A new program in Los Angeles seeks to break that cycle for a small number of the most troubled veterans using a strategy known as “housing first.” This approach, which has been successfully used by the Department of Housing and Urban Development for nearly a decade, doesn’t wait for people to sober up or get a job before they are given a place to stay. A permanent home, provided through a Section 8 voucher, instead becomes the anchor that makes all the rest possible: addiction services, therapy, sobriety, a steady job.
Critics worry that the vouchers come with no strings attached, so the incentive for positive change disappears. The numbers tell a different story. Federal officials reported a 30 percent drop in homelessness from 2005 to 2007, crediting the “housing first” programs. But the downturn has since hit hard, and new crops of soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan are returning to a brutal job market. Veterans currently make up an estimated 13 percent of the people in America’s shelters. There are believed to be more than 17,000 homeless veterans in Los Angeles County alone.
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