities—did not have a direct relationship to homelessness. However, those two factors did
contribute to (1) low levels of social support upon returning home, (2) psychiatric disorders (not
including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)), (3) substance use disorders, and (4) being
unmarried (including separation and divorce). Each of these four post-military variables, in turn,
contributed directly to homelessness.45 In fact, social isolation, measured by low levels of support
in the first year after discharge from military service, together with the status of being unmarried,
had the strongest association with homelessness of the 18 factors examined in the study.46
Factors that Pre-date Military Service
According to the Rosenheck/Fontana study, factors that predate military service also play a role in
homelessness among veterans. It found that three variables present in the lives of veterans before
they joined the military had a significant direct relationship to homelessness. These were
exposure to physical or sexual abuse prior to age 18; exposure to other traumatic experiences,
such as experiencing a serious accident or natural disaster, or seeing someone killed; and
placement in foster care prior to age 16.47 The researchers also found that a history of conduct
disorder had a substantial indirect effect on homelessness.48 Conduct disorder includes behaviors
such as being suspended or expelled from school, involvement with law enforcement, or having
poor academic performance. Another pre-military variable that might contribute to homelessness
among veterans is a lack of family support prior to enlistment.49
The conditions present in the lives of veterans prior to military service, and the growth of
homelessness among veterans, have been tied to the institution of the all volunteer force (AVF) in
1973. As discussed earlier in this report, the overrepresentation of veterans in the homeless
population is most prevalent in the birth cohort that joined the military after the Vietnam War. It is
possible that higher rates of homelessness among these veterans are due to “lowered recruitment
standards during periods where military service was not held in high regard.”50 Individuals who
joined the military during the time after the implementation of the AVF might have been more
likely to have characteristics that are risk factors for homelessness.51
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Findings on the relationship between PTSD and homelessness depend on both the sample and
time period of service.

45 “A Model of Homelessness Among Male Veterans of the Vietnam War Generation,” p. 424.
46 Ibid., p. 425.
47 Ibid., p. 426.
48 Ibid.
49 Richard Tessler, Robert Rosenheck, and Gail Gamache, “Homeless Veterans of the All-Volunteer Force: A Social
Selection Perspective,” Armed Forces & Society 29, no. 4 (Summer 2003): 511 (hereinafter, “Homeless Veterans of the
All-Volunteer Force: A Social Selection Perspective”).
50 Testimony of Robert Rosenheck, M.D., Director of Northeast Program Evaluation Center, Department of Veterans
Affairs, Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess., February 23, 1994.
51 “Homeless Veterans of the All-Volunteer Force: A Social Selection Perspective,” p. 510.
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Among the group of veterans separated from the military in 2005 and 2006 who were included in
the VA analysis, post-traumatic stress disorder increased the risk of homelessness among male
and female veterans who served in OEF/OIF. However, there was not an increased risk among
veterans, male or female, who did not serve in OEF/OIF.
The Rosenheck/Fontana study “found no unique association between combat-related PTSD and
homelessness.”52 However, the NVVRS found that PTSD was significantly related to other
psychiatric disorders, substance abuse, problems in interpersonal relationships, and
unemployment.53 These conditions can lead to readjustment difficulties and are considered risk
factors for homelessness.54
Federal Programs that Serve Homeless Veterans
The federal response to the needs of homeless veterans, like the federal response to homelessness
generally, began in the late 1980s. Congress, aware of the data showing that veterans were
disproportionately represented among homeless persons,55 began to hold hearings and enact
legislation in the late 1980s. Among the programs enacted were Health Care for Homeless
Veterans, Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans, and the Homeless Veterans Reintegration
Program. Also around this time, the first national group dedicated to the cause of homeless
veterans, the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, was founded by service providers that
were concerned about the growing number of homeless veterans.
While homeless veterans are eligible for and receive services through programs that are not
designed specifically for homeless veterans, the VA funds multiple programs to serve homeless
veterans. The majority of homeless programs are run through the Veterans Health Administration
(VHA), which administers health care programs for veterans.56 The Veterans Benefits
Administration (VBA), which is responsible for compensation and pensions,57 education
assistance,58 home loan guarantees,59 and insurance, operates one program for homeless veterans.
In addition, the Department of Labor (DOL) is responsible for programs that provide employment
services for homeless veterans while the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
collaborates with the VA on two additional programs. Many of these programs are summarized in
this section.

52 “A Model of Homelessness Among Male Veterans of the Vietnam War Generation,” p. 425.
53 Robert Rosenheck, Catherine Leda, and Peggy Gallup, “Combat Stress, Psychosocial Adjustment, and Service Use
Among Homeless Vietnam Veterans,” Hospital and Community Psychiatry 42, no. 2 (February 1992): 148.
54 “Homeless Veterans,” p. 98.
55 Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs, Veterans’ Administration FY1988 Budget, the Vet Center Program, and
Homeless Veterans Issues
, 100th Cong., 1st sess., S.Hrg. 100-350, February 18 & 19, 1987, pp. 2-6.
56 For more information about the VHA, see CRS Report R42747, Health Care for Veterans: Answers to Frequently
Asked Questions
, by Sidath Viranga Panangala and Erin Bagalman.
57 For more information about veterans benefits, see CRS Report RS22804, Veterans’ Benefits: Pension Benefit
Programs
, by Umar Moulta-Ali and Carol D. Davis and CRS Report RL34626, Veterans’ Benefits: Disabled Veterans,
by Umar Moulta-Ali et al.
58 For more information about educational assistance, see CRS Report R42755, The Post-9/11 Veterans Educational
Assistance Act of 2008 (Post-9/11 GI Bill): Primer and Issues
, by Cassandria Dortch; and CRS Report R42785, GI
Bills Enacted Prior to 2008 and Related Veterans’ Educational Assistance Programs: A Primer
, by Cassandria Dortch.
59 For more information about the VA Loan Guaranty, see CRS Report R42504, VA Housing: Guaranteed Loans,
Direct Loans, and Specially Adapted Housing Grants
, by Libby Perl.
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The Department of Veterans Affairs
The majority of programs that serve homeless veterans are part of the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA), one of the three major organizations within the VA (the other two are the
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) and the National Cemetery Administration).60 The VHA
operates hospitals and outpatient clinics across the country through 21 Veterans Integrated
Service Networks (VISNs). Each VISN oversees between five and eleven VA hospitals as well as
outpatient clinics, nursing homes, and domiciliary care facilities. Many services for homeless
veterans are provided in these facilities. In addition, the VBA has made efforts to coordinate with
the VHA regarding homeless veterans by placing Homeless Veteran Outreach Coordinators
(HVOCs) in its offices in order to assist homeless veterans in their applications for benefits.
Health Care for Homeless Veterans
The first federal program to specifically address the needs of homeless veterans, Health Care for
Homeless Veterans (HCHV), was initially called the Homeless Chronically Mentally Ill veterans
program.61 The program was created as part of an emergency appropriations act for FY1987 (P.L.
100-6) in which Congress allocated $5 million to the VA to provide medical and psychiatric care
in community-based facilities to homeless veterans suffering from mental illness.62 The law was
amended in 2012 so that all homeless veterans, whether suffering from mental illness or not, are
eligible for the program (P.L. 112-154). Through the HCHV program, VA medical center staff
conduct outreach to homeless veterans, provide care and treatment for medical, psychiatric, and
substance use disorders, and refer veterans to other needed supportive services.63 Although P.L.
100-6 provided priority for veterans whose illnesses were service-connected, veterans with non-
service-connected disabilities were also made eligible for the program. Within two months of the
program’s enactment, 43 VA Medical Centers had initiated programs to find and assist mentally
ill homeless veterans.64 Currently, about 132 VA sites have implemented HCHV programs.65 The
HCHV program is authorized through FY2015.66
The HCHV program itself does not provide housing for veterans who receive services. However,
the VA was initially authorized to enter into contracts with non-VA service providers to place
veterans in residential treatment facilities so that they would have a place to stay while receiving

60 For more information about the organization of the VA, see U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, 2010
Organizational Briefing Book
, June 2010, http://www4.va.gov/ofcadmin/docs/vaorgbb.pdf.
61 In 1992, the VA began to refer to the program by its new name. VA FY1994 Budget Summary, Volume 2, Medical
Benefits, p. 2-63.
62 Shortly after the HCHV program was enacted in P.L. 100-6, Congress passed another law (P.L. 100-322) that
repealed the authority in P.L. 100-6 and established the HCHV program as a pilot program. The program was then
made permanent in the Veterans Benefits Act of 1997 (P.L. 105-114). The HCHV program is now codified at 38
U.S.C. §§2031-2034.
63 38 U.S.C. §2031, §2034.
64 Veterans Administration, Report to Congress of member agencies of the Interagency Council on Homelessness
pursuant to Section 203(c)(1) of P.L. 100-77, October 15, 1987.
65 Wesley J. Kasprow, Rani Desai, Diane DiLello, Leslie Cavallaro, and Nicole Harelik, Healthcare for Homeless
Veterans Programs: Twenty-Fourth Annual Report
, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Northeast Program
Evaluation Center, March 31, 2011, p. 3 (hereinafter, Healthcare for Homeless Veterans Programs: Twenty-Fourth
Annual Report
).
66 The program was most recently authorized in the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014
(P.L. 113-175).
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treatment. In FY2003, the VA shifted funding from contracts with residential treatment facilities
to the VA Grant and Per Diem program (described later in this section).67 Local funding for
residential treatment facilities continues to be provided by some VA medical center locations,
however. According to data from the VA, in FY2013 there were 3,598 beds available and 13,352
veterans stayed an average of 83 days.68 The HCHV program as a whole served approximately
146,565 veterans in that same year.69
Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans
Domiciliary care consists of rehabilitative services for physically and mentally ill or aged
veterans who need assistance, but are not in need of the level of care offered by hospitals and
nursing homes. Congress first provided funds for the Domiciliary Care program for homeless
veterans (DCHV) in 1987 through a supplemental appropriations act (P.L. 100-71). Prior to
enactment of P.L. 100-71, domiciliary care for veterans generally (now often referred to as
Residential Rehabilitation and Treatment programs) had existed since the 1860s. The program for
homeless veterans was implemented to reduce the use of more expensive inpatient treatment,
improve health status, and reduce the likelihood of homelessness through employment and other
assistance. Congress has appropriated funds for the DCHV program since its inception.
The DCHV program operates at 45 VA medical centers and has 2,367 beds available.70 In
FY2013, the number of veterans completing treatment was 7,177 with an average length of stay
of about three months.71 Veterans received medical, psychiatric, and substance abuse treatment, as
well as vocational rehabilitation during their time in the DCHV program.
Compensated Work Therapy/Transitional Residence Program
The Compensated Work Therapy (CWT) Program has existed at the VA in some form since the
1930s.72 The program was authorized in P.L. 87-574 as “Therapeutic and Rehabilitative
Activities,” and was substantially amended in P.L. 94-581, an act that amended various aspects of
veteran health care programs.73 The CWT program is permanently authorized through the VA’s
Special Therapeutic and Rehabilitation Activities Fund.74
The goal of the CWT program is to give veterans with disabilities work experience and skills so
that they may re-enter the workforce and maintain employment on their own. The VA either
employs veterans directly (in FY2012, nearly 49% of veterans in the CWT program worked for

67 FY2004 VA Budget Justifications, p. 2-163.
68 FY2015 VA Budget Justifications, pp. VHA-208 to VHA-209.
69 Ibid., p. VHA-208.
70 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Congressionally Mandated Annual Report on Specialized Programs Offering
Assistance to Homeless Veterans Fiscal Year (FY) 2013
, p. 13 (hereinafter FY2013 VA Report on Homeless Veterans
Programs
).
71 Ibid.
72 Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, report to accompany S. 2908, 94th Cong., 2nd sess., S.Rept. 94-1206, September
9, 1976.
73 The CWT program is codified at 38 U.S.C. §1718.
74 38 U.S.C. §1718(c).
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the VA75), finds work for veterans at other federal agencies, or enters into contracts with private
companies or nonprofit organizations that then provide veterans with work opportunities.
Veterans must be paid wages commensurate with those wages in the community for similar work,
and through the experience the goal is that participants will improve their chances of living
independently and reaching self-sufficiency. In 2003, the Veterans Health Care, Capital Asset, and
Business Improvement Act (P.L. 108-170) added work skills training, employment support
services, and job development and placement services to the activities authorized by the CWT
program.
In 1991, as part of P.L. 102-54, the Veterans Housing, Memorial Affairs, and Technical
Amendments Act, Congress added the Therapeutic Transitional Housing component to the CWT
program. The housing component is authorized through FY2015.76 The purpose of the program is
to provide housing to participants in the CWT program who have mental illnesses or chronic
substance use disorders and who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.77 Although the law
initially provided that both the VA itself or private nonprofit organizations, through contracts with
the VA, could operate housing, the law was subsequently changed so that only the VA now owns
and operates housing.78 The housing is transitional—up to 12 months—and veterans who reside
there receive supportive services. As of FY2013, the VA operated 42 transitional housing facilities
with 579 beds.79 During that same year, 1,056 veterans completed treatment with an average stay
of five months.
In FY2012, 17,407 veterans were admitted into the CWT program, 55% of whom were homeless.
Similar to those veterans who enter into the VA’s Health Care for Homeless Veterans and
Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans programs, large percentages of veterans engaged in the
CWT program in FY2012 suffered from serious mental illness and substance use disorders. Of
those admitted to the CWT program, 62% of veterans had a substance use disorder, 63% had
serious mental illness, and nearly 41% were dually diagnosed (i.e., had both a substance use
disorder and mental illness).80 In addition, 79% of participants were found to have a disabling
medical condition, with nearly all participants (97%) having a psychiatric disorder or disabling
medical condition or both.81
Grant and Per Diem Program
Initially called the Comprehensive Service Programs, the Grant and Per Diem program was
introduced as a pilot program in 1992 through the Homeless Veterans Comprehensive Services
Act (P.L. 102-590). The law establishing the Grant and Per Diem program, which was made
permanent in the Homeless Veterans Comprehensive Services Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-95),

75 Sandra D. Resnick, Richard Kaczynski, Debbie Sieffert et al., Sixteenth Progress Report on the Compensated Work
Therapy (CWT) Program, Fiscal Year 2012
, Department of Veterans Affairs Northeast Program Evaluation Center,
Table 1.2 (hereinafter, Sixteenth Progress Report on the Compensated Work Therapy (CWT) Program).
76 The program was last authorized as part of the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014
(P.L. 113-175). See 38 U.S.C. §2031.
77 The VA’s authority to operate therapeutic transitional housing is codified at 38 U.S.C. §2032.
78 The provision for nonprofits was in P.L. 102-54, but was repealed by P.L. 105-114, §1720A(c)(1).
79 FY2013 VA Report on Homeless Veterans Programs, p. 13.
80 Sixteenth Progress Report on the Compensated Work Therapy (CWT) Program, Table 1.2.
81 Ibid.
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authorizes the VA to make grants to public entities or private nonprofit organizations to provide
services and transitional housing to homeless veterans.82
The Grant and Per Diem program is authorized at $250 million for FY2015 and each fiscal year
thereafter (P.L. 113-175). Prior to 2011, the program had been permanently authorized at $150
million per year (P.L. 110-387). However, Congress increased the authorization level in
subsequent years to comport with amounts that the VA estimated were needed for the program in
each of these fiscal years.83
The program has two parts: grant and per diem. Eligible grant recipients may apply for funding
for one or both parts. The grants portion provides capital grants to acquire, construct, expand, or
remodel facilities so that they are suitable for use as either service centers or transitional housing
facilities.84 The capital grants will fund up to 65% of the costs of acquisition, construction,
expansion, or remodeling of facilities.85 Grants may also be used to procure vans for outreach and
transportation of homeless veterans. The per diem portion of the program reimburses grant
recipients for the costs of providing housing and supportive services to homeless veterans. The
supportive services that grantees may provide include outreach activities, food and nutrition
services, health care, mental health services, substance abuse counseling, case management, child
care, assistance in obtaining housing, employment counseling, job training and placement
services, and transportation assistance.86 Organizations may apply for per diem funds alone
(without capital grant funds), as long as they would be eligible to apply for and receive capital
grants.
As part of the FY2012 Grant and Per Diem application process, the VA encouraged providers to
enter into a new arrangement with veterans called “transition in place.”87 Rather than dedicating
transitional housing to homeless veterans who move on after 24 months, under the transition in
place concept, providers own or lease apartments that are used by eligible veterans, with the idea
that veterans remain there and take over the lease once the transition period ends. The VA
awarded grants to 31 organizations that plan to use the transition in place model.88
The per diem portion of the Grant and Per Diem program pays organizations for the housing and
services that they provide to veterans at a fixed dollar rate for each bed that is occupied.89
Organizations apply to be reimbursed for the cost of care provided, not to exceed the current per
diem rate for domiciliary care. The per diem rate increases periodically; the FY2014 rate was
$43.32 per day.90 The per diem portion of the program also compensates grant recipients for the

82 The Grant and Per Diem program is codified at 38 U.S.C. §§2011-2013.
83 See, for example, VA Budget Justifications for FY2012 and FY2013.
84 The Honoring America’s Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-154) made
construction an eligible use of funds.
85 38 U.S.C. §2011(c).
86 38 CFR §61.1.
87 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “Fund Availability Under VA’s Homeless Providers Grant and Per Diem
Program,” 77 Federal Register 12648, March 1, 2012.
88 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “VA Approves $28 Million in Grants for Homeless Veterans,” press release,
September 19, 2012, http://www.va.gov/HOMELESS/docs/GPD/GPDProgram_press_release_09192012.pdf.
89 38 CFR §61.33.
90 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs website, State Homes – Payment Rate Information, November 4, 2014,
http://www.nonvacare.va.gov/state-homes-payment-rate.asp.
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services they provide to veterans at service centers. Grantee organizations are paid at an hourly
rate of one-eighth of either the cost of services or the domiciliary care per diem rate. Any per
diem payments are offset by other funds that the grant recipient receives, so the per diem program
can be thought of as a payer of last resort, covering expenses after grantees have used funds from
other sources.
The Advisory Committee on Homeless Veterans recommended that the per diem reimbursement
system be revised to take account of service costs and geographic disparities instead of using a
capped rate, and to allow use of other funds (such as those authorized under the McKinney-Vento
Homeless Assistance Grants) without offset.91 The Honoring America’s Veterans and Caring for
Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-154) directed VA to study the per diem payment
method, and develop “more effective and efficient procedures” for grantees’ fiscal control and
fund accounting, as well as for adequately reimbursing grantees that provide services to homeless
veterans. The VA issued a report to Congress in October 2013. The report analyzed current per
diem rates and recommended that an “alternate methodology be developed in establishing the
annual maximum per diem rate so that it is commensurate with the cost of care to providers.”92
However, the report did not recommend tying reimbursement to geographic areas, noting that
some areas receiving the maximum reimbursement rate are not necessarily high-cost areas, and
that reimbursement rates may depend on a provider’s ability to access other sources of funding.93
According to VA data, more than 650 Grant and Per Diem programs were funded in FY2013.
These providers had more than 15,500 beds available for veterans and discharged 23,039 veterans
during the fiscal year with an average length of stay of 188 days (approximately six months).94
The maximum amount of time a veteran may remain in housing is 24 months, with three total
stays, though clients may stay longer “if permanent housing for the veteran has not been located
or if the veteran requires additional time to prepare for independent living.”95 Of those
discharged, 60% moved to permanent housing, and 25% had full- or part-time employment.96
Grant and Per Diem for Homeless Veterans with Special Needs
In 2001, Congress created a demonstration program to target grant and per diem funds to specific
groups of veterans (P.L. 107-95). The groups initially included women, women with children,
frail elderly veterans, veterans with terminal illnesses, and those with chronic mental illnesses.
Later, male veterans with children were added as part of the Honoring America’s Veterans and
Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-154). The program was most recently
authorized at $5 million per year through FY2015 as part of the Department of Veterans Affairs
Expiring Authorities Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-175).

91 2009 Annual Report of the Advisory Committee on Homeless Veterans, July 1, 2009, p. 9, http://www1.va.gov/
advisory/docs/ReportHomeless2009.pdf (hereinafter, 2009 Advisory Committee on Homeless Veterans Report).
92 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Study and Report on Making Per Diem Payments to Providers for Homeless
Veterans
, October 2013, p. 16.
93 Ibid.
94 FY2013 VA Report on Homeless Veterans Programs, p. 14.
95 38 C.F.R. §61.80(d) and §61.33(e).
96 FY2013 VA Report on Homeless Veterans Programs, p. 14.
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Supportive Services for Veteran Families
In the 110th Congress, the Veterans’ Mental Health and Other Care Improvements Act of 2008
(P.L. 110-387) authorized a program of supportive services to assist very low-income veterans
and their families who either are making the transition from homelessness to housing (sometimes
called rapid rehousing) or who are moving from one location to another. Entities eligible for
funds are private nonprofit organizations and consumer cooperatives, and funds are made
available through a competitive process. Organizations that assist families transitioning from
homelessness to permanent housing are given priority for funding under the law. Among the
eligible services that recipient organizations may provide are case management, health care
services, daily living services, assistance with financial planning, transportation, legal assistance,
child care, and housing counseling. Most recently, the program was authorized at $300 million
through FY2015 as part of the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014
(P.L. 113-175).
Since the Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) program was enacted, the VA has
awarded grants available for use from FY2011 through FY2015 for a total of $966 million to
grantees in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and
Guam.97 In FY2012 and FY2013, the SSVF program served more than 59,000 veterans and their
family members (totaling nearly 98,000 people and 61,000 households).98 The majority of
households (39,000) received rapid rehousing assistance, with 23,000 households receiving
assistance for homelessness prevention.99 The VA allowed grantees to use 50% of funding for
temporary financial assistance for veteran families. The majority of financial assistance in each
year went for rental assistance (57% and 61%).100
Dental Care for Homeless Veterans
The Homeless Veterans Comprehensive Assistance Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-95) provided that dental
care for certain homeless veterans shall be considered medically necessary (and therefore
provided by the VA) if needed to gain employment, relieve pain, or treat certain conditions.101
Veterans are eligible if they are receiving care in the Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans
program, the Compensated Work Therapy Transitional Housing program, in Community
Residential Care Facilities, or in a Grant and Per Diem program. Congress authorized dental care
based on surveys of VA staff and community providers as part of the VA CHALENG report
indicating that dental care was one of homeless veterans’ greatest unmet needs.102

97 Grant information is summarized in the Department of Veterans Affairs, Supportive Services for Veteran Families
(SSVF) Grant Awards Fact Sheet
, September 2014, http://www1.va.gov/HOMELESS/ssvf/docs/
93014_SSVF_Award_Announcement_FY15_FACT_SHEET.pdf.
98 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Supportive Services for Veterans Families (SSVF) FY2013 Annual Report, p. 2,
http://www1.va.gov/HOMELESS/ssvf/docs/SSVFUniversity/SSVF_Annual_Report_FY_2013.pdf.
99 Note that a small number of households received assistance in both categories.
100 Supportive Services for Veterans Families (SSVF) FY2013 Annual Report, p. 9.
101 38 U.S.C. §2062.
102 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, ‘‘Stuart Collick—Heather French Henry Homeless Veterans
Assistance Act
, report to accompany H. 2716, 107th Cong., 1st sess., October 16, 2011, H.Rept. 107-241, p. 21,
https://www.congress.gov/107/crpt/hrpt241/CRPT-107hrpt241-pt1.pdf.
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Enhanced Use Leases
The law governing Enhanced Use Leases (EULs), long a method for the VA to make productive
use of underutilized real property, was changed in 2012 to make homeless veterans and veterans
at risk of homelessness the sole beneficiaries of the program. Prior to 2012, and beginning in
1991, Congress gave the VA the authority to enter into EULs with outside developers to improve,
maintain, and make use of VA property for a period of time. The arrangement was made possible
as part of the Veterans’ Benefits Programs Improvement Act (P.L. 102-86).103
Until 2012, the VA was able to enter into any lease that furthered the mission of the VA and
enhanced the use of the property or that would result in the improvement of medical care and
services to veterans in the geographic area.104 The maximum lease term was 75 years, and the VA
was to charge “fair consideration” for the lease, including in-kind payment.105 While EULs
involved non-housing purposes (e.g., child care centers, golf courses, and parking facilities), a
number of the EULs awarded prior to 2012 involved housing for homeless veterans.106
In 2012, as part of the Honoring America’s Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act
(P.L. 112-154), Congress limited the circumstances under which the VA may enter into EULs to
“the provision of supportive housing.” Supportive housing is defined as housing combined with
supportive services for veterans or their families who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.
Among the types of housing that qualify are transitional, permanent, and single room occupancy
housing, congregate living, independent living, or assisted living facilities. Leases that were
entered into prior to January 1, 2012, will be subject to the law as it existed previously. While the
VA does not have to receive consideration for an EUL under the amended law, if it does receive
consideration, it may only be “cash at fair value,” and not in-kind payment. Each year, the VA is
to release a report about the consideration received for EULs.
Even prior to enactment of P.L. 112-154, the VA had made a commitment to use the EUL process
to benefit homeless veterans through the Building Utilization Review and Repurposing (BURR)
Initiative, the purpose of which is to provide housing for homeless veterans by identifying
underutilized VA properties. The VA identified 34 properties suitable for use as transitional or
permanent housing for homeless veterans in which it will enter into EULs.107
Acquired Property Sales for Homeless Veterans
The Acquired Property Sales for Homeless Veterans program is operated through the Veterans
Benefits Administration (VBA). The program was enacted as part of the Veterans’ Home Loan
Program Improvements and Property Rehabilitation Act of 1987 (P.L. 100-198). The current

103 38 U.S.C. §§8161-8169.
104 38 U.S.C. §8162.
105 Ibid.
106 See Awarded Enhanced Use Lease Projects As of December 31, 2011, http://www.va.gov/oaem/docs/
awardedEulProjects.pdf.
107 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “VA to Expand Housing for Homeless Veterans and Their Families,” press
release, June 8, 2011, http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=2113.
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version of the program was authorized in P.L. 102-54 (a bill to amend Title 38 of the U.S. Code),
and is authorized through FY2015.108
Through the program, the VA is able to dispose of properties that it has acquired through
foreclosures on its loans so that they can be used for the benefit of homeless veterans.
Specifically, the VA can sell, lease, lease with the option to buy, or donate, properties to nonprofit
organizations and state government agencies that will use the property only as homeless shelters
primarily for veterans and their families.
VA and HUD Collaborations
HUD-VASH
The HUD-VA Supported Housing (HUD-VASH) program began in 1992 as a collaboration
between the VA and HUD whereby HUD provided housing to homeless veterans through a set-
aside of tenant-based Section 8 vouchers and the VA provided supportive services. (Section 8
vouchers are a portable housing subsidy where tenants find rental housing on the private market
and HUD pays a portion of their rent.) The program targeted veterans with severe psychiatric or
substance use disorders and distributed approximately 1,753 Section 8 vouchers to veterans over
three years.109 Through the program, local Public Housing Authorities (PHAs) administered the
Section 8 vouchers while local VA medical centers provided case management and clinical
services to participating veterans. After the initial voucher distributions, no new vouchers were
made available to homeless veterans for approximately 15 years—until FY2008—when HUD-
VASH was revived by Congress. This section of the report discusses the program’s progression.
HUD initially distributed Section 8 vouchers to PHAs through three competitions, in 1992, 1993,
and 1994. Prior to issuing the vouchers, HUD and the VA had identified medical centers with
Domiciliary Care and Health Care for Homeless Veterans programs that were best suited to
providing services. PHAs within the geographic areas of the VA medical centers were invited to
apply for vouchers. In the first year that HUD issued vouchers, 19 PHAs were eligible to apply,
and by the third year the list of eligible VA medical centers and PHAs had expanded to 87.110
HUD has not separately tracked these Section 8 vouchers, and, over the years, when veterans
have left the program and returned their vouchers to PHAs, the vouchers have not necessarily
been turned over to other veterans.
In 2001, Congress codified the HUD-VASH program (P.L. 107-95) and authorized the creation of
an additional 500 vouchers for each year from FY2003 through FY2006.111 A bill enacted at the
end of the 109th Congress (P.L. 109-461) also provided the authorization for additional HUD-
VASH vouchers. However, it was not until FY2008 that Congress provided funding for additional

108 The program was most recently authorized in the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014
(P.L. 113-175). The program is codified at 38 U.S.C. §2041.
109 The first announcement of voucher availability was made in the Federal Register. See U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, “Invitation for FY1992 Section 8 Rental Voucher Set-Aside for Homeless Veterans with
Severe Psychiatric or Substance Abuse Disorders,” 57 Federal Register no. 55, p. 9955, March 20, 1992.
110 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Funding Availability (NOFA) for the Section 8 Set-Aside
for Homeless Veterans with Severe Psychiatric or Substance Abuse Disorders,” 59 Federal Register no. 134, p. 36015,
July 14, 1994.
111 42 U.S.C. §1437f(o)(19).
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vouchers: the Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-161) included $75 million to fund
Section 8 vouchers for homeless veterans for one year (after the first year, funding for the
vouchers is absorbed into the tenant-based Section 8 account). Congress continued to fund new
vouchers in each year from FY2009 through FY2014 as well, appropriating $75 million each of
those years except FY2011, when $50 million was appropriated.
Language in each of the appropriations acts specifies that the VA and HUD determine the
allocation of vouchers based on geographic need as determined by the VA, PHA administrative
performance, and other factors that HUD and the VA may specify. In a notice dated March 23,
2012, HUD reported three data sources that the two agencies rely on in distributing vouchers: (1)
HUD point-in-time estimates of veteran homelessness, (2) VA medical center data on contacts
with homeless veterans, and (3) performance data from local Public Housing Authorities and VA
medical centers.112
The appropriations laws for HUD-VASH allow HUD to waive any statutory or regulatory
provision regarding the vouchers if it is necessary for the “effective delivery and administration”
of assistance.113 Pursuant to this provision, in the notice implementing the HUD-VASH program,
HUD waived the statutory requirement that vouchers be made available only to veterans with
mental illnesses and substance use disorders.114 In administering the vouchers, local VA medical
centers determine veteran eligibility for the program and veterans are then referred to partnering
PHAs. The PHAs review applicants only for income eligibility and to ensure that they are not
subject to lifetime sex offender registration.
The VA provides case management and services to participating veterans. The VA may also
contract with state or local government agencies, tribal organizations, or nonprofits to help
veterans find suitable housing and supportive services. The contract between the VA and the
outside service provider may occur in circumstances where (1) there is a shortage of affordable
rental housing and a veteran needs more assistance than the VA can provide, (2) a veteran does
not live near a local VA facility and it is impractical for the VA to provide assistance, or (3)
veterans in the area have lower than average success in obtaining housing when compared to
veterans participating in HUD-VASH overall.115
According to the VA, as of February 2014, 46,272 vouchers were under lease, with another more
than 2,580 veterans undergoing program approval or searching for housing.116 For the number of
vouchers funded in each fiscal year, see Table 5.
Project-Based HUD-VASH Vouchers
HUD allows PHAs to project base their HUD-VASH vouchers. When vouchers are project based,
they are attached to a specific unit of housing and do not move when the tenant moves. This may
be desirable in housing markets where it is difficult to find housing providers who accept

112 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers: Revised
Implementation of the HUD-VA Supportive Housing Program,” 77 Federal Register 17086-17090, March 23, 2012.
113 The exceptions are provisions involving fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor standards, and the environment.
114 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers: Implementation of the
HUD-VA Supportive Housing Program,” 73 Federal Register 25027, May 6, 2008.
115 See the Honoring America’s Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-154).
116 VA summary of HUD-VASH voucher performance provided to CRS.
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vouchers, and it may be a more efficient arrangement for providing supportive services. Initially,
HUD limited the number of project-based vouchers to 50% of a PHA’s total VASH allocation, but
on September 15, 2011, HUD released a notice removing the 50% limit.117 However, PHAs must
still adhere to the requirements that the funding allocated for project-based vouchers does not
exceed 20% of the PHA’s total tenant-based voucher budget (for all vouchers, not just those used
by veterans), and that the local VA medical center must agree to the plan. If a veteran lives in a
unit where HUD-VASH vouchers have been project based and wants to move, the PHA must
provide the tenant with a Section 8 voucher or other tenant-based assistance.
HUD has set aside project-based vouchers in four fiscal years: FY2010, FY2011, FY2013, and
FY2014. In each case, the vouchers were awarded competitively. In FY2010, 676 vouchers were
awarded to PHAs in 18 states.118 Another three PHAs that had applied for vouchers from the
FY2010 appropriation received 99 vouchers funded through the FY2011 allocation.119 In FY2013
956 vouchers were awarded to PHAs in 16 states,120 and in FY2014 730 vouchers to PHAs in 15
states.121
Demonstration Program to Prevent Homelessness Among Veterans
As part of the FY2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act (P.L. 111-8), Congress appropriated $10
million through the HUD Homeless Assistance Grants account to be used for a pilot program to
prevent homelessness among veterans. The appropriation law required that the program be
operated in a limited number of sites, at least three of which were to have a large number of
individuals transitioning from military to civilian life, and at least four of which were to be in
rural areas.
In July 2010, HUD issued a notice of implementation of the new demonstration program.122
HUD, in consultation with the VA and DOL, selected five geographic areas in which local
Continuums of Care (CoCs) would assign a grantee to carry out the prevention program. CoCs
are planning entities formed at the local level to determine how the community will address
homelessness. The areas were chosen based on the number of homeless veterans reported by the
local CoC and VA Medical Center, the number of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation
Enduring Freedom veterans accessing VA health care, the presence and diversity of military sites

117 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Notice PIH 2011-50, Project-Basing HUD-Veterans Affairs
Supportive Housing Vouchers
, September 15, 2011, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=11-
50pihn.doc.
118 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing, Case
Management to Nearly 700 Homeless Veterans Across the U.S.,” press release, June 13, 2011, http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2011/HUDNo.11-118.
119 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing, Case Management to Nearly 100
Homeless Veterans,” press release, September 19, 2011, http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=2173.
120 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD and VA Announce Vouchers to Help Nearly 1,000
Homeless Veterans Find Permanent Homes,” press release, August 6, 2014, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
press/press_releases_media_advisories/2014/HUDNo_14-094.
121 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD and VA Team Up to Help More Than 9,000 Homeless
Veterans Find Permanent Homes,” press release, October 1, 2014, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/
press_releases_media_advisories/2014/HUDNo_14-119.
122 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Notice of FY2009 Implementation of the Veterans
Homelessness Prevention Demonstration Program
, July 14, 2010, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/
documents/VetsHomelessPreventionDemo.pdf.
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in the area (e.g., representation of different branches of the military, National Guard, and
Reserves), availability of VA health care, type of geographic area (urban versus rural), and the
community’s capacity to administer the prevention program. The five areas and corresponding
military bases selected were (1) San Diego, CA (Camp Pendleton); (2) Killeen, TX (Fort Hood);
(3) Watertown, NY (Fort Drum); (4) Tacoma, WA (Joint Base Lewis-McChord); and (5) Tampa,
FL (MacDill Air Force Base).
The prevention program operates much like the Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing
Program that was created as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (P.L. 111-5).
Funds may be used for short-term rental assistance (up to three months) or medium-term rental
assistance (4-18 months), for up to six months of rental arrears, for security or utility deposits,
utility payments, and help with moving expenses.123 Recipients may also use funds for supportive
services that help veterans and their families find and maintain housing such as case management,
housing search and placement, credit repair, child care, and transportation.124 To be eligible,
veterans and their families must meet the following criteria:125
• have income at or below 50% of the area median income;
• be experiencing short-term homelessness or be at risk of losing housing;
• lack the resources or support networks to obtain housing or remain housed; and
• be experiencing instability as evidenced by one of the following: (1) living on the
street or in shelter for less than 90 days, (2) being at least one month behind in
rent, (3) facing eviction within two weeks, (4) being discharged from an
institution, (5) living in condemned housing, (6) being behind on utility payments
by at least a month, (7) paying greater than 50% of income for housing, or
(8) facing a sudden and significant loss of income.
Program Data
In 2013, HUD released an interim report on the Homelessness Prevention Demonstration.126
During the program’s first year, 574 households were served at the five sites (lower than was
expected). The demonstration program served a high percentage of younger veterans, with 50%
between ages 25 and 44 (compared to 19% of veterans who are in this age group), and a high
percentage of women veterans, 26% (compared to 8% of the veteran population).127 Of
households served, 45% were families with children.128 At the time of program entry, 76% of
adult participants were unemployed and 38% had no income.129 Of the households served, 14%
were homeless at the time they entered the program, 68% were at imminent risk of losing their

123 Ibid., pp. 9-11.
124 Ibid., p. 11.
125 Ibid., pp. 13-14.
126 Mary Cunningham, Martha Burt, and Jennifer Biess, et al., Veterans Homelessness Prevention Demonstration
Interim Report
, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, September 2013, http://www.huduser.org/portal/
publications/pdf/HUD519_VHPD_InterimReport.pdf.
127 Ibid., p. 19.
128 Ibid.
129 Ibid., p. 25.
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housing with no resources for temporary or permanent housing, and 18% were considered
unstably housed (but having options for temporary housing).130
In the first year, 82% of households received assistance with homelessness prevention and 19%
received rapid rehousing.131 The most common direct financial assistance provided was rental
assistance, received by 85% of households. Other assistance included help with utilities (44% of
households), security and utility deposits (38% of households), hotel and motel vouchers (9% of
households), and moving costs (5% of households).132 Households also received supportive
services, including outreach (18% of households), case management (98% of households), help
with housing search (11% of households), and legal assistance and credit repair (each at less than
1%).133
The Department of Labor
The Department of Labor (DOL) contains an office specifically dedicated to the employment
needs of veterans, the office of Veterans’ Employment and Training Service (VETS). In addition
to its program for homeless veterans—the Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program (HVRP)—
VETS funds employment training programs for all veterans. These include the Veterans
Workforce Investment Program and the Transition Assistance Program.
Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program (HVRP)
Established in 1987 as part of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (P.L. 100-77), the
HVRP was authorized most recently at $50 million through FY2015 as part of the Department of
Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-175). In 2010, the Veterans’ Benefits
Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-275) created a separate HVRP for women veterans and veterans with
children. The program, which includes child care among its services, is authorized from FY2011
through FY2015 at $1 million per year.
The HVRP program has two goals. The first is to assist veterans in achieving meaningful
employment, and the second is to assist in the development of a service delivery system to
address the problems facing homeless veterans. Eligible grantee organizations are state and local
Workforce Investment Boards, local public agencies, and both for- and nonprofit organizations.134
Grantees receive funding for one year, with the possibility for two additional years of funding
contingent on performance and fund availability.135 The DOL awards grants separately for urban
and non-urban areas.
HVRP grantee organizations provide services that include outreach, assistance in drafting a
resume and preparing for interviews, job search assistance, subsidized trial employment, job

130 Ibid., p. 29.
131 Ibid., p. 60.
132 Ibid., p. 62.
133 Ibid., p. 63.
134 U.S. Department of Labor, Veterans’ Employment and Training Service, Solicitation for Grant Applications, Urban
and Non-Urban Homeless Veterans’ Reintegration Program (HVRP) Grants For Program Year (PY) 2010, March 26,
2010, p. 21, http://www.dol.gov/vets/grants/2010/HVRP%20PY%202010%20SGA%20%28PDF%29.pdf.
135 Ibid., p. 18.
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training, and follow-up assistance after placement. Recipients of HVRP grants also provide
supportive services not directly related to employment such as transportation, provision of
assistance in finding housing, and referral for mental health treatment or substance abuse
counseling. HVRP grantees often employ formerly homeless veterans to provide outreach to
homeless veterans and to counsel them as they search for employment and stability. In fact, from
the inception of the HVRP, it has been required that at least one employee of grantee
organizations be a veteran who has experienced homelessness.136
In program year (PY) 2012 (from July 1, 2012, through June 30, 2013), grantees through the
HVRP program served a total of 17,480 homeless veterans, of whom 11,317 (or 65%) were
placed in employment.137 The average wage of veterans who were placed in employment was
$11.22 per hour, and the average cost of placing a veteran in employment was $3,034.
Incarcerated Veterans Transition Program
The Homeless Veterans Comprehensive Assistance Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-95) instituted a
demonstration program to provide job training and placement services to veterans leaving
prison.138 The Veterans’ Mental Health and Other Care Improvements Act of 2008 (P.L. 110-387)
removed the program’s demonstration status, expanded the number of sites able to provide
services to 12, and changed the name slightly to “Referral and Counseling Services: Veterans at
Risk of Homelessness Who Are Transitioning from Certain Institutions.” The program was most
recently authorized through FY2015 as part of the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring
Authorities Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-175).
Stand Downs for Homeless Veterans
A battlefield stand down is the process in which troops are removed from danger and taken to a
safe area to rest, eat, clean up, receive medical care, and generally recover from the stress and
chaos of battle. Stand Downs for Homeless Veterans are modeled on the battlefield stand down
and are local events, staged annually in many cities across the country, in which local Veterans
Service Organizations, businesses, government entities, and other social service organizations
come together for up to three days to provide similar services for homeless veterans. Items and
services provided at stand downs include food, clothing, showers, haircuts, medical exams, dental
care, immunizations, and, in some locations where stand downs take place for more than one day,
shelter. Another important facet of stand downs, according to the National Coalition for Homeless
Veterans, is the camaraderie that occurs when veterans spend time among other veterans.
Although stand downs are largely supported through donations of funds, goods, and volunteer
time, the DOL VETS office may award both HVRP grant recipient organizations or other
organizations that would be eligible up to $10,000 to fund stand downs.139

136 “Procedures for Preapplication for Funds; Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, FY1988” Federal
Register
vol. 53, no. 70, April 12, 1988, p. 12089.
137 U.S. Department of Labor, Office of the Assistance Secretary for Veterans’ Employment and Training, Annual
Report to Congress, FY2015
, p. 14, http://www.dol.gov/vets/media/FY2013_Annual_Report_to_Congress.pdf.
138 38 U.S.C. §2023.
139 See the FY2015 DOL Budget Justifications, p. VETS-36, http://www.dol.gov/dol/budget/2015/PDF/CBJ-2015-V3-
05.pdf.
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Funding for Homeless Veterans Programs
Table 4, below, shows historical funding levels for seven programs that target services to
homeless veterans. Following Table 4, Table 5 shows funding for housing provided through the
HUD-VA collaboration known as HUD-VASH. HUD has funded Section 8 vouchers for homeless
veterans since FY1992, but after the initial appropriation for the vouchers, HUD does not
separately report the amount of funds necessary to provide rental assistance for each of the
vouchers in subsequent years. Unlike programs included in Table 4, then, it is not possible to
provide annual budget authority or obligations for HUD-VASH. Table 5 contains information
regarding the initial budget authority needed to support the vouchers in the first year of
appropriations.
Table 4. Funding for Selected Homeless Veterans Programs, FY1988-FY2014
(dollars in thousands)
Budget
Authority
(DOL
Obligations (VA Programs)
Program)
Compensated
HUD-VA
Health
Domiciliary
Work
Supported
Supportive
Homeless
Care for
Care for
Therapy/
Grant and
Housing
Services for
Veterans
Fiscal
Homeless
Homeless
Therapeutic
Per Diem
(Supportive
Veteran
Reintegration
Year
Veteransa
Veterans
Residence
Program
Services)b
Families
Program
1988 12,932
15,000c NA NA NA
NA 1,915
1989 13,252
10,367
NA
NA
NA
NA
1,877
1990 15,000
15,000
NA
NA
NA
NA
1,920
1991 15,461d 15,750
—d NA NA NA 2,018
1992 16,500d 16,500
—d NA
2,300 NA 1,366
1993 22,150
22,300
400

NA
2,000
NA
5,055
1994 24,513
27,140
3,051
8,000
3,235
NA
5,055
1995 38,585e 38,948 3,387
—e 4,270 NA
107f
1996 38,433e 41,117 3,886
—e 4,829 NA
0
1997 38,063e 37,214 3,628
—e 4,958 NA
0
1998 36,407
38,489
8,612
5,886
5,084
NA
3,000
1999 32,421
39,955
4,092
20,000
5,223
NA
3,000
2000 38,381
34,434
8,068
19,640
5,137
NA
9,636
2001 58,602
34,576
8,144
31,100
5,219
NA
17,500
2002 54,135
45,443
8,028
22,431
4,729
NA
18,250
2003 45,188
49,213
8,371
43,388
4,603
NA
18,131
2004 42,905
51,829
10,240
62,965
3,375
NA
18,888
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Budget
Authority
(DOL
Obligations (VA Programs)
Program)
Compensated
HUD-VA
Health
Domiciliary
Work
Supported
Supportive
Homeless
Care for
Care for
Therapy/
Grant and
Housing
Services for
Veterans
Fiscal
Homeless
Homeless
Therapeutic
Per Diem
(Supportive
Veteran
Reintegration
Year
Veteransa
Veterans
Residence
Program
Services)b
Families
Program
2005 40,357
57,555
10,004
62,180
3,243
NA
20,832
2006 56,998
63,592
19,529
63,621
5,297
NA
21,780
2007 71,925
77,633
21,514
81,187
7,487
NA
21,809
2008 77,656
96,098
21,497 114,696
4,854
NA
23,620
2009 80,219 115,373
22,206 128,073
26,601
218
26,330
2010 109,727
175,979
61,205
175,057
71,137
3,881
36,330
2011 200,808
221,938
73,420
148,097
119,603
60,541
36,257g
2012 118,889
218,962
73,067
208,046
169,873
99,974
38,185h
2013 128,500
245,228
71,687
200,329
288,107 299,921
36,188j
2014i 137,013
183,362
60,565
214,990
326,851 300,000
38,109
Sources: Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Justifications, FY1989-FY2015, VA Office of Homeless
Veterans Programs, the Department of Labor Budget Justifications FY1989-FY2015, and the Department of
Labor FY2013 Operating Plan.
a. Health Care for Homeless Veterans was originally called the Homeless Chronically Mentally Ill veterans
program. In 1992, the VA began to use the title “Health Care for Homeless Veterans.”
b. This column contains only the funding al ocated from the VA for supportive services and does not include
the cost of providing housing.
c. Congress appropriated funds for the DCHV program for both FY1987 and FY1988 (P.L. 100-71), however,
the VA obligated the entire amount in FY1988. See VA Budget Summary for FY1989, Volume 2, Medical
Benefits, p. 6-10.
d. For FY1991 and FY1992, funds from the Homeless Chronical y Mental y Ill veterans program as wel as
substance abuse enhancement funds were used for the Compensated Work Therapy/Therapeutic
Residence program.
e. For FY1995 through FY1997, Grant and Per Diem funds were obligated with funds for the Health Care for
Homeless Veterans program. VA budget documents do not provide a separate breakdown of Grant and Per
Diem Obligations.
f.
Congress appropriated $5.011 mil ion for HVRP in P.L. 103-333. However, a subsequent rescission in P.L.
104-19 reduced the amount.
g. The FY2011 Department of Defense and Ful -Year Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 112-10) imposed an
across-the-board rescission of 0.2% on all discretionary accounts. The level for HVRP reflects this
rescission.
h. The FY2012 appropriation for the Departments of Labor, HHS, and Education contained an across-the-
board rescission of 0.189% on all discretionary accounts. The level for HVRP reflects this rescission.
i.
The obligation amounts for FY2014 are estimates.
j.
The FY2013 level for HVRP reflects deductions for sequestration and an across-the-board rescission of
0.2%.
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Table 5. Funding for HUD-VASH
Number of
Years
Amount
Vouchers
Provided
Tenant-Based
Project-Based
Supported
(dollars in
Vouchers
Vouchers
with Amount
Fiscal Year
Public Law
millions)
Supported
Supported
Provided
1992 NAa 17.9b 750 — 5
1993 NAa 19.1c 750 — 5
1994 NAa 18.4d 700 — 5
2008 P.L.
110-161
75.0
10,150e — 1
2009 P.L.
111-8
75.0
10,290e — 1
2010 P.L.
111-117
75.0
9,510e 676f 1
2011 P.L.
112-10
50.0
6,815g 99h 1
2012 P.L.
112-55
75.0
10,450i — 1
2013 P.L.
113-6
75.0
9,865j 956k 1
2014 P.L.
113-76
75.0
8,276l 730l 1
Source: Sources for each voucher distribution are noted in the table notes, below.
a. Funding for FY1992 through FY1994 was set aside from Section 8 tenant-based appropriations.
b. The FY1992 announcement of the amount set aside and number of vouchers available was made in the
Federal Register. See U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Invitation for FY1992 Section 8
Rental Voucher Set-Aside for Homeless Veterans with Severe Psychiatric or Substance Abuse Disorders,”
57 Federal Register no. 55, pp. 9955-9968, March 20, 1992.
c. The announcement of the availability of funding and amount of vouchers to be funded in 1993 was made in
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) for Fiscal
Year 1993, for the Section 8 Set Aside for Homeless Veterans With Severe Psychiatric or Substance Abuse
Disorders,” 58 Federal Register no. 188, pp. 51191-51206, September 30, 1993.
d. The announcement of 1994 vouchers was made in U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development,
“Funding Availability (NOFA) for the Section 8 Set-Aside for Homeless Veterans with Severe Psychiatric or
Substance Abuse Disorders,” 59 Federal Register no. 134, pp. 36007-36015, July 14, 1994.
e. For a list of how the FY2008 through FY2010 tenant-based vouchers were al ocated to local housing
authorities, see http://www.hud.gov/offices/pih/programs/hcv/vash/docs/vash-awards.xls.
f.
The list of project-based vouchers for FY2010 is available at http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/
huddoc?id=HUD-VASHPBVFY2010AWARDEES.PDF. See also, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing, Case Management to Nearly 700 Homeless
Veterans Across the U.S.,” press release, June 13, 2011, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/
press_releases_media_advisories/2011/HUDNo.11-118.
g. A list showing how FY2011 tenant-based vouchers were distributed is available at http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=HUD-VASH2011CHART.PDF. See also, U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing and Support to Thousands of Homeless
Veterans,” press release, July 14, 2011, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/
press_releases_media_advisories/2011/HUDNo.11-150.
h. Department of Veterans Affairs, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing, Case Management to Nearly
100 Homeless Veterans,” press release, September 19, 2011, http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel/
pressrelease.cfm?id=2173.
i.
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD, VA to Provide Permanent Housing and
Support to More Than 10,000 Homeless Vets,” press release, March 27, 2012, http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2012/HUDNo.12-063 and “HUD, VA to
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Provide Additional Housing and Support for Homeless Vets,” press release, June 13, 2012,
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2012/HUDNo.12-099.
j.
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD and VA Team Up to Provide Permanent
Housing to 9,000 Homeless Vets,” press release, May 29, 2013, http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
press/press_releases_media_advisories/2013/HUDNo.13-082; “HUD and VA Announce More Vouchers to
Help Homeless Vets Get Into Permanent Homes,” press release, August 21, 2013, http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2013/HUDNo.13-127; and “HUD and VA
Announce More Vouchers to Help Homeless Vets Get Into Permanent Homes,” September 27, 2013,
http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2013/HUDNo.13-146.
k. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD and VA Announce Vouchers to Help Nearly
1,000 Homeless Veterans Find Permanent Homes,” press release, August 6, 2014, http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2014/HUDNo_14-094.
l.
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “HUD and VA Team Up to Help More Than 9,000
Homeless Veterans Find Permanent Homes,” press release, October 1, 2014, http://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2014/HUDNo_14-119.
Issues Regarding Veterans and Homelessness
The VA Plan to End Veteran Homelessness
On November 3, 2009, the VA announced a plan to end homelessness among veterans within five
years.140 The VA outlined six areas of focus for the new plan in its FY2011 budget justifications:
(1) outreach and education, (2) treatment, (3) prevention, (4) housing and supportive services, (5)
employment and benefits, and (6) community partnerships.141 In the FY2011 through FY2013
budget documents, the VA laid out plans to expand existing programs and to implement two new
programs, the VA-HUD pilot to prevent veteran homelessness and the SSVF program. Since
FY2009, VA obligations for targeted homeless veterans programs have increased from
approximately $376 million to $1.4 billion in FY2013.142 During the same period, healthcare
obligations for homeless veterans have increased from $2.5 billion to about $4.6 billion.
During the last several years, estimates of homeless veterans have fallen. The most recent point-
in-time estimate of homeless veterans, from 2014, reported not-quite 50,000 homeless veterans, a
reduction of nearly 25,000 since 2009. (For more information, see the section of this report
entitled “Estimates of the Number of Homeless Veterans.”)
During this same time period, the need for permanent housing, as reported by homeless veterans
and those who provide services, has also declined. The VA’s annual “Community Homelessness
Assessment, Local Education and Networking Groups” (CHALENG) report surveys homeless
veterans, as well as government and community service providers, about the most pressing unmet
needs among homeless veterans. Through FY2006, the highest priority unmet need according to
all respondents in the CHALENG reports was long-term permanent housing.143 However, in the

140 See U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, “Secretary Shinseki Details Plan to End Homelessness for Veterans,”
press release, November 3, 2009, http://www1.va.gov/OPA/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=1807.
141 FY2011 VA Budget Justifications, p. 1K-11.
142 See FY2011 and FY2015 VA Congressional Budget Justifications.
143 John H. Kuhn and John Nakashima, The Fifteenth Annual Progress Report on P.L. 105-114: Services for Homeless
Veterans Assessment and Coordination
, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, March 11, 2009, p. 14, (hereinafter The
Fifteenth Annual CHALENG Report
).
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FY2007 report, permanent housing was the second-highest unmet need, behind child care.144 In
FY2008 and FY2009, it fell to the fourth-highest unmet need,145 in FY2010, long-term housing
was the ninth in the list of unmet needs for veterans,146 and in FY2011, it was 16th on the list.147
One of the reasons that estimates of homeless veterans are declining and that the highest unmet
need is no longer housing is an increasing emphasis on permanent supportive housing for
veterans. The permanent supportive housing model promotes stability by ensuring that residents
receive services tailored to their particular needs, including health care, counseling, employment
assistance, help with financial matters, and assistance with other daily activities that might
present challenges to a formerly homeless individual.
Historically, homeless programs targeted to veterans did not provide permanent supportive
housing (although veterans were eligible for housing through HUD’s homeless programs).
Instead, programs such as Grant and Per Diem offered transitional housing to help veterans
become stable, find employment, and eventually transition to permanent housing. However, after
leaving transitional housing, veterans competed with other needy groups—including elderly
residents, persons with disabilities, and families with young children—for government assisted
housing.148 With the advent of HUD-VASH (discussed earlier in this report), tens of thousands of
units of permanent supportive housing funded through the federal government have been targeted
to homeless veterans for the last seven fiscal years. Congress has appropriated $500 million for
the program, an amount sufficient to fund nearly 68,000 vouchers for one year.149 The additional
Section 8 vouchers, as well as increased funding through VA program interventions (see Table 4),
could be making a difference in the number of veterans experiencing homelessness.
In addition to funding increases, the numbers of veterans served in VA homeless programs have
increased in the years since the plan was announced, as shown in Table 6. In the year prior to the
plan’s announcement, about 118,000 veterans were served in DCHV, HCHV, CWT/TR, GPD, and
HUD-VASH. By FY2013, the number had increased to nearly 223,000. (Note that veterans may
have been served by more than one program.)

144 John H. Kuhn and John Nakashima, The Fourteenth Annual Progress Report on P.L. 105-114: Services for
Homeless Veterans Assessment and Coordination
, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, February 28, 2008, p. 8.
145 The Fifteenth Annual CHALENG Report, p. 10, and John H. Kuhn and John Nakashima, The Sixteenth Annual
Progress Report on P.L. 105-114: Services for Homeless Veterans Assessment and Coordination
, U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs, March 17, 2010, p. 12.
146 John H. Kuhn and John Nakashima, The Seventeenth Annual Progress Report on P.L. 105-114: Services for
Homeless Veterans Assessment and Coordination
, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, July 5, 2011, p. 12.
147 Catherine Abshire, John H. Kuhn, John Nakashima, The Eighteenth Annual Progress Report Community
Homelessness Assessment, Local Education and Networking Groups (CHALENG) for Veterans Fiscal Year (FY)
2011, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, p. 11, http://www1.va.gov/HOMELESS/docs/chaleng/
2011_CHALENG_Report_FINAL.pdf.
148 According to a 2007 GAO study, veteran households were underrepresented in HUD-assisted housing. GAO
estimated that 11% of low-income veteran renter households received HUD rental assistance compared to 19% of low-
income nonveteran renter households. Government Accountability Office, Information on Low-Income Veterans’
Housing Needs Conditions and Participation in HUD’s Programs
, GAO-07-1012, August 17, 2007, p. 29,
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d071012.pdf.
149 See the FY2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-161), the FY2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act (P.L.
111-8), the FY2010 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 111-117), the FY2011 Department of Defense and Full-
Year Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 112-10), the FY2012 Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations
Act (P.L. 112-55), the FY2013 Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-6), and the FY2014
Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-76).
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Table 6. Veterans Served in Select VA Homeless Programs
(FY2009 and FY2013)
Program FY2009
FY2013
Domiciliary Care for Homeless
6,311 7,177
Veteransa
Health Care for Homeless Veteransb 77,696
146,477
Compensated Work
Therapy/Transitional Residencesc
455 1,056
Grant and Per Diemd 15,906
23,039
HUD-VASHe 18,050
45,153
Source: Catherine Leda Seibyl, Sharon Medak, and Linda Baldino, et al., The Twenty-First Progress Report on the
Department of Veterans Affairs Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans Program: Fiscal Year 2009
, U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs, March 24, 2010, Table 1a.; Wesley J. Kasprow, Timothy Cuerdon, and Diane DiLel a, et al.,
Health Care for Homeless Veterans Programs: Twenty-Third Annual Report, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,
March 25, 2010, Tables 3-1, 5-8; Catherine Leda Seibyl, Sharon Medak, and Linda Baldino, et al., Compensated
Work Therapy / Transitional Residence (CWT/TR) Program Fiscal Year 2009
, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,
June 2010, Table 5; U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Housing and Urban Development—Department of Veterans
Affairs Supported Housing Program
, p. 15, Table 1; and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Congressionally
Mandated Annual Report on Specialized Programs Offering Assistance to Homeless Veterans Fiscal Year (FY) 2013.

a. The VA reports completed episodes of treatment for DCHV.
b. The VA reports individuals treated in the HCHV program.
c. The VA reports completed episodes of treatment for the CWT/TR program. For FY2009, this was obtained
by applying the percentage of veterans completing treatment to the total number of veterans discharged.
d. The VA reports the number of veterans discharged from the GPD program.
e. The number represents veterans and their families housed with HUD-VASH vouchers.
Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
As veterans return from Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), and
Operation New Dawn (OND), just as veterans before them, they face risks that could lead to
homelessness.
In FY2013, the VA reported that 14% of the more-than 260,000 veterans served in VA homeless
programs were those from OIF/OEF/OND.150 Approximately 1.76 million OEF/OIF/OND troops
have been separated from active duty and become eligible for VA health benefits since 2003.151 If
the experiences of the Vietnam War are any indication, the risk of becoming homeless continues
for many years after service. One study found that after the Vietnam War, 76% of Vietnam era
combat troops and 50% of non-combat troops who eventually became homeless reported that at

150 FY2013 VA Report on Homeless Veterans Programs, p. 2.
151 Since October 2003, DOD’s Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) has periodically (every 60 days) sent VA an
updated personnel roster of troops who participated in OEF, OIF, and OND, who have separated from active duty, and
become eligible for VA benefits. The current separation data are from FY2002 through December 2013. Note that the
total includes veterans who died in-theater (5,838).
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least 10 years passed between the time they left military service and when they became
homeless.152
A number of studies have examined the mental health status of troops returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan. According to one study of troops returning from Iraq published in the New England
Journal of Medicine, between 15% and 17% screened positive for depression, generalized
anxiety, and PTSD.153 Another study, conducted by the RAND Corporation, found that, of
veterans surveyed, 14% reported screening positive for PTSD and 14% for major depression.154
Veterans returning from Iraq also appear to be seeking out mental health services at higher rates
than veterans returning from other conflicts.155 Research has also found that the length and
number of deployments of troops in Iraq result in greater risk of mental health problems.156
Access to VA health services could be a critical component of reintegration into the community
for some veterans, and there is concern that returning veterans might not be aware of available VA
health programs and services.157
The VA has multiple means of reaching out to injured veterans and veterans currently receiving
treatment through the Department of Defense (DOD) to ensure that they know about VA health
services and to help them make the transition from DOD to VA services.158 However, for some
veterans, health issues, particularly mental health issues, may arise later. A study of Iraq soldiers
returning from deployment found that a higher percentage of soldiers reported mental health
concerns six months after returning than immediately after returning.159
Women Veterans
The number and percentage of women enlisted in the military have increased since previous wars.
In FY2012, approximately 14.3% of enlisted troops in the active components of the military
(Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines) were female, up from approximately 3.3% in FY1974 and
10.9% in FY1990.160 The number of women veterans can be expected to grow commensurately.

152 See Robert Rosenheck, Catherine A. Leda, and Linda K. Frisman, et al., “Homeless Veterans,” in Homelessness in
America
, ed. Jim Baumohl (Phoenix: The Oryx Press, 1996), p. 105.
153 Charles W. Hoge, Carl A. Castro, Stephen C. Messer, and Dennis McGurk, “Combat Duty in Iraq and Afghanistan,
Mental Health Problems, and Barriers to Care,” New England Journal of Medicine 351, no. 1 (July 1, 2004): Table 3.
154 Terri Tanielian and Lisa H. Jaycox, eds., Invisible Wounds of War: Psychological and Cognitive Injuries, Their
Consequences, and Services to Assist Recovery
(Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 2008) 96.
155 Charles W. Hoge, Jennifer L. Auchterlonie, and Charles S. Milliken, “Mental Health Problems, Use of Mental
Health Services, and Attrition from Military Service After Returning from Deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan,” JAMA
295, no. 9 (March 1, 2006): 1026, 1029.
156 Office of the Surgeon Multi-National Force-Iraq and Office of the Surgeon General United States Army Command,
Mental Health Advisory Team V, February 14, 2008, pp. 42-43, 46-47, http://www.armymedicine.army.mil/reports/
mhat/mhat_v/MHAT_V_OIFandOEF-Redacted.pdf.
157 See, for example, Amy Fairweather, Risk and Protective Factors for Homelessness Among OIF/OEF Veterans,
Swords to Plowshares’ Iraq Veteran Project, December 7, 2006, p. 6.
158 For more information about transition services, see the National Resource Directory,
http://www.nationalresourcedirectory.gov/.
159 Charles S. Milliken, Jennifer L. Auchterlonie, and Charles W. Hoge , “Longitudinal Assessment of Mental Health
Problems Among Active and Reserve Component Soldiers Returning from the Iraq War,” JAMA 298, no. 18
(November 14, 2007): 2141, 2144.
160 U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense, Personnel and Readiness, Population
Representation in the Military Services, FY2012
, Appendix D, Table D-13, http://poprep.cna.org/2012/appendixd/
(continued...)
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According to the VA, there were approximately 1.2 million female veterans in 1990 (4% of the
veteran population) and 1.6 million in 2000 (6%).161 In 2010, approximately 1.8 million veterans
were women.162 The VA predicted that there would be 1.9 million female veterans (10% of the
veteran population) in 2020. At the same time, the number of male veterans is expected to
decline.163
Women veterans face challenges that could contribute to their risks of homelessness. A study of
women veterans in the Los Angeles area compared homeless women veterans to women veterans
who were housed and found that the characteristics most associated with homelessness were
unemployment, having a disability, and being unmarried.164 Additional factors associated with
homelessness were screening positive for PTSD, experiencing military sexual trauma, suffering
from an anxiety disorder, and having fair or poor health.
Experts have found that female veterans report incidents of sexual assault that exceed rates
reported in the general population.165 One study of all returning OEF/OIF veterans who used VA
mental and/or primary health care found that 15.1% of female veterans reported experiencing
sexual assault or harassment while in the military (referred to by the VA as military sexual
trauma, MST).166 Another study of MST among homeless veterans who were using VHA care in
FY2010 found that 39.1% of homeless women veterans experienced MST.167
In the two studies, women veterans who had experienced military sexual trauma were more likely
than other veterans to have been diagnosed with a mental health conditions. In the study of
returning OEF/OIF veterans, women veterans were more likely to have been diagnosed with
depressive disorders, PTSD, anxiety disorders, alcohol and substance use disorders, and
adjustment disorders.168 In particular, the relationship between military sexual trauma and PTSD
among women was stronger than it was for men.169 In the study of homeless veterans, women
veterans who had experienced MST were more likely than women veterans without a history of

(...continued)
d_13.html.
161 Robert A. Klein, Women Veterans: Past, Present, and Future, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of the
Actuary, updated September 2007, pp. 8-9, http://www1.va.gov/vetdata/docs/Womenveterans_past_present_future_9-
30-07a.pdf.
162 U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 Statistical Abstract, Table 521, http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/
12s0520.pdf.
163 Women Veterans: Past, Present, and Future, pp. 8-9.
164 Donna L. Washington, Elizabeth M. Yano, and James McGuire, et al., “Risk Factors for Homelessness among
Women Veterans,” Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 21, no. 1 (January 2010), pp. 81-91.
165 Jessica Wolfe et al., “Changing Demographic Characteristics of Women Veterans: Results from a National Sample,”
Military Medicine 165, no. 10 (October 2000): 800.
166 Rachel Kimerling, Amy E. Street, and Joanne Pavao, et al., “Military-Related Sexual Trauma Among Veterans
Health Administration Patients Returning From Afghanistan and Iraq,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 100,
no. 8 (August 2010), pp. 1409-1412.
167 Joanne Pavao, Jessica A. Turchik, and Jenny K. Hyun, et al., “Military Sexual Trauma Among Homeless Veterans,”
Journal of General Internal Medicine, vol. 28, no. S2 (July 2013), pp. S535-S541. The percentage of men reporting a
history of MST was 3.3%.
168 “Military-Related Sexual Trauma Among Veterans Health Administration Patients Returning From Afghanistan and
Iraq,” p. 1411. The study looked at both male and female veterans who had reported experiencing military sexual
trauma. The percentage of men who so reported was 0.7%.
169 Ibid.
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MST to have depressive disorders, PTSD, substance use disorders, anxiety disorders, bipolar
disorders, personality disorders, and behaviors associated with suicide.170 These factors can
increase the difficulty with which women veterans readjust to civilian life, and could be risk
factors for homelessness (see earlier discussion in this report).
Women veterans are estimated to make up a relatively small, but growing, proportion of the
homeless veteran population. According to the 2012 Annual Homeless Assessment Report,
homeless women veterans represented 8% of veterans living in shelter.171 As a result, programs
serving homeless veterans may not have adequate facilities for female veterans at risk of
homelessness, particularly transitional housing for women and women with children. In FY2010,
4.5% of individuals placed in Grant and Per Diem programs were women172 while 4.9% of
veterans served in the Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans program in FY2010 were
women.173 The program that serves the highest percentage of female veterans is HUD-VASH;
approximately 11% of veterans who have received vouchers are women.174
The need for assistance among younger women veterans, in particular, appears to be increasing. A
report released by the VA about the risk and prevalence of homelessness among veterans noted
the increased risk of homelessness among young, female veterans, and that intervention upon
return from service and during the transition to civilian life could benefit this group.175 It is also
noteworthy that child care was the highest unmet need reported by homeless veterans and service
providers in four of the last five VA CHALENG reports (in the most recent CHALENG report,
for FY2011, child care is the third highest unmet need).
In the 110th Congress, the Veterans’ Mental Health and Other Care Improvements Act of 2008
(P.L. 110-387) added a provision to the statute governing the Domiciliary Care for Homeless
Veterans program requiring the Secretary to “take appropriate actions to ensure that the
domiciliary care programs of the Department are adequate, with respect to capacity and with
respect to safety, to meet the needs of veterans who are women.” In the 111th Congress, the
Veterans’ Benefits Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-275), signed into law on October 13, 2010, created an
HVRP grant program specifically targeted to serve women veterans and veterans with children.
The new program, like HVRP, provides job training, counseling, and job placement services, but
also provides child care for participants. The program is authorized from FY2011 through
FY2015 at $1 million per year.


170 “Military Sexual Trauma Among Homeless Veterans,” p. S538.
171 FY2012 AHAR, p. 4-8.
172 Healthcare for Homeless Veterans Programs: Twenty-Fourth Annual Report, Table 5-3, p. 229.
173 Twenty-Second Annual Progress Report on the Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans Program, p. 8.
174 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Homeless Women Veterans: Actions Needed to Ensure Safe and
Appropriate Housing
, GAO-12-182, December 2011, p. 28, http://www.gao.gov/assets/590/587334.pdf.
175 Prevalence and Risk of Homelessness Among U.S. Veterans: A Multisite Investigation, p. 25.
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Author Contact Information

Libby Perl

Specialist in Housing Policy
eperl@crs.loc.gov, 7-7806


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