LOS ANGELES — With its donations swelling, a charity formed by the older brother of a firefighter who died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center was ready to up its game.
Its mission of paying the mortgages of fallen first responders' families and building housing for critically injured veterans was no longer enough, Tunnel to Towers founder Frank Siller decided.
"We must expand our mission to eradicate homelessness among our veterans nationwide," Siller told his board late last year.
That goal has brought the New York-based nonprofit to Los Angeles, where it is making a key contribution to expedite the agonizingly slow redevelopment of the Department of Veterans Affairs' West Los Angeles campus into a community for 3,000 veterans.
An undisclosed grant from Tunnel to Towers will fill a multimillion-dollar gap in the financing for construction expected to continue over the next decade to build at least 1,700 units of housing for homeless veterans.
"Their contribution will accelerate the building of those units by hopefully a year or so," said Steve Peck, chief executive of U.S. Vets, one of three developers on the team selected by the VA to build the housing and oversee the services and governance that will make the development a community.
The project grew out of the 2015 settlement of a lawsuit alleging that the VA misused the 388-acre property by leasing parts of it for non-veteran uses while failing to serve veterans.
But since its unveiling in a 2016 master plan, there has been little tangible progress. Although a tiny-home village has been built, allowing the VA and local authorities to relocate homeless veterans who had formed an encampment nearby on San Vicente Boulevard, that was not part of the master plan.