Vet Died After VA Center, Jail Refused him
By Becky Ogann
Story Created: Nov 20, 2007
Story Updated: Nov 20, 2007
IOWA CITY (AP) - A homeless Vietnam veteran whose body was found beneath an Iowa City bridge had been turned away just days before from a Veterans Affairs center and the Johnson County jail.That's according to University of Iowa police reports obtained by the Cedar Rapids Gazette.
Sonny Lovino was found dead earlier this month under a bridge. An autopsy showed he died of hypothermia. His body was found two days after Lovino had repeated run-ins with police.
Advocates for the mentally ill say it's hard to help when people refuse treatment.
http://www.kcrg.com/news/local/11640976.html
Looks like the help Iowa offers is not as advertised. Taking into consideration the final sentence of the report "Advocates for the mentally ill say it's hard to help when people refuse treatment." there is no need to wonder why they added that part in. The truth is, Sonny was turned away from the police and the VA. He sought help. He reached out hoping someone would give a damn if he lived or died. He was rejected.
This is what Iowa says they do for the homeless veterans.
Homeless: Nearly one-quarter of all homeless adults are veterans, and many more veterans who live in poverty are at risk of becoming homeless. VA is the only federal agency that provides substantial hands-on assistance directly to the homeless. It has the largest network of homeless assistance programs in the country. More than 15,000 residential rehabilitative, transitional and permanent beds are available for homeless veterans throughout the country.
VA aggressively reaches out to veterans on the street, conducts clinical assessments, offers needed medical treatment, and provides long-term shelters and job training.
More than $265 million is dedicated to specialized homeless programs to assist homeless veterans, including grants and per diem payments to more than 400 public and non-profit groups.
Iowa VA medical facilities seek to break the cycle of homelessness by forming a homeless coordinating group to identify the needs of homeless veterans and to develop programs to meet those needs. This team of professionals has identified four basic needs of the homeless: housing, transportation, dental care and eye care. The team is focused on meeting these basic needs and increasing housing to improve the quality of life. Regional coverage for homeless outreach is based in Des Moines, Iowa City and the Quad Cities area. Domiciliary care is available in Des Moines; compensated work therapy is available for homeless veterans in Des Moines and Knoxville.
These are the totals from last year. There are more now. You also need to keep in mind that there are more they simply do not know about.
State
Funded Beds
Homeless Veterans
AK
0
600
AL
42
824
AR
40
850
AZ
199
3,970
CA
1,875
49,724
CO
102
1,203
CT
103
5,000
DC
43
2,500
DE
15
550
FL
430
18,910
GA
165
3,297
HI
118
800
IA
56
547
ID
10
500
IL
136
2,197
IN
108
1,200
KS
47
601
KY
115
425
LA
150
9,950
MA
378
1,700
MD
241
3,300
ME
0
100
MI
139
3,513
MN
23
523
MO
82
3,325
MS
60
1,579
MT
17
232
NC
182
1,659
ND
0
1,000
NE
12
770
NH
36
257
NJ
142
6,500
NM
30
860
NV
201
4,715
NY
274
21,147
OH
261
1,710
OK
27
500
OR
159
5,891
PA
332
2,784
RI
23
175
SC
110
1,375
SD
42
170
TN
241
2,844
TX
233
15,967
UT
145
530
VA
86
870
VT
10
30
WA
167
6,800
WI
209
828
WV
41
347
WY
31
98
PR
12
80
TOTAL
7,700
195,827
http://www.nchv.org/page.cfm?id=81
This is a report from the UK on New York on people going hungry. Just regular people who cannot afford to eat.
New York hunger levels 'rising'
Over 1.3 million people, one in six New Yorkers, cannot afford enough food, with queues at soup kitchens getting longer, anti-poverty groups say.
The New York City Coalition Against Hunger says the number of people who use food pantries and soup kitchens in the city increased by 20% in 2007.
Some of the food distribution points are struggling to meet demand.
The coalition blames the situation mainly on increased poverty as well as government cutbacks in food aid.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7106726.stm
What has this nation become? What are we doing? Why do we allow Congress to spend over a trillion dollars to wage wars while veterans come home only to end up homeless? Why do we allow them to give tax breaks to the rich people while regular people go hungry? Why do we allow Congress to constantly claim they care about the poor and needy in this nation, in their own states while ignoring the fact most of them do not tell the truth?
This is Thanksgiving day. Traditionally a day to give thanks for the bounty of this nation. As you gather with your family today, feasting and appreciating all you have, maybe you will appreciate it more finally acknowledging many in this country have nothing. While they too are Americans, this land of hope and plenty offers them plenty of misery. The government fails them, churches and charities fail them, the people in this nation fail them.
My heart breaks for all the forgotten in this nation but above all it breaks for the veterans. Veterans like Sonny who came home from where he was sent, fed, clothed, sheltered while he served, only to survive, return home wounded and die under a bridge because he was turned away on a cold night, not once, but twice.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If it is not helpful, do not be hurtful. Spam removed so do not try putting up free ad.