As part of the VA’s nationwide goal to house 38,000 homeless Veterans in 2022, the Salem VA Healthcare System has provided 125 permanent housing placements to homeless Veterans.
Permanent housing placements provided by VA staff and community partners included apartments or houses Veterans could rent or own, often with a subsidy to help make the housing affordable. VA staff also helped some Veterans end their homelessness by reuniting with family and friends.
The Salem Homeless Program exceeded local Permanent Housing Placement goals, registering a placement rate of 121%. Nationally, 40,401 Veterans were housed, exceeding the national goal by more than 6.3%.
“This goal was achieved through the hard work and dedication of our homeless program staff, our grantees, contractors, and the extraordinary contributions of community partners,” said Rebecca Stackhouse, Salem VA HCS Executive Director. “The progress we’re seeing with Veteran homelessness shows we have the right solutions to end homelessness for Veterans. We are very fortunate to have an outstanding team that is laser-focused on the mission and that truly puts Veterans first.”
Nationally, the number of Veterans who experienced homelessness on a single night in January 2022, was 33,129 – a decrease of 11% from January 2020. The estimated number of Veterans experiencing homelessness has declined by 55.3% since 2010.
Efforts are built on the evidence-based “Housing First” approach, which prioritizes getting a Veteran into housing, then providing the wraparound support needed to stay housed – including health care, job training, legal and education assistance, and more.