Feb 13, 2014 - Phoenix, Arizona recently announced it had become the first US city to successfully end chronic veteran homelessness. Two years ago, there were 222 chronically homeless vets on the city's streets. Today, there are practically none.How did the nation's sixth-largest city accomplish this remarkable achievement? To find out, this Digital Journalist spoke with city leaders, homeless advocates and formerly homeless vets.
Originally, the objective wasn't to get every homeless veteran off the streets. Project H3 VETS, coordinated and orchestrated by the Arizona Coalition to End Homelessness using plans devised by the Arizona Department of Veterans' Services (AZDVS), started out with a goal of housing 75 of the most chronically homeless and vulnerable veterans.
"It wasn't daunting," said Cloudbreak Communities community development director Brad Bridwell, co-creator of the initiative. "The ball got rolling, and soon after we realized that just 222 chronically homeless veterans existed. And suddenly, that didn't seem daunting either, and as success after success mounted, agencies started committing more time and resources to the effort." read more>>>
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