By CombatProse | USMC
The VA just put real money behind a real problem: on May 21, 2026, they issued a request for proposals (RFP) to build about 220 temporary housing units for veterans on the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center north campus. According to VA, the contract is worth up to $30 million, proposals are due June 23, 2026, and they expect to award in August 2026 with delivery by the end of 2026. (VA News)
That headline matters. But if you’re a vet sleeping in your truck tonight, the bigger question is: what can you do right now? This post is the no-fluff playbook.
The West LA VA housing RFP: what it is (and what it isn’t)
Primary keyword: West LA VA housing.
This RFP is VA going to the private sector and saying: “Bring us a plan to build temporary units on our campus to house veterans.” It’s tied to an executive order to create the National Center for Warrior Independence on the West LA campus. (VA News)
And it’s not small. VA says the West LA campus had capacity for 955 veterans in January 2025, 1,377 today, and it’s projected to hit 1,670 by end of 2026 and 2,048 by 2027. (VA News)
Here’s what it isn’t:
- It’s not a “sign up here and get a unit” link.
- It’s not a guarantee the system will suddenly run smooth.
- It’s not only for California vets. VA’s stated goal is to make the campus a destination for homeless vets “from across the nation.” (VA News)
Why this matters for the veteran community (beyond LA)
Most community posts talk about homelessness like it’s a sad story. Wrong frame. This is a readiness issue.
If you’ve got vets in your circle who are couch-surfing, living out of a vehicle, or one blown transmission away from the street, you need a plan that doesn’t rely on “hope.” This RFP is a signal: the West LA pipeline is expanding. The move for the community is to know the entry points and get guys connected before they crater.
This is the same mindset we pushed in PTSD Awareness Month: Check On Your People: stop pretending “someone else” is handling it. You’re the someone else.
If you need housing help now: the West LA VA “Welcome Center” is your door
VA Greater Los Angeles runs a Community Resource and Referral Center on campus (most people call it the “Welcome Center”). VA says you can walk in during business hours and get connected with a VA social worker, get a health screening, and get referred to temporary housing programs (plus legal and employment help). (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
West LA VA Community Resource and Referral Center (aka “Welcome Center”) (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
- Address: 11301 Wilshire Blvd, Building 402, Los Angeles, CA 90073
- Hours: Monday–Friday, 7:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
Outside business hours, VA says call 211 for shelter referrals. (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
What to bring (don’t overthink it)
If you’ve got it, bring it:
- ID
- DD214
- Any discharge paperwork
- Anything showing you’re homeless or at risk (eviction notice, late rent, etc.)
If you don’t have it, still show up. The mission is connection, not perfection.
If you’re living out of a vehicle: Safe Parking LA on the West LA campus
VA Greater LA says Safe Parking LA runs on the north campus and provides a guarded place for veterans with vehicles to sleep, plus basic sanitation and case management access. It runs 7:30 p.m. to 7:00 a.m., seven days a week. (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
VA notes a couple rules: no large RVs, no kids under 18, and only service animals allowed. (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
How to get in (per VA): fill out an interest form at SafeParkingLA.org, or call/text 323-210-3375, or email intakes@safeparkingLA.org. (VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care)
For leaders and friends: how to help a vet actually use this
Most vets won’t walk into a building and ask for help. Pride, shame, or just being smoked from life. Here’s how to get traction.
1) Don’t ask “Do you need anything?” Give a two-option order
- “I can drive you to Building 402 tomorrow at 0900, or we go Wednesday at 1300. Pick one.”
- “You want me to sit with you while you call, or you want me to call first?”
2) Use an existing org as your force multiplier
If you’re not in LA, your local orgs still matter. If you don’t know which one is useful, start with our breakdown: VFW vs. American Legion vs. DAV: Which Post Helps You Most in 2026?
3) If they’re spiraling, use the buddy-check SOP
Homelessness and mental health aren’t separate lanes. If a vet is slipping, treat it like a safety issue, not a “feelings” issue. Use the check-in SOP from this post and know the crisis line: 988, press 1.
What to watch next (June–December 2026)
This is the timeline you should care about:
- June 23, 2026: initial proposals due. (VA News)
- August 2026: VA expects to award the contract. (VA News)
- End of 2026: VA wants the units delivered. (VA News)
If you’re community leadership (post commander, chapter lead, peer support, etc.), this is a good moment to push a local “housing resources” one-pager and make sure everyone in your circle knows: Building 402 is the door.
Recommended Reading / Gear
- Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging — Solid reminder that isolation kills veterans faster than bad luck.
- The Disaster Ready Home — Not a prepper manifesto. Practical planning, which is what most vets actually need.
- WAR by Sebastian Junger — Junger embeds with a platoon in Afghanistan’s most dangerous valley. If you want to understand what the guys you’re helping actually lived through, start here.
- VRIEXSD 400-Piece Emergency First Aid Kit — Keep one in the truck. 400 pieces, organized and labeled. “I didn’t plan for it” is how things get worse.
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