Boston Globe: More Female Veterans are Winding up Homeless

The Boston Globe recently spoke to IAVA Executive Director Paul Rieckhoff and IAVA Member Veteran Angela Peacock for this article addressing the alarming rise in homelessness among female veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.
“Some of the first homeless vets that walked into our office were single moms,’’ said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director and founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. “When people think of homeless vets, they don’t think of a Hispanic mother and her kids. The new generation of veterans is made up of far more women.’’
Many of them are like Angela Peacock, a former Army sergeant who was diagnosed with PTSD when she returned from Iraq in 2004 and became addicted to pain-killers.
Later evicted from her apartment in Texas, she spent more than two years “couch-hopping’’ between friends and family before moving in as a squatter in an empty house in St. Louis.
“They could kick me out anytime they want,’’ Peacock said in an interview. “I have been clean for two and a half years and am working on getting my life back, but it doesn’t happen overnight.’’
[link]Press Contacts
To arrange an interview with an IAVA Member Veteran, contact us at press[at]iava.org, or call Michael Houston at (212) 982-9699.

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