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Front PageFebruary 21, 2008 


Vets: Back from the war but no place to call home
Vetwork helps homeless veterans access services
BY JENNA O'DONNELL Staff Writer
Twenty years ago, Paul Kozak took a leave from his job to start a program to help fellow Vietnam veterans in Ocean County.

GLORIA STRAVELLI Above, Paul Kozak uses the Vetwork van to respond to calls about homeless veterans in need of assistance.
Kozak took a one-year leave of absence and never went back. Years later, that program has expanded and become Vetwork, a nonprofit organization that helps American veterans who find themselves homeless in Monmouth and Ocean counties.

According to theNationalAlliance toEnd Homelessness, there may be as many as 6,500 homeless veterans in the state of New Jersey.

"I sawthat therewas a bigger need," said Kozak of his continued involvementwith the program,which iswell established inOcean County but was lacking a Monmouth County base.

To reach veterans inMonmouth County, Vetwork needed an additional mobile van. That is how theMonmouth CountyAssociation of Realtors (MCAR) became involved.

"There was a need for a mobile office for vets in Monmouth County. When we heard about it, we felt it was something we would want to be a part of," said Jane Canlim, a Realtor with the Tinton Falls-basedMCAR. "It was an eight-to- 10 week project that the public relations committee of MCAR took on."

Plants, books, DVDs and photos of family and his canine companions decorate the apartment of a formerly homeless veteran.
The initiative beganwith a $20,000 grant from the OceanFirst Foundation that could be used toward the van if MCAR raised the additional funds for the vehicle.

"It was really a win-win for both of us," Canlim said. "A little over $13,000 was raised."

Thanks to the donations, Vetwork announced in January that it would be expanding services to provide homeless Monmouth County veterans with emergency services froma rapid-responsemobile unit. To be eligible for services, the veteran must be a single male or female, honorably discharged, andwilling to enter a VAtransitional housing program, work-study program or detox/rehab facility.

Vetwork is a program sponsored by the not-for-profit Vetgroup Inc., based in Forked River in Ocean County. The program responds to and helps veterans dealing with homelessness, providing support services that include counseling, transportation to Veterans Administration health-care facilities, emergency shelter, food, clothing and more.

Vetwork provides services to all honorably dischargedOcean County veterans, but with the help of MCAR's fundraiser, will be able to expand services in Monmouth County.

"Our needs are growing," Kozak said. "We don't want to turn anyone away. The number of veterans who are in need continues to climb, especially as troops return home from the war. Currently, we are well equipped to provide essential services in Ocean County, but we have a real need in Monmouth County."

The priority for Vetwork, Kozak explained, is to provide immediate assistance to homeless veterans in the area. Whether that need is food, shelter or rehab, counselors are ready to assess the situation and provide veterans with the help that they need.

"There's really no way to know how many homeless vets there are," Kozak said. "I address them as they come through my door. We had four guys in the last two weeks that are already in programs."

Joe, a 78-year-old veteran ofWorldWar II, is one example of a Vetwork success story. Although he had served his country and worked continuously over the years, Joe,who does not want his last name used, found himself living in motels, vans and the woods in and aroundMonmouth County formore than 30 years.

Sitting in his cozy, brightly decorated apartment in Brick recently, Joe remembered more than two decades of hardship duringwhich his only homewas a yellowvan and his only companions, his two dogs.

"If it wasn't for Vetwork," Joe said, "I probably would have been dead."

Kozak recalls meeting Joe back in 2005, at a timewhen he needed a place to recuperate from surgery.

"Iwas living in that van for 20 years," Joe said. "And I was working."

Joe, who has lived in New Jersey all his life, lost both of his parents at a young age, leaving himwith little security.At the age of 19, he joined the U.S. Navy, inspired by patriotism, but in retrospect callswar a "necessary evil."

Upon returning fromthe service, Joe took up the family trade of tile work, a trade he continued towork atwhile homeless, but one which he said did not provide a secure source of income.

"[Tilework]was a good trade at one time," Joe said, in a matter-of-fact sort of way. "Some people do very well at it…but I wasn't one of them. For a while you were busy and then there's no work, and before you know it, you can't keep up with the rents."

Joe cited rising rents, the lack of affordable

housing, as the main reason for becoming homeless, despite the fact that he continued

to work at his trade.

A lover of animals and nature, Joe has filled his apartment with colorful plants, photographs of his parents, and images of animals, including his beloved dogs.

His books,whichKozak recalls Joewould haul aroundwith himduring his "yellowvan days," are now neatly stacked on shelves along the wall.

"It goes to show you that a homeless person can live decent too," Joe remarked with pride.

Yet it took a lot of bad breaks and just a few good ones for Joe to get to where he is now, living comfortably in public housing.

"That kind of stuff didn't hold me back. Just like with the homelessness, it happened. There it is- what are you gonna do about it?" he said.

However, when his van broke down and his dogs died, Joe described the nightmare of his years spent wandering and alone.

"I love nature, but I don't want to live in it," Joe said. "Not under those conditions. I like a nice house, a nice apartment. The scariest thing in my life was when I first realizedmy truck was gone- that wasmy security - and thought, 'What am I going to do now?' "

Joe described the horror that he lived through during the two or three years that he spent living in the woods following the loss of his van.

He described the fear of being alone and in the dark without a sense of direction or a point of reference.

"Here I am in the woods, in the dark. It was pitch black. I was lucky when it was warm weather, but I was in the freezing weather too. Sometimes I would walk into huge puddles or get tangled up in weeds. Fromthe distance I could hear people talking and sometimes a gunshot would go off. Someone must have been hunting, and I wondered, am I going to get picked off out here? Iwas alone, Iwas all over, and I hated it. I hated every minute of it."

Help finally came for Joe when someone made a call to Vetwork in 2005.He had been in an insurance office paying an insurance bill to keep his van on the road when a woman there found out about his situation. She reached out to social service agencies unsuccessfully, andwould later call Vetwork on Joe's behalf.

By then itwas amatter of life or death for Joe, who had been getting sick.

"I didn't know my way around as far as bureaucracy," Joe said. "I always just went out and went to work. But the van broke down and I didn't have the money to fix it and you couldn't go towork if you couldn't get there. Then I found Vetwork and they helped me, got me a pension, did a lot for me."

The people at Vetwork also showed Joe something that he had never really found at social services or fromthe surrounding community: compassion.

"I was negative at first," Joe recalled. "I thought, 'They won't be able to help me.' But when I finally got to Vetwork, they offer you coffee…Imean, generosity, you know, instead of 'Oh, you creep, what are you doing here?' "

"Joewas pretty overwhelmed, too,"Kozak remarked. "Hewas under a lot of pressure at the time. He was being chased off the street. He needed an operation and he didn't know how to approach social services."

Vetworkwas able to help Joe access services, getting himfood and shelter, and treatment for his medical condition, as well as a pension and, finally, a home.

"For veterans 62 or over and below a certain income, we can get them a pension," Kozak said. "In Joe's case, we signed himup for a pension, but this takes time."

In the interim,Vetwork provided Joewith food and housing until he was established with an income and an apartment.

When he was working, Joe had been unable to get help finding housing, but Vetwork helped him to secure an income that, along with Social Security benefits, and his pension, is livable.

The first time he closed the door to his own apartment,