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IILLINOIS SHELTER HELPS VETERANS REGAIN LIVES --
Founded by two veterans who thought the words
"soldier"
and "homeless" shouldn't occur in the same
sentence.

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Story here...
http://www.midweeknews.com/articles/
2007/10/31/local/de%20kalb_county/dekalbcounty01.txt
Story below:
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More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Shelter helps veterans regain lives
By Diane Strand
Bill enlisted in the Marine Corps and became a helicopter mechanic. He
later married another Marine and they have one child who is now 7.
But after he was discharged, he followed his wife to a small town in Texas
where the only job he could find was in roofing for his father-in-law's
company. It felt wrong, so Bill left Texas to get work elsewhere. Along
the way, the couple divorced and Bill gained custody of his son, though
his mom has guardianship.
Alcohol has been short-circuiting his goals.
A tall handsome guy, Bill is now living at the Midwest Shelter for
Homeless Veterans, in Wheaton, trying to get it all together. The shelter
opened Jan. 8 of this year.
Looking back, he said, “I went to the boonies in Texas. As a helicopter
mechanic I thought I would have a good chance, for example, as an aviation
technician. I applied to all the major airlines,” without success.
Bill said his son “gives me strength to work toward my goals and to build
a family.”
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The shelter is nestled in a comfortable older
home in residential Wheaton, founded by two vets who thought the words
“soldier” and “homeless” shouldn't occur in the same sentence.
Co-founder Bob Adams is a social worker, and the other half of the
equation, Dirk Enger, an ironworker. They both were combat vets-Adams in a
hospital unit in Vietnam in 1968, and Enger in a Marine Corps. elite unit
in Desert Storm/Desert Shield in 1991.
Adams said ignoring vets in trouble is inconsistent with “our military
training and the values they gave us-you don't leave anyone behind.”
Marvin's story was longer; he enlisted in the army during the Vietnam War
“I never went into battle, but I did go the DMZ. I was a tank driver and
gunner and later became a supply clerk.”
When he came home to Oklahoma, he took a civil service job, was married
for 11 years, and had two kids, then was divorced. A second marriage
produced three more children but also ended in divorce. “But I have five
beautiful kids,” Marvin said.
Substance abuse has also been an albatross around Marvin's neck.
There is zero tolerance at the shelter.The guy who uses loses. Adams said
a tough policy is the only way to run a homeless shelter; otherwise,
everything spins out of control.
The difficulties these men face probably won't be as tough as many other
soldiers from Afghanistan and Iraq, Adams said. Soldiers are coming home
having lost several limbs. In other wars, “They wouldn't have survived.
Tammy Duckworth wouldn't have survived,” he said referring to the officer
who lost one leg and part of another in a helicopter assault. She now
heads Veterans' Affairs in Illinois.
Adams described the extent of the problem, “On any given night, there are
20,000 homeless veterans in Illinois, 18,000 of them in the Chicago
metropolitan area. Illinois has the fourth largest number in the country.”
Their little shelter is the only one for vets in DuPage County, yet DuPage
is the third wealthiest county in the country, they said.
Midwest Shelter has received a grant from HUD which paid half the purchase
price of the Wheaton home and the rest is mortgaged. The shelter also has
a per diem grant from the VA.
Adams and Enger are strictly volunteers.
The neighborhood has been supportive of the shelter which flies a U.S.
flag and a POW/MIA flag out front. The church across the street, Trinity
Episcopal, has been a major benefactor, Enger said, and other churches
have helped, including St. John's Catholic in Winfield. The city council
and mayor also have been receptive.
“We did a survey and a couple of open houses for our neighbors,” Adams
said. “People wanted to know what we were doing.” A board of directors
with members from the business community also provides strong support.
The shelter now houses five vets, but they are planning an expansion to
house 10 more.
Adams and Enger help vets with job searches and retraining, as well as
obtaining driver's licenses. “The park district hired two of our
residents,” Enger said proudly.
The average stay for a veteran is four to nine months, Adams said. Medical
care is provided by Hines Hospital in Maywood, as well as psychological
services for issues of substance abuse and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
As a social worker, Adams provides counseling and also has a small private
practice in Lombard.
Vets with substance abuse problems are required to participate in a
12-step program. “The church across the street has AA meetings seven days
a week,” Enger said.
PTSD is a major problem, the co-founders warn, and the armed services
should be screening for it. “We imagine there will be a real avalanche of
cases from Afghanistan and Iraq and help will be needed over time,” Enger
said.
Transportation in suburbia is a challenge, so the shelter was able to
purchase a van through the VA, which is available to take residents to
jobs or other appointments.
Residents do most of their own cooking and attendance at the evening meal
is required.
Both the public and the military fail to calculate the long-term costs of
war,” Adams said, “high crime rates, high divorce rates, substance abuse,
violence, especially domestic violence-and the loss of useful, productive
lives.”
Upcoming talk
Enger will speak about the shelter at 7 p.m. Thursday at the First
Congregational Church, 615 N. First St. in DeKalb. The event is sponsored
by the DeKalb Interfaith Network for Peace and Justice and the NIU Black
Student Union.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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