Gov. Tim Walz had an urgent request for a group of landlords gathered Wednesday at the Uptown VFW in Minneapolis.
The state has counted 207 homeless veterans remaining in Minnesota. They want to get each of them under their own roof before winter. Would the landlords help?
Slowly, hands raised. Developer Joe Weis committed two units in Rochester and said if a federal veteran housing voucher doesn't cover their rent, he'll make up the rest. Catholic Charities plans to add 250 units and give preference to veterans. Landlord Juanita Pekay said she will house her first homeless veteran starting Thursday.
State leaders walked away buoyed, saying landlords are the missing link in their goal to make Minnesota the fourth state in the nation to end veteran homelessness in a tight rental market.
The federal definition of "ending" homelessness doesn't mean every veteran thereafter will have a home. But meeting the challenge requires the state to hit certain marks: identify all homeless veterans; provide shelter immediately to anyone who doesn't have it and wants it; and help them move into permanent homes. There also needs to be a system to handle veterans who lose their housing or are at risk of homelessness.
To reach that point, Minnesota would need to find 450 units to house people who are now without a place or could become homeless in the months ahead, said state Department of Veterans Affairs Commissioner Larry Herke.
There are 20 to 25 veterans each month who are newly homeless or weren't previously identified by the state despite living without housing for a while, Housing Finance Agency Commissioner Jennifer Ho said.
"Every day there's going to be a new veteran that enters in [to homelessness]. But we said we want it to be rare and brief, and then permanent [housing] once they move off of that," Walz said.