Combat Vets Aim to End Homelessness with Tiny Homes

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Chris Stout, Army veteran and founder of the Veterans Community Project, was chosen one of CNN's Top 10 Heroes for 2018. (Courtesy photo)

When former Army Cpl. Chris Stout saw his fellow veterans struggling with homelessness, he set out to solve the problem by going small -- really small. Tiny, even.

On Veterans Day 2015, Stout and three other combat vets started the Veterans Community Project (VCP), a nonprofit that builds communities of tiny homes, providing a host of services for veterans.

During a 2005 combat tour in Afghanistan, Stout was wounded and transitioned back to Kansas City, Missouri. Like many wounded warriors, he struggled with physical and mental injuries. He knew that he felt better when in the company of other veterans, and for a short time, he worked as a veteran counselor connecting vets to services they needed.

But it wasn't enough.

"I often would use my own money to put up vets in a hotel room," Stout said. "I felt like there must be [a] better way to get vets the services they needed, as well as housing."

With its focus first on the greater Kansas City area, VCP wants to use the region as the blueprint for achieving similar successes in cities across the United States. Long term, they aspire to eliminate veteran homelessness nationwide.

Volunteers help with the finishing touches on some of the tiny homes in the Veterans Community Project village.
Volunteers help with the finishing touches on tiny homes in the Veterans Community Project village.

"We are the place that says 'yes' first and figures everything else out later," Stout said. "We serve anybody who's ever raised their hand to defend our Constitution."

Homelessness is one of the major contributors to the high suicide rate of veterans, he said. According to the latest 2016 Department of Veterans Affairs study, that rate is 22 per day among younger veterans ages 18-34.

In the VCP program, veterans get more than just a home; they get a community of like-minded veterans supporting each other.

"It's very much like the barracks lifestyle, except that each veteran has their own home," Stout said. "They're taking care of each other. We also have a community center for them to gather and share camaraderie."

The founders of VCP say on their website they are a team of "connectors, feelers and doers on a mission to help our kin, our kind. We move with swift, bold action and will always serve with compassion."

Stout and his partners use their military logistics prowess to ensure that their housing communities are located along convenient bus lines and provide every veteran a free bus pass to allow easy transportation.

"We like to have them say, 'What do you provide?' That way, we can ask them, 'What do you need?' And then we can start being the connectors," Stout said. "At least 60% of the people that we serve, we're serving them because of a poor transition from the military."

And it's thanks, in part, to his work with that community that he's accumulated a wealth of good advice on how to survive the transition from the military into the civilian world.

To create a personalized transition plan for yourself, and for transition guides and checklists, visit the Military.com Transition Center.

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Whether you want to polish up your resume, find veteran job fairs in your area, or connect with employers looking to hire veterans, Military.com can help. Sign up for a free Military.com membership to have job postings, guides and advice, and more delivered directly to your inbox. 

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