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Fix The VA Referral Failures That Leave Veterans Homeless
Final signature count: 42
42 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Veterans Site
Veterans who ask VA for housing help should not be lost in a broken referral system.
VA is supposed to identify veterans who are experiencing homelessness or at risk of losing housing, connect them with help, and follow up before crisis deepens. But a December 2025 VA Office of Inspector General audit found serious weaknesses in that process.1
From January through June 2024, VHA screened more than 2.4 million veterans and identified 31,149 who reported either experiencing homelessness or being at risk. About 59%, or 18,250 veterans, asked to be referred to social work or homelessness program staff for help.1
At 42 of 140 facilities, however, between 25% and about 71% of veterans who wanted referral assistance did not receive follow-up action within 30 days, depending on the facility.1 That means veterans who raised their hands for help could still be left waiting.
HUD-VASH Referrals Need Accountability
HUD-VASH is one of the country’s most important tools for housing homeless veterans. HUD says the program combines Housing Choice Voucher rental assistance with VA case management and clinical services.5 VA says those services help homeless veterans and their families find and sustain permanent housing while accessing health care, mental health treatment, and other supports.4
But a March 2026 Government Accountability Office report found that VA did not consistently collect data on why eligible veterans were not referred to HUD-VASH. GAO found 174,045 instances of eligible veterans not being referred from 2020 through 2024, and VA did not document the reason in 151,296 of those cases, or 87%.2
Task & Purpose reported that staffing shortages, high turnover, and burnout contributed to failures to refer veterans into supportive housing, with staff at all eight GAO review sites saying there were not enough HUD-VASH case managers or raising workload concerns.3
VA Must Fix The System Before More Veterans Fall Through
VA’s 2025 Point-in-Time data showed 32,495 veterans experiencing homelessness, including 13,518 living unsheltered.6 Those numbers are lower than past years, but they are still tens of thousands of veterans without stable housing.
Progress cannot depend on a referral system that misses follow-up or leaves gaps undocumented. VA must require written local policies, train staff, create reliable reports, document every non-referral reason, fill case-management positions, expand qualified community partnerships, and report missed follow-ups publicly.
A veteran who screens positive for homelessness risk and asks for help should receive help. No veteran should disappear into an unchecked referral gap.
Sign now to urge VA, HUD, and Congress to fix homeless veteran referral failures and ensure every veteran who asks for housing help receives documented follow-up.
The Petition
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