VETERANS: This needs to be replicated without becoming a Gooferment “program”

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/sixth-tiny-home-village-is-ending-homelessness-for-veteran-across-the-us/?utm_source=newsletter.goodnewsnetwork.org&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=sea-turtles-rebounding-worldwide&_bhlid=ea0d7b3241322bcce7d2f328cc999646126b8478

Sixth Tiny Home Village is Ending Homelessness for Veterans Across the US: ‘This place saved me’
By Good News Network – Oct 19, 2025

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This week, the nonprofit Veterans Community Project (VCP) broke ground on its sixth tiny home village, this time in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to offer more military veterans a fresh start with housing and individualized care.

Each 240-square-foot home is part of a larger community designed to help residents regain stability and independence.

Since its founding in 2018 when they welcomed their first residents in Kansas City, VCP has helped hundreds of vets transition out of homelessness.

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Tiny houses all around the nation?  Small enough to be a “personal neighborhood” and large enough to have a support staff.  This is an “experiment” that seems to be working. 

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INSPIRATIONAL: This seems to be a big step forward to a real solution

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/texas-tiny-house-community-for-the-homeless-nears-2000-neighbors-easing-homeless-in-austin/?utm_campaign=newsletters&utm_medium=weekly_mailout&utm_source=10-01-2024

Texas Tiny Home Community Thrives With 2,000 Neighbors: Easing Homelessness in Austin
By Andy Corbley – Jan 9, 2024 

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“…No one’s ever done what they’re about to do,” Mark Hilbelink, the director of Austin’s largest homeless-services provider, told the New York Times.

In a big feature for the Times, Lucy Tompkins documents the stories of hope and recovery that some of the residents have lived through since moving to Community First!, which is run with a Christian ethic of “Neighborhoods of Knowingness.”

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For all the politicians and bureaucrats slavering about the issue, little gets done.  In this day and age, one would think that if the Gooferment would just get out of the way with all its diktats and “regulations”, private charity could “solve” the problem.  Like the lessons from the Great Chicago Fire, intelligent help can do wonders. All Gooferment did was close down the mental asylums to “save money” and never deliver the local mental health resources that were promised.

Argh!

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INNOVATION: Tiny homes see to solve homelessness?

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-12/los-angeles-tiny-homes-homeless?fbclid=IwAR1jiIIS3DL4O_rPz2IM9JLmfdTkSv7RYsa01MAwfhxfkuxOfgWUraN2dhQ

$130,000 for an 8-foot-by-8-foot shed? That’s what L.A. is paying in a bid to house the homeless
By DOUG SMITH, SENIOR WRITER 
DEC. 12, 2020

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Combining public and private funds, the nonprofit now manages 550 tiny homes in villages on public property, private property and church property around the Seattle area. It costs from $300,000 to $500,000 to set up 40 or 50 homes, depending on the sewer connection, Lee said. Portable toilets initially used have been replaced by permanent bathrooms and showers.

The villages function as communities, with residents all performing chores and, at some, taking part in self-governance.

Seattle’s citizen-driven model never got traction in Los Angeles.

When a self-styled homeless activist started delivering hand-made tiny homes to people living on the streets, the city ruled the structures illegal and quickly stamped out the movement.

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Too bad the Gooferment squashes any private attempt to solve the problem that the Gooferment created!

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