VA says it’s helping a record number of homeless veterans find permanent housing
The Department of Veterans Affairs said it assisted nearly 52,000 formerly homeless veterans with housing in fiscal year 2025.
Michele Sandiford
November 20, 2025 2:01 pm
< a min read
- The Department of Veterans Affairs said it’s helping a record number of homeless veterans find permanent housing. The VA said it assisted nearly 52,000 formerly homeless veterans with housing in fiscal 2025. That’s more than any previous year tracked by the department. The VA provides subsidies to help some veterans afford rent on houses or apartments. In other cases, it helps reunite homeless veterans with family or friends.
- A bipartisan push to extend a cybersecurity information sharing law may have a path forward in the Senate. A 10-year extension of the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 could be included in a future spending package. That’s according to Sens. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), the co-sponsors of the bill. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has been blocking their bill. But Peters and Rounds told the audience at the Aspen Institute Cyber Summit on Tuesday that the bill would have plenty of support if it can reach the Senate floor as part of a package. Congress included a short-term extension of the CISA 2015 law in the continuing resolution.
- The Army has selected nine installations as potential sites for microreactor power plants under its next-generation Janus nuclear power program. Meanwhile, the Defense Innovation Unit issued a solicitation for commercial advanced nuclear technologies to support the effort. The nine sites the Army identified through comprehensive analysis include Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. The Army said the final number and location for these microreactors will be determined as part of the acquisition process, but the service is committed to maximizing the number of sites.
- Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll instructed unit leaders to check in on their soldiers daily now through Jan. 15. In a memo to the force, Driscoll mandated every officer and noncommissioned officer to “deliberately” check in on every soldier to see if they need help. “The holidays can be a high-risk period for self-harm. We know it’s a problem, it happens every year, so we’ll address it head-on,” Driscoll said in the memo. The effort is based on initiatives like in the 11th Airborne Division in Alaska, where they “systemically prioritized soldier checks” to combat a high suicide rate.
- The Office of Personnel Management has kicked off another human resources IT modernization effort. OPM is reviewing responses to an RFI and meeting with vendors for how to modernize the USA Hire platform. Agencies use USA Hire to conduct assessments of applicants for jobs. In fiscal 2024, agencies used the program to assess approximately one million applicants for over 20,000 job opportunity announcements. OPM expects agency use to continue to grow, especially from TSA and ICE as they hire more employees. OPM plans to release a draft solicitation in January and a final request for proposals in October to modernize the USA Hire platform.
- The Office of Personnel Management is close to finalizing its effort to strip job protections from tens of thousands of federal employees. OPM’s proposed regulations for the so-called “Schedule Policy/Career” classification have been moved into the “final rule stage,” according to the White House’s regulatory agenda. Those regulations are slated for possible finalization by the end of November. OPM’s final rule will impact career employees in “policy-influencing positions,” making them at-will and easier to fire.
- NASA is moving quickly to consolidate up to a quarter of its suburban Maryland campus. The International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers said the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is embarking on plans to close 13 buildings on its campus. The union said NASA began work closing buildings and labs in late September and that this work continued through the government shutdown. The agency is looking to reduce 25% of the campus’s real estate by 2037.
- The General Services Administration continues to lower the price for access to AI tools. First it was $1, then it was 50 cents. Now for a quarter, agencies are able to buy artificial intelligence tools through the GSA schedule contract. Under a new deal signed with the GSA, Perplexity is offering its AI research and drafting capabilities for a mere 25 cents for the next 18 months. GSA said it structured the deal to make the software available directly from Perplexity through the GSA schedule. Previously, agencies could only access Perplexity through a reseller. This is the first OneGov agreement GSA signed that is directly with an original equipment manufacturer, or OEM.
- Agencies are likely to see an uptick in Freedom of Information Act delays and backlogs. That’s because agency FOIA offices were furloughed through the shutdown, but the law requires agencies to count normal working days during the shutdown as part of the FOIA processing time. That’s according to new Justice Department guidance to federal FOIA offices. DOJ said there were 29 days during the shutdown that will count toward FOIA requests and administrative appeals processing.
- The Trump administration’s cuts to the federal workforce are becoming more apparent across the country. Close to half of respondents in a nonprofit’s recent survey said they or someone they know have been personally affected by the government cuts. Six months ago, less than a third of respondents said the same. The new survey from the Partnership for Public Service also found that the impacts are disproportionately affecting younger adults.
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