A year and a half ago, Honolulu joined a national push to . The goal was to get homeless veterans off the streets and into permanent housing by the end of 2015.

Honolulu has fallen short of that goal, but how much work there is to do depends on whose statistics you look at.

A found that there were 413 homeless veterans on Oahu, a 12 percent decrease from the previous year but 84 more homeless vets than the city calculated at about the same time.

Jun Yang, who leads the mayor鈥檚 , said the point-in-time count isn鈥檛 the best way to measure Honolulu鈥檚 progress on this issue to date.

Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell touted the city’s progress in combating veteran homelessness at a press conference in听December. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The survey was taken during a single day in January. Volunteers scoured Honolulu neighborhoods interviewing homeless people. Surveyors noted the respondents’ race and gender, as well as whether they said they were veterans. The report, published in June, said Honolulu had 413 homeless veterans 鈥 sheltered and unsheltered.

The city鈥檚 method of counting homeless veterans is more rigorous, Yang said. Honolulu has worked with nonprofit groups to compile of homeless veterans, training people in what questions to ask and how to verify the information with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

As of January 鈥 about听the same time the point-in-time count was conducted 鈥 the city calculated there were 329 homeless veterans.

Yang said the discrepancy was likely attributable in large part to homeless people falsely claiming that they were veterans.

How Landlords Can Help

Jerry Jones, former director of the who is now public policy director at the in Los Angeles, thinks that鈥檚 unlikely.

鈥淧eople experiencing homelessness are no more likely than anyone else to make false claims about their military service,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure it happens occasionally, but that鈥檚 not a plausible explanation for why Honolulu鈥檚 veteran homeless numbers are so high.鈥

Jen Stasch is director of , a coalition of homeless service groups that conducted the point-in-time count in Honolulu. Stasch said she hasn’t closely examined the discrepancy between the mayor’s data and the point-in-time count, but thinks it’s possible that the difference could be attributed to false claims of respondents.

Stasch said it鈥檚 not unusual for homeless people who haven鈥檛 served in the military to identify as veterans in the hope of receiving additional services. Then again, some homeless people who are veterans may say they aren鈥檛.

Yang said another reason the January point-in-time survey and the city鈥檚 own January numbers may differ is that the volunteers conducting the survey could have spotted homeless veterans that the city hadn鈥檛 counted yet.

A police officer walks through a cleared homeless camping area as city workers ready for a sweep along Ilalo Street last October. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Yang doubted that would be a large factor now, however, given how frequently the city has reached out to the homeless over the past few months.

By now, both the January point-in-time survey and the mayor鈥檚 January progress report are somewhat outdated. The latest available data is from the end of May, when the City and County of Honolulu reported housing 747 veterans with 221 still in need of housing.

That鈥檚 a huge increase over the same month last year, when only 42 veterans had been housed.

In May, Honolulu was meeting two of four benchmarks of the听听for ending veteran homelessness, but the city still hadn’t been able to eliminate chronic homelessness for veterans or ensure that those who need housing could move into a unit within 90 days.

Yang said in order to meet the challenge, the city needs more landlords willing to rent units to homeless veterans.

鈥淲e’re trying to do this as fast as possible,鈥 he said.

Challenges

The city’s efforts to meet the goal of ending veteran homelessness have been hampered by a limited supply of rental units and changing federal criteria.

When Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell first pledged to join the national campaign, HUD had a list of five criteria to determine if a city had met the goal of ending veteran homelessness. They included ensuring that there are no unsheltered homeless veterans and creating a plan for providing permanent housing to all veterans who are in temporary shelter.

But in October last year, HUD released new benchmarks for measuring success:

  • The city should have no veterans who are , which refers to people who have a disabling condition, such as a substance abuse problem, and have been homeless either for an entire year or at least four times over the past three years.
  • The average amount of time for moving a veteran into housing is less than 90 days.
  • The total number of newly identified homeless veterans should be less than the total number of homeless veterans moving into housing.
  • The total number of homeless veterans entering service-intensive transitional housing is less than the newly identified homeless veterans.

Ryan Okahara, who leads HUD’s Honolulu office, said the city has consistently scored well on the last two benchmarks, but has struggled with the first two.

For example, as of May, it took an average of 235 days for a homeless veteran to enter permanent housing here, far more than the goal of 90.

The relative lack of supply of affordable units in Honolulu makes it hard to move veterans into housing quickly.

According to Amy Rohlfs, a public affairs officer at the in Honolulu, homeless veterans are 鈥渙ver-represented with chronic medical illness, mental health and substance abuse issues, social-legal justice issues, low rates of lifetime employment, historical dependence on subsidy programs and lack of support systems.鈥

All of that can make it harder to convince homeless veterans to move into housing and persuade landlords to accept them. As of May, there were still 68 chronically homeless veterans in Honolulu and seven of them hadn’t accepted offers to move into permanent housing.

A National Issue

Despite still having hundreds of homeless veterans on the street, 鈥淗onolulu is by no means alone,鈥 said Okahara from HUD.

贬鲍顿鈥檚 that two states and 20 communities have eliminated veterans’ homelessness. But hundreds of communities that accepted the challenge, including major cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and Portland, haven’t met the goal.

While Los Angeles has a larger veteran homeless population, the city has seen bigger gains than Honolulu, reporting a in a recent survey 鈥斕齛 decrease from over .

Jones from LA’s Inner City Law Center said the success has been fueled by federal funding for , which are rental subsidies given to veterans. Los Angeles County for HUD-VASH vouchers in fiscal year 2016.

Caldwell chats with a police office while observing homeless people in Chinatown. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

In Hawaii, about $6.65 million has been allocated for HUD-VASH vouchers. According to Okahara, there are 677 vouchers statewide and 500 are on Oahu.

That doesn’t include another $6.5 million that the VA is spending for staff, grants and emergency housing programs.

Rohlfs from the VA said as of now, there are some 50 veterans who have vouchers in hand, but are unable to find housing.

Still, she and Okahara remain optimistic.

鈥淗onolulu is one of a few major cities which is positioned to end homelessness amongst veterans by the end of the year,鈥 Rohlfs wrote in an email.

鈥淭he only thing standing in our way is finding affordable housing,鈥 she added.

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