Trump Budget Zeros Out 6,000 Homeless Veterans Housing
President Donald Trump allocated zero dollars in his $2.2 trillion fiscal 2027 budget proposal for a promised Los Angeles facility to house 6,000 homeless veterans, despite signing an executive order last year pledging completion by January 1, 2028. The proposed National Center for Warrior Independence was to be constructed on the West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Medical Center campus, but Trump's budget included no funding for the housing project.
Trump's administration has required Department of Veterans Affairs officials and local advocates to sign nondisclosure agreements regarding the project, preventing transparency about planning and costs. During a May 13 House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing, Republican Chairman Mike Bost demanded answers, stating "Transparency should be a priority, not an option," and Rep. Derrick Van Orden criticized the plan as incomplete, calling it "corruption." The VA delivered its plan to lawmakers eight months behind schedule and could not specify total project costs despite requesting $500 million as an initial payment.
VA officials claimed the department was "hard at work implementing" Trump's order and issued a request for proposals with a June 23 deadline to establish additional housing units. However, testimony revealed that housing capacity at the West LA center increased from 955 to 1,377 beds during Trump's second term, yet none of this growth resulted from his executive order. Trump has never explained the 6,000-veteran figure, which exceeds Los Angeles' total homeless veteran population by approximately double, prompting speculation about plans to relocate veterans from other regions.
Rep. Mark Takano raised concerns that VA staffing cuts have created insufficient personnel to support homeless veterans already at the West LA facility, let alone the promised 6,000 residents. Veterans who secured a federal court order for additional housing at the site have opposed the VA's plan to construct 800 tiny 8-by-8-foot homes there. Takano warned that inadequate support services could turn the property into "a vast West Side skid row," jeopardizing tenant safety and mental health.
In response to congressional criticism, the VA blamed "litigation inherited" by the Trump administration and promised monthly briefings. The department stated it was "reclaiming sections of the campus that had long been irresponsibly leased" to private companies and that "subsequent budget requests will include adding thousands more housing units," offering no commitment to fund the project in the current fiscal year.