Menu
Log in
Log in

Young veterans become new face of the homeless

  • Saturday, July 17, 2010 20:30
    Message # 385587
    Deleted user

    Young veterans become new face of the homeless

    Friday, July 16, 2010 at 7:55 p.m.

    Charles Worley, 31, center, is a homeless veteran who came to 
Stand Down Friday looking for help with housing, among other things. He 
met up with Mike Judd, left, and Christopher Lawrence of the 
Iraq-Afghanistan Veterans of San Diego organization.

    Peggy Peattie

    Charles Worley, 31, center, is a homeless veteran who came to Stand Down Friday looking for help with housing, among other things. He met up with Mike Judd, left, and Christopher Lawrence of the Iraq-Afghanistan Veterans of San Diego organization.

    23RD ANNUAL VETERANS VILLAGE OF SAN DIEGO STAND DOWN

    What: Temporary camp for homeless veterans and dependents, offering showers, free clothes, medical and dental care, legal assistance, housing referrals, substance abuse counseling and other help. About 900 people are being served.

    Where: 1465 Park Blvd., San Diego

    When: This weekend through 4 p.m. Sunday

    Contact: (619) 497-0142; info@vvsd.net

    Charles Worley stood in the smoking area, looking at the uniformed Marine volunteers walking around Stand Down for the Homeless.

    That used to be him, with the confident stride, bulked-up muscles and full stomach.

    Instead, this Marine veteran who served two years in Iraq is a Stand Down client. Two years after being discharged, Worley is homeless.

    “I’ve been couch-bouncing. I’ve actually been outdoors for the past three or four days,” said the 31-year-old whose defense industry job lost funding, then unemployment ran out. He missed the deadline for college summer classes, so the G.I. Bill doesn’t help him right now.

    “You think, I’m a United State Marine. As soon as I take my uniform off, I’m going to have 20, 30 job offers. Didn’t work that way. Not in 2008.”

    Worley and young veterans like him are the future faces of homelessness.

    Advocates are braced for a flood of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans on the streets as the combined stresses of combat trauma, a poor economy and lack of a civilian track record take their toll despite the newly amped-up G.I. Bill and five years of free Veterans Affairs Department health care, among other programs.

    A few young faces mixed with the largely older crowd at Stand Down, the three-day effort organized by Veterans Village of San Diego to help homeless veterans leave the streets. The event, now in its 23rd year, was the first of its kind and a national model. Officials say about 900 people entered the gate at San Diego High School on Friday to get services.

    The line started along the fence outside on Tuesday. Many of the faces camped out, waiting for entry, were old hands. Some seasoned Stand Down veterans didn’t have a lot of sympathy for the younger folks who showed up.

    Young spirit, strong back — that should add up to a job and enough money for rent, said Tom Ambersley, 61, who waited in a lawn chair along Park Boulevard for two days before the event started.

    A Navy ship mechanic from 1966 to 1981, he worked in civilian shipyards after that until he hurt his back. Eventually, the state disability checks didn’t cover the bills and he hit the streets of Chula Vista.

    This is the 17th year Ambersley has attended Stand Down, where he is looking forward to getting free dental work. With only a few remaining teeth, he says at least one more needs pulling because it’s loose.

    “I don’t see any connection with the homeless and coming back from the war, unless they are so brain damaged that they shouldn’t be discharged in the first place,” Ambersley said. “They should be able to get a job doing something.”

    But two young Iraq veterans volunteering at Stand Down get it.

    Former Marine Matt Camp and Mike Judd, former Army Airborne, recently started a group called Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of San Diego. Mainly, it’s an effort to gather their fellow veterans for camaraderie.

    But they also see it as a way to catch people before they start slipping toward bad places.

    “We’re going to police our own ranks,” Camp said. “We need to care for our own.”

    Camp had a brush with the streets himself. The first month after his discharge in June 2009, he lived in his truck and on friends’ couches. Still looking for a job, he didn’t have the money for rent. All that combat pay had already been spent.

    Judd said the streets have an allure for someone accustomed to the mindset of the war zone.

    “I do understand the appeal, because I’ve thought about it myself,” said Judd, who is a counselor at Veterans Village of San Diego. “They like the idea of just surviving, because it’s what they did for so long.”

    Like Worley, the former Marine, Keenan Thompson fell a long way to land at San Diego High this weekend.

    The 27-year-old former sailor was featured on the 2005 PBS series “The Carrier,” a 10-part documentary about life about the San Diego-based aircraft carrier Nimitz.

    More recently, he was living, high, on the streets of his native Los Angeles.

    Hurt when an F/A-18 jet rolled across the deck, he got a medical discharge for post-traumatic stress disorder. His drinking turned worse and he couldn’t hold down a job. He hit bottom when he got arrested for drug possession.

    The Los Angeles judge told him to get into a recovery program. He did, turning to Father Joe’s Villages in San Diego, where he is living now.

    “When I got out of the military, I became more emotionally cut off. I was dealing with a lot of nightmares, dreams, alcoholism and all the PTSD symptoms,” he said.

    “It put a lot of strain on my wife and family. I couldn’t hold down a job, and it was a rough time."

    Thompson was at Stand Down in the hope of getting his speeding tickets handled. He’d like to get his drivers license back.

    “I’m just trying to stay positive,” he said.

    Jeanette Steele: (619) 293-1030; jen.steele@uniontrib.com. Follow on Twitter @jensteeley

  • Saturday, July 17, 2010 21:04
    Reply # 385607 on 385587
    Deleted user
    I was honored to work in the clothing shop Friday, and sick at the same time, the small town Iowa Standdown's, I served back home, don't compare to what I saw yesterday.

    The homeless men and women I met were polite and humble and didn't want to be a bother, I kept repeating that it was an honor to serve them as they had once served this country. There was a multitude of barriers, from TBI, PTSD, addictions, and disease, as probably i am guessing an antiquated system that doesn't reach these people soon enough.

    For TWENTY THREE YEARS, this San Diego Standdown has been growing. It is a well run operation, feeding, cleaning and housing more than 900 men women and children, and yes even infants for 3 days and 2 nights, with security and dignity.

    I wanted to cry all he way home, I want to go back next year with a plan. This year, I only wanted to observe, and now I have a year to think about how SWVBRC can best serve the homeless before and after these events and what I what I can do as a state employee to be a good advocate.

    Ask yourself, why are people returning year after year after year? And think about where the young men in this article will be 10 years from now!

    After my grueling day in the heat down there, all I wanted to do was crawl into a cool safe bed, but I felt guilty doing that, knowing there were  900 homeless people still waiting in line for dinner, and 900 volunteers still on the job, so I visited the VFW post in my neighborhood and talked to at least 5 people who DIDN'T even know what a Standdown was. Shame, seems like part one of my plan should be to raise the awareness within the Veteran community.

    Maybe a seasoned homeless person chooses to stay with what they have only known for the last 20 years and maybe there is not much that can be done to help put a roof over their head.

    It sickens me to think we are losing young 20ish year old men the same dismal future after serving and protecting our country. We are a weathly nation, free because of the men and women who wear the USA uniform and we need to direct them to every service provider that is out there, to collect ever benefit they have EARNED.

    I don't want to ever see what I saw yesterday again, but I know I will. And I will spend the rest of my life working towards helping Veterans avoid ending up homeless in the first place.

DOD Welcome home-small.jpg A welcoming home for our Troops.

Welcoming home our men and women doesn't end after the crowd disperses, it MUST continue on for the life of the Veteran! They've served us, now we will serve them with programs that work so they reintegrate into society.

We are a national public benefit nonprofit organization that educates American Communities about best practices to serve Veterans.  We honor their service by empowering Veterans to apply their training and skills to successfully transition to productive careers and enterprises.

We provide free vocational training 24/7 to all of our members through our website, in addition to local events.  We believe the tenet that American Communities are the ultimate beneficiaries when Veterans claim their benefits and invest in productive endeavors.

The SWVBRC enlists the support of members of local Communities like you to increase Veteran awareness of the value of obtaining a VA card and receiving earned benefits.

Sponsorships, donations, volunteers and support from communities like yours enable us to reach out to Veterans and empower them to transition back into successful, productive enterprises that ultimately benefit all Americans and support future generations.

The Internal Revenue Service has determined that Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc. is an organization exempt from federal income tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. A donation to SWVBRC, Inc. is deductible to the extent permitted under law.

© 2008 - 2022 Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc.

 Privacy Policy

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work is posted under fair use without profit or payment as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and/or research.

Contact Us
Designed by The ARRC® & Powered by Wild Apricot.

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software