Soldiers of Misfortune
At Bottom Rung of Poverty, More Homeless Veterans Seeking Help By Cameron W. Barr
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 30, 2004; Page B01
Robert Slay sleeps on a wood-framed cot in a tent, set up in a clearing in the woods a few yards from the shopping centers and office buildings along upper Rockville Pike.
He spends parts of his day on a traffic median, fingering a rosary or clutching a Bible along with his appeal for help, neatly lettered on a tattered piece of cardboard. Sometimes, amid the dead-ahead looks, the cell phone conversations and the mirrored sunglasses, a window slides open and a hand emerges offering some coins, a dollar bill or two, or a sandwich. "Every night I pray for the people that have actually given me stuff," he says.
Slay, 52, is also a veteran of the Vietnam War era, and one of a growing number of aging soldiers who find themselves at the bottom rung of poverty.
Despite a Bush administration goal to end homelessness in the United States by 2012, surveys are reporting more people asking local governments and charitable organizations for food and shelter.
A 25-city survey conducted for the U.S. Conference of Mayors and released in December found that requests for shelter rose 13 percent in 2003. Requests for food assistance grew 17 percent from 2002, the survey found.
Kit Angell, coordinator of the Health Care for Homeless Veterans program at the VA Medical Center in Washington, forecasts that her staff will work with more than 1,850 clients this fiscal year, an increase of almost 40 percent over the previous year. "I anticipated increases in the numbers because of the economy, and that has been the case," she said, also citing "a lack of access to rehabilitation and vocational programs." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34442-2004Mar29.html