{click on graphic to enlarge}WASHINGTON — May 30, 2012 - Fewer than 60,000 veterans are now believed to be homeless, Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki said Wednesday, a decline of more than 90,000 from public estimates four years ago.
But VA officials warn that getting the remaining veterans off the streets — and meeting their goal of ending veterans homelessness by 2015 — may prove even more difficult in the years to come.
On Wednesday, at the annual conference of the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, Shinseki said that department officials now estimate that fewer than 60,000 veterans find themselves living on the streets on any given night.
“We’re still not where we need to be,” Shinseki said at the annual conference of the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans. “Our veterans are still counting on us to bring a sense of urgency to this fight.”
Shinseki’s estimate is 20 percent lower than the VA’s official homeless count in 2010. Meanwhile, the overall U.S. homeless population has decreased only slightly in recent years, from about 643,000 in 2009 to 636,000 in 2011, according to the National Alliance to End Homelessness.
But advocates for the homeless credit the dramatic turnaround with veterans to renewed efforts to provide them housing and health care, following Shinseki’s public pledge in 2009 to end veterans homelessness in five years. read more>>>
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