By Michelle Ye Hee Lee The Republic | azcentral.com Mon Sep 2, 2013 1:13 AM
The population of female veterans in the U.S. is small, but the
challenges the women face to stave off homelessness are significant.
Sandra Keeme, 35, served in the U.S. Navy for seven years. She was
deployed three times — twice to Iraq, once to Japan.
During her deployment to Japan, she was sexually assaulted by a
fellow soldier. She developed trust and anger issues and quickly spiraled into
alcoholism after she left the Navy. She eventually became homeless.
Keeme is one of six women living at a transitional housing
facility for veterans in downtown Phoenix, run by the Madison Street Veterans
Association, a local non-profit that helps homeless vets. She has
post-traumatic stress disorder as a secondary effect of military sexual trauma.
PTSD and military sexual assault are common among women in the military and are
increasingly gaining national attention as more women step forward.
“We’ve all been through kind of the same situation. Being a part
of the veteran community is like you have automatically an extended family,”
Keeme said, sitting on her bunk bed in the veteran women’s center at MANA
House, which stands for Marines, Army, Navy and Air Force.
“Especially female veterans, there’s not that many of us, but
there’s a lot more than there used to be,” she said. “We can identify with
being surrounded by guys and being kind of taken for granted sometimes.”
Female veterans make up about 17 percent of the veteran population
in the U.S., according to the Arizona Department of Veterans’ Services.
MANA House provides transitional housing for homeless male
veterans, and opened its doors to women earlier this year. It is one of the
only resources specifically provided for homeless female veterans in the
Valley. There is room for up to 16 women there.
The long-term viability
of the women’s shelter at MANA House is unclear because it does not
have a stable funding source. There are several fundraising efforts to pay for
the women’s space until the organization’s leaders can find a stable source of
money.
Sean Price, homeless-veterans-services coordinator for the Arizona
Department of Veterans’ Services, indicated that the number of female veterans
who become homeless is relatively small. But he said there are “unique
challenges and needs for the women that do become homeless.”
“We don’t know how many women veterans are homeless in the Valley.
I think one of the biggest reasons we don’t know is because of the domestic
violence that is prevalent in the veteran world,” Price said.
At MANA House, the women openly talk about menopause and other
female issues. The area looks more like a hospital emergency room, with
pastel-colored plastic curtains used as partitions between bunk beds. But for
the women, it’s a safe haven where they can work to stabilize themselves and
work to find a home.
“This is really the only place for women, and they barely have
room for us. We share the military. We share the homelessness,” said Bonnie
Diaz, who served in the Air Force from 1987 to 1994.
Diaz has been at MANA House since March and is on the hunt for a
job. She lost her job and became homeless after her fiance, with whom she was
searching for a new place to live, was arrested.
Diaz is the “squad leader” of the women’s area at MANA House,
responsible for keeping the living space in order and helping other residents.
The men’s center operates in the same way, with residents divided into
squadrons that rotate chores.
Greater Phoenix is gaining national attention for its efforts to
combat veteran homelessness, regardless of gender or family status. Most
prominently, President Barack Obama gave a nod to Phoenix during his speech on
middle-class homeownership last month, saying the area is on track to end
chronic homelessness among veterans by mid-2014.
It is difficult to find funding for just female veterans, but
there are general resources designed for veterans that are available for both
women and men, Price said.
Project H3: Vets is a program coordinated by the Arizona Coalition
to End Homelessness, which works with community organizations to use federal
housing vouchers to get chronically homeless veterans into permanent housing.
The veterans also receive services to help them get back on their feet, such as
substance-abuse counseling and behavioral-health care.
The program has been highlighted by federal agencies, including
the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, as a model for other
areas combating veteran homelessness. After Obama’s speech in Phoenix, three
regions — Washington, D.C., Salt Lake City and Philadelphia — challenged
Phoenix in a race to end veteran homelessness.
Terry Araman, program director at the Madison Street Veterans
Association, said he wants to keep the women’s center at MANA House a
transitional place that could provide women with the specific services they
need until they can find housing on their own.
Keeme, for example, needs a place to stay while she addresses
legal issues with a DUI charge.
By October, she wants to move to Prescott and start a new life.
MANA House is a dry house, meaning no alcohol consumption is allowed. Keeme
receives substance-abuse counseling and attends Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.
“Constantly, since we opened the doors, I’ve had people ask, and
women veterans ask: ‘You have a space for men; when are you going to have a
place for women?’ ” Araman said.
Araman made available an area in MANA House for 16 women, which
costs between $200,000 and $250,000 a year. He intended the women’s center to
be supported the same way MANA House was, through a Veterans Affairs funding model,
but he was not able to obtain the same funding.
While Araman works on
securing a stable funding source for the women’s shelter, organizations and
individuals are raising money.
The non-profit Veterans of Foreign Wars will host a 5K/10K run on
Sept. 15 to raise money for women at MANA House.
“As a nation, it’s our obligation to make sure
we’re stepping up and not shortchanging women veterans, because I think that’s
what has happened in the past,” Araman said. “They’re a small group and maybe
not as vocal, maybe not as prominent as the men veterans. But still, they
deserve all the support we give to the men.”









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