March 16, 2013 - On a winter’s day at Fort Snelling, it’s not hard to hear the soldiers’ ghosts.As the wind whips through the cracks and broken windows, their voices can be heard in cavernous Building 210, the old quartermaster stables, where horses for cavalry officers were kept. Or in Building 211, with its high beams and wide doors where grease-stained GIs, most likely smoking and probably swearing, once toiled fixing tanks during World War II.
All but abandoned for decades, five military buildings on what is known as Fort Snelling’s Upper Post are scheduled to be rehabbed. The buildings, which date to the turn of the 20th century and saw service from the Spanish-American War to World War II, will be repurposed to combat one of the military’s most nagging of contemporary issues: homelessness. Plans call for 58 affordable apartments for homeless veterans and their families. read more>>>
Homeless veterans need REAL HOUSING, not VA prison-like insane asylums!
ReplyDeleteThis WILL NOT be housing; the veterans will be BABY-SAT 24/7 & mandated to THOUSANDS of rules, restrictions, and stipulations, in addiction to being REMINDED DAILY that they are "ONE BROKEN RULE AWAY" from being thrown to the streets!
ReplyDelete$259,000 for a BARE-BONED STUDIO APT.?
ReplyDeleteTaxpayers are being RIPPED-OFF, and so are the veterans; $259,000 could house 5 homeless veterans for 5 years EACH, instead of one.