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Trump is pushing to institutionalize the homeless. That may include veterans : NPR

Military veterans are given food, clothing and other supplies during a Stand Down event designed to help veterans who are homeless or housing insecure on June 16, 2023 in Chicago.

Military veterans are given food, clothing and other supplies during a Stand Down event designed to help veterans who are homeless or housing insecure on June 16, 2023 in Chicago.

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Pedro Jauregui, with the organization U.S. Vets in Long Beach, Calif., once spent a whole year getting one homeless veteran to come in from the cold.

“The first time I met him I had to walk away ’cause he gave me some choice words, waved a one finger at me and said he was gonna kill me,” Jauregui said.

But a year of regular visits, including plenty of hot coffees and donuts, and Jauregui convinced the vet to come indoors. After that he sobered up and started using his VA benefits for college.

“We build relationships and then we use whatever we can to get the veteran the help he needs,” Jauregui said.

More than 30,000 U.S. military veterans are homeless, according to the latest government data from an annual one night “point in time count.” That number is down significantly in the past decade, which most experts credit to a straightforward combination of robust funding and a philosophy focused on offering housing without prerequisites, called housing first.

While the Trump administration has promised new housing for vets, President Trump also signed an executive order last year titled “Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets,” which leans heavily toward institutionalizing homeless people against their will. This winter, NPR obtained slides describing a proposed VA plan called “Safe Harbor,” which would include veterans in that shift to involuntary treatment. Then in March, the VA put out a memorandum of understanding with the Justice Department about state court guardianship for veterans.

But VA Secretary Doug Collins says the memorandum has nothing to do with the Safe Harbor proposal.

“We have veterans, not homeless, just veterans, who are in our facilities,” he said at the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans annual conference last month,”They have no family, they have no representation and they really are not in a position to actually make competent choices for their own healthcare.”

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