ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Sunday, November 10, 1996              TAG: 9611110048
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL   PAGE: A-8  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: WASHINGTON


VETERANS DISPROPORTIONATELY HOMELESS ASSOCIATED PRESS

One in every three homeless men seeking refuge at a network of shelters is a veteran, a survey released Saturday showed. The figure far exceeds the percentage of veterans in the overall population or of male veterans among all American males.

``The scars of Vietnam still are not fully healed for many veterans,'' said the Rev. Stephen Burger, executive director of the International Union of Gospel Missions. The union, a nondenominational shelter organization, has conducted the survey for the past eight years.

``Large numbers of Vietnam veterans, unable to cope with the post-traumatic stress of their wartime service, continue to come through our doors.''

The union reported a gradual increase in the percentage of veterans using its shelters over the last three years. The missions say the rise may stem in part from reductions in the nation's active-duty forces, but the study included no breakdown of how many veterans were from the Vietnam era.

``Many recently discharged veterans are having difficulty making the transition from the order of military life,'' Burger said. ``There aren't many positions available in civilian life for tank drivers.''

Phil Rydman, spokesman for the Kansas City-based organization, said war-related stress and drug and alcohol abuse are among the most common problems facing homeless veterans.

``We're dealing with the trauma of coming back from war, plus the addictions and substance abuse that these fellows have,'' Rydman said.

The survey, conducted at 133 shelters across the country, found that 34 percent of the 10,400 men seeking refuge were veterans of war or military service.

In 1991, the union survey showed 29 percent veterans, a figure that remained stable until 1993. Then, it began a steady increase to the current level.

By comparison, the Veterans Administration estimates there are almost 27 million veterans in all, about 10 percent of the total population. About 19 percent of all men are veterans.

National statistics on the homeless vary widely. In 1994, a Clinton administration task force estimated that 7 million Americans were homeless sometime during the second half of the 1980s, far more than the 1990 Census calculation of 600,000 people.


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