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Veterans of Iraq are showing up in homeless shelters.

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Back From Iraq -- and Out on the Streets

 

By Alexandra Marks, The Christian Science Monitor

 

NEW YORK - Veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts are now showing up in

the nation's homeless shelters.

 

While the numbers are still small, they're steadily rising, and raising alarms

in both the homeless and veterans' communities. The concern is that these

returning veterans - some of whom can't find jobs after leaving the military,

others of whom are still struggling psychologically with the war - may be just

the beginning of an influx of new veterans in need. Currently, there are 150,000

troops in Iraq and 16,000 in Afghanistan. More than 130,000 have already served

and returned home.

 

So far, dozens of them, like Herold Noel, a married father of three, have found

themselves sleeping on the streets, on friends' couches, or in their cars within

weeks of returning home. Two years ago, Black Veterans for Social Justice (BVSJ)

in the borough of Brooklyn, saw only a handful of recent returnees. Now the

group is aiding more than 100 Iraq veterans, 30 of whom are homeless.

 

" It's horrible to put your life on the line and then come back home to nothing,

that's what I came home to: nothing. I didn't know where to go or where to

turn, " says Mr. Noel. " I thought I was alone, but I found out there are a whole

lot of other soldiers in the same situation. Now I want people to know what's

really going on. "

 

After the Vietnam War, tens of thousands of veterans came home to a hostile

culture that offered little gratitude and inadequate services, particularly to

deal with the stresses of war. As a result, tens of thousands of Vietnam

veterans still struggle with homelessness and drug addiction.

 

Veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are coming home to a very different

America. While the Iraq war remains controversial, there is almost unanimous

support for the soldiers overseas. And in the years since Vietnam, more than 250

nonprofit veterans' service organizations have sprouted up, many of them created

by people like Peter Cameron, a Vietnam veteran who is determined that what

happened to his fellow soldiers will not happen again.

 

But he and dozens of other veterans' service providers are concerned by the

increasing numbers of new veterans ending up on streets and in shelters.

 

Part of the reason for these new veterans' struggles is that housing costs have

skyrocketed at the same time real wages have remained relatively stable, often

putting rental prices out of reach. And for many, there is a gap of months,

sometimes years, between when military benefits end and veterans benefits begin.

 

" We are very much committed to helping veterans coming back from this war, " says

Mr. Cameron, executive director of Vietnam Veterans of California. " But the

[Department of Veterans Affairs] already has needs it can't meet and there's a

lot of fear out there that programs are going to be cut even further. "

 

Beyond the yellow ribbons

 

Both the Veterans Administration and private veterans service organizations are

already stretched, providing services for veterans of previous conflicts. For

instance, while an estimated 500,000 veterans were homeless at some time during

2004, the VA had the resources to tend to only 100,000 of them.

 

" You can have all of the yellow ribbons on cars that say 'Support Our Troops'

that you want, but it's when they take off the uniform and transition back to

civilian life that they need support the most, " says Linda Boone, executive

director of The National Coalition for Homeless Veterans.

 

After the Vietnam conflict, it was nine to 12 years before veterans began

showing up at homeless shelters in large numbers. In part, that's because the

trauma they experienced during combat took time to surface, according to one

Vietnam veteran who's now a service provider. Doctors refer to the phenomenon as

post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

 

A recent study published by the New England Journal of Medicine found that 15 to

17 percent of Iraq vets meet " the screening criteria for major depression,

generalized anxiety, or PTSD. " Of those, only 23 to 40 percent are seeking help

- in part because so many others fear the stigma of having a mental disorder.

 

Many veterans' service providers say they're surprised to see so many Iraq

veterans needing help so soon.

 

" This kind of inner city, urban guerrilla warfare that these veterans are facing

probably accelerates mental-health problems, " says Yogin Ricardo Singh, director

of the Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program at BVSJ. " And then there's the

soldier's mentality: Asking for help is like saying, 'I've failed a mission.'

It's very hard for them to do. "

 

Beyond PTSD and high housing costs, many veterans also face an income void, as

they search for new jobs or wait for their veterans benefits to kick in.

 

When Mr. Noel was discharged in December of 2003, he and his family had been

living in base housing in Georgia. Since they were no longer eligible to live

there, they began the search for a new home. But Noel had trouble landing a job

and the family moved to New York, hoping for help from a family member.

Eventually, they split up: Noel's wife and infant child moved in with his

sister-in-law, and his twins were sent to relatives in Florida. Noel slept in

his car, on the streets, and on friend's couches.

 

Last spring he was diagnosed with PTSD, and though he's currently in treatment,

his disability claim is still being processed. Unable to keep a job so far, he's

had no steady income, although an anonymous donor provided money for him to take

an apartment last week. He expects his family to join him soon.

 

'Nobody understood ... the way I was'

 

Nicole Goodwin is another vet diagnosed with PTSD who has yet to receive

disability benefits. Unable to stay with her mother, she soon found herself

walking the streets of New York, with a backpack full of her belongings and her

1-year-old daughter held close.

 

" When I first got back I just wanted to jump into a job and forget about Iraq,

but the culture shock from the military to the civilian world hit me, " she says.

" I was depressed for months. I couldn't sleep. I couldn't eat. The worst thing

wasn't the war, it was coming back, because nobody understood why I was the way

I was. "

 

Ms. Goodwin was determined not to sleep on the streets, and so eventually went

into the New York City shelter system where, after being shuffled from shelter

to shelter, she was told she was ineligible for help. But media attention

changed that, and she was able to obtain a rent voucher. With others'

generosity, she also found a job. She's now attending college and working with

other veterans who are determined to go to Washington with their stories.

 

" When soldiers get back, they should still be considered military until they can

get on their feet, " she says. " It's a month-to-month process, trying to actually

function again. It's not easy, it takes time. "

 

 

 

 

 

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