More homeless female veterans seek shelter
Housing falling far short of demand, social-services advocates say
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DAYTON, Ohio - When Carisa Dogen looks back on her life of 38 years, it's easy to see where she lost her way: She left her hometown of Dayton at 15 and moved to Kentucky, where she graduated from high school and enrolled in electronics school. But drugs beckoned, and she didn't finish.
She joined the military, but fate intervened and she later found herself homeless — forced to sleep in parks on some nights when it was bitterly cold and rainy, and scavenge for food in trash cans.
"I got accosted a couple of times by males. Walking the streets and stuff, it's hard and it's scary," she said in the comfort of The Other Place, a homeless shelter in Dayton that helped put her into new housing where she will receive treatment and job training.
Particularly bewildering for Dogen, she is an Army veteran. Her life should never have come to this.
Of the 1.8 million female military veterans, Dogen was among the 7,000 to 8,000 who are homeless, as estimated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. She is among the few who have benefited from new housing specifically for female veterans, an initiative homeless advocates say falls far short of what is needed.
Dogen will live in a 27-unit renovated apartment building for female veterans on the Dayton Veterans Affairs Medical Center campus. It was completed in August and is expected to be completely filled sometime this month.
A new phenomenon
That number of apartments intended specifically for female veterans makes the building one of the largest of about a dozen around the nation, said Peter Dougherty, director of homeless veterans programs for Veterans Affairs. Run by a private housing agency, it will give veterans access to medical services, day care, job training, and drug and alcohol counseling.
The homeless female veteran is a relatively new phenomenon because only recently have so many women — more than 190,000 in Iraq and Afghanistan alone — been serving in the military, said Todd DePastino, a historian at Waynesburg University who wrote a book on the history of homelessness.
The number of homeless female veterans have gone up — from 3 percent of all homeless veterans a decade ago to 5 percent, the VA says.
"It's a national embarrassment," said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.
For Dogen, the struggle is personal.
For nine years she lived in Dayton, until she turned 15 and moved to Pikeville, Ky., where she graduated high school.
"I had to carry a briefcase, and my grandma had me go to school in three-piece suits," Dogen recalled.
Seeking shelter
After graduating in 1988, Dogen moved to Louisville to study electronics and got mixed up in drugs. She quit school. "I was kind of ashamed and embarrassed to go back home because I didn't finish school," she said, so she moved to Murray, Ky., and enlisted in the Army.
But depression set in, and she turned to alcohol to take the edge off. Then as she prepared to deploy overseas in 1990 as the military geared up for action in the Persian Gulf, the Army discovered she had scoliosis — which causes an abnormal curvature of the spine — and gave her a medical discharge. Out of work and unable to sit or stand for long periods, she collected a box of rejection letters from potential employers.
"It was a long time before I started working because I had a drinking problem," she said.
But she has been out of work since 2000, on and off drugs for 10 years and in March lost the apartment she had since 2005. Which is how she ended up at The Other Place, which served as a temporary shelter while she applied for housing on the VA Medical Center campus.
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