|

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

Be sure to get all five
VA Watchdog dot Org
RSS feeds --
Daily VA
News Flashes
House CVA
Veterans' News
Senate CVA
Veterans' News
VA Press
Releases
VSO Press
Releases

Download
your
free copy of the
2007 VA benefits
handbook here...

|
Printer-Friendly Version
VETERANS HELPING OTHER VETERANS -- He was homeless
before seeking help for drug and alcohol problems
more
than six years ago. Now the former Army medic
works
with homeless veterans as part of a national
initiative the VA launched two years ago.

Homeless veteran Darrell Briggs,
right, spoke with certified peer specialist Tony Cobbin at the St.
John Center. Cobbin is a former homeless veteran himself who now
offers couseling through the Department of Veterans Affairs. (Photo
by Sam Upshaw Jr., The Courier-Journal) |
Story here...
http://www.courier-journal.com/ap
ps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080121/NEWS01/801210426
Story below:
-------------------------
Veterans help other vets
VA taps experience, aids homeless
By Marcus Green
magreen@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
In a tiny office sheltered from the din of the St. John Center, Tony
Cobbin leans closer to the homeless man in a wheelchair and listens to a
familiar story.
Darrell Briggs, a 53-year-old Army veteran, tells Cobbin that he is once
again trying to get sober.
It's a story that Cobbin, a counselor with the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs, knows well.
He was homeless before seeking help for drug and alcohol problems more
than six years ago. Now the former Army medic works with homeless veterans
as part of a national initiative the VA launched two years ago.
Article continues below:
"ASK
THE BUILDER" VIDEOS -- HOME IMPROVEMENT TIPS
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
Sitting across from Briggs, Cobbin relates how
treatment helped him after several failed attempts. He talks about how his
life changed when he entered a program at Interlink Counseling. He says
he's been sober since June 16, 2001.
"All I'm doing is passing on information that was given to me," Cobbin
says. "I'm just passing it to you because I know it worked for me, and I
hope you can see that it worked for me."
"Oh, I can see that," Briggs says.
"And," Cobbin says, "I hope it is something in me that you see that will
inspire you, man."
A new approach
The Veterans Affairs Department took an unusual step to help homeless
veterans two years ago: It began hiring people who know the situation
firsthand.
Nationwide, the department budgeted $5.9 million for about 124 full-time
peer counseling positions in 2007, according to the VA.
The government created the program in part because of a successful
initiative in Boston that pairs formerly homeless veterans with veterans
looking to get off the streets and into housing, said Paul Smits, a VA
consultant on homelessness issues.
"It's been so helpful," Smits said of the Boston program. "We've had such
good feedback from veterans who've been able to benefit from it."
That's the goal of officials in Louisville.
"Sometimes the bottom line is somebody who has actually been there and can
speak to that -- homelessness and the recovery process," said Todd Dedas,
a VA healthcare coordinator.
Cobbin speaks openly about his experience on the streets.
He grew up in Flint, Mich., and joined the Army at 18. He served from 1979
to 1990, he says, and drugs contributed to a demotion from sergeant to
specialist that eventually resulted in an honorable discharge.
Cobbin had used alcohol, hashish, heroin and other drugs, but he said his
spiral into drug addiction accelerated in September 1987, when he was
introduced to crack cocaine. He had arrived at a friend's house at Fort
Sam Houston in Texas for training after being stationed in Europe.
"I walked into his house and he shook my hand with one hand and gave me
that pipe with the other hand, and my life kind of went downhill from that
point on," he says.
Once he left the Army, Cobbin worked as a firefighter in Flint during most
of the 1990s, but his drug use continued. He used "whatever I could get my
hands on."
During his Army career, Cobbin had been stationed at Fort Knox. After
hearing from his ex-wife about a treatment program in Louisville, he
boarded a bus from Michigan with a gym bag and $20.
From there he went to Interlink, and then to a halfway house.
Skip forward a few years to a day last month. Cobbin is imploring Briggs
to seek treatment at Interlink.
"If I can do this, man, you can do it," Cobbin says.
Briggs agrees: "I can't keep doing what I'm doing." With his background,
Cobbin believes he's able to relate to homeless veterans. He just doesn't
know yet if he's making a difference.
But when Cobbin recently spoke at a mental health event at Louisville's VA
hospital, he was approached by a man grateful for a new outlook inspired
by Cobbin.
"To me that's what it's all about," Cobbin says.
Vet homelessness drops
Advocates for homeless veterans say little research has been done to gauge
the results of such peer counseling, although a Baltimore study on housing
assistance is to be completed this year.
"The idea that there is research being done … on the effectiveness of
one-on-one mentoring or counseling -- we know that that has to be better
than no help at all," said John Driscoll, vice president of operations and
programs for the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans.
Nationwide, programs designed to help homeless veterans appear to be
working. A VA survey reported that an estimated 195,827 homeless veterans
used its facilities each night in 2006, which Driscoll said is down from
more than 300,000 in 2003.
But the National Alliance to End Homelessness estimates that the number of
homeless veterans rose slightly from 2005 to 2006.
The news was better for Kentucky, where an estimated 425 veterans were
homeless in 2006, down 56 percent from the year before. In Indiana, the
number of homeless veterans dropped by about 100, to 1,200. The national
drop is due to expanded care through counseling centers, VA staff who work
closely with homeless veterans and an increase in locally based services,
Driscoll said.
Most services for homeless veterans emerged after the end of the Vietnam
War, and it took soldiers from that era about a decade to request help, he
said. Now, there are hundreds more places where homeless veterans can get
help.
For that reason, and because veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan
are getting early mental health assessments, "there is reason to think
that the impact is not going to be as severe as it was after Vietnam,"
Driscoll said.
The vast majority of veterans who served in those wars have not
experienced homelessness, according to the coalition, but Driscoll expects
the numbers will rise in the years to come.
The reasons veterans become homeless are complex and can't necessarily be
traced to their military or combat experiences, including post-traumatic
stress.
A study funded by the VA shows that about 12 percent of homeless veterans
were homeless before enlisting or had problems associated with
homelessness, such as poverty, Driscoll said.
"In an all-volunteer force a lot of people do go into the military because
it is the way out of poverty or out of compromised family situations. …
For the great, great majority of people that go that route, the military
is their salvation," he said.
Victory can be elusive
During a typical week, Cobbin sees a stream of homeless veterans. Some are
looking to get warm. Others, like Briggs, want help getting identification
cards.
Whatever the reason, Cobbin tries to find out why they are homeless and,
when needed, prod them to seek treatment. He says the two most common
causes of homelessness are substance abuse and mental illness.
When they spoke in December, Briggs said he struggled with drugs and
alcohol and became homeless about 10 years ago after his mother died. He
couldn't pay the mortgage because of his crack habit.
Briggs said he'd been to Interlink twice but hadn't completed the program.
"So this time I want to do what it takes to get my life back together," he
said. "I can't take this no more."
But a month after talking to him, Cobbin hadn't seen Briggs.
"We don't know where he's at," he said. "We don't have a clue."
Reporter Marcus Green can be reached at (502) 582-4675.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
email Larry
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page) |

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

|