Operation Stand Down RI Blasts Homeless Assessment Report

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Operation Stand Down RI Blasts Homeless Assessment Report

Operation Stand Down RI is taking a recent assessment of homeless veterans in RI to task for its methodology.
Operation Stand Down Rhode Island is blasting the 2015 Annual Homeless Assessment Report that was recently released to Congress, that was based on a "Point-in-Time Count" which identified 107 veterans as homeless in Rhode Island.

“This is an absurd method in that it captures only a snapshot of those homeless during a few hours in an entire year. It relies on individuals to identify themselves as being both homeless and a veteran to people who are often complete strangers approaching them in shelters and on the street,” said Erik Wallin, Esq. the Executive Director of Operation Sand Down Rhode Island.

The Point-in-Time Count Method

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The Point-in-Time count method involves a group of individuals, mostly volunteers, coordinated by the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless, who go out on a single night during the course of an entire year and look for homeless individuals in shelters and other locations.

“The point-in-time count grossly understates the number of homeless veterans in the State of Rhode Island by relying on an inherently flawed method of counting the homeless,” said Wallin.

Costs to the State

Information released by the Providence VA Medical Center during a March 31, 2015 symposium on veterans homelessness reported that in 2014, 787 veterans were reported as being homeless and are treated at the Providence VA Medical Centers Homeless Program.

“Relying on the flawed method of the Point-in-Time Count, has cost the State at least $3 million,” said Wallin. “This lost grant money would have supplemented the existing one million dollar SSVF grant currently administered by OSDRI which since 2013 has allowed the organization to rapidly house 475 literally homeless veterans and prevent from becoming homeless another 275 primarily Rhode Island veteran families," Wallin added.

Wallin suggests that even the 787 number is low saying that some veterans may not be eligible for VA Medical Care due to not having enough time in service.

Operation Stand Down Rhode Island

Operation Stand Down Rhode Island is a non-profit organization  for homeless and at risk veterans. The organization was found in 993 and is headquartered in Johnston.


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