Veterans Support Organization

5 stars
(0)
4 stars
(0)
3 stars
(0)
2 stars
(0)
1 stars
(11)
Category: Miscellaneous

Contact Information
New York, United States

Veterans Support Organization Reviews

M.E. Brown January 20, 2011
Bogus Veterans' "Charity"
Veterans Support Organization is a bogus 501(c)(3) "non-Profit" which rakes in huge revenue and but spends next to nothing on actual veterans' services. It solicits donations through paid personnel, some of whom allegedly never served in the military, at malls and other locations across the country. It claims fake uniforms etc. as part of its program expense but does little of substance, spending only about 15% of its income on programs. It purports to publish the results of an "independent audit" on its website. In fact it does not.

Instead one finds a mere two page summary without details which is worthless. Presumably if the audit was conducted according to generally accepted accounting principals AND it supported the assertion that 65% of the gross revenue of $2.5m+ received in fiscal year 2009 was actual spent on veterans' programs same would be supplied for anyone to read. The fact that it is not is inherently suspect. Beware of this organization and be aware that the fact that a corporation is a "non-profit" does not mean that it is truly a charity.

M.E. Brown
Dihonered Vet January 10, 2011
SCAM
I have seen these guys out at the Malls, they don't wear the same uniforms that they did in the past, they are like snakes they change the way they look to blend in. I am a Army Vet, I am dishonered by the way they do business. I spoke to the one guy that was at the Mall and he sounded like a drunk..I can not believe that the Malls would allow a group like this here. I called the Attorney Generals Office in MA and they are already looking into the validity of this organization.
I spoke with the VA Hospital in Brockton MA, They have seroius issues with the VSO and the PAST Manager, they said that they puilled him out to avoid future problems, only to create more in TN.
I spoke with the Current Manager before Christmas, He assured me that they were a legit organization and that the money does go to the local Veterans. The Past Manager was not "Pulled Out" he wanted to move back with his family in Florida. I asked how much money goes to the veterans, he told me 64.7% that seems really low. I know of other organizations out there that donate more than that.

They pay their workers 30% every day they work, so if they bring in 1000.00 they get 300.00? Thats crazy, I know people who barely make that a week. They raise money EVERY day of the week in December and then 4 days a week the rest f the year, you do the math these guys are bringing in a LOT of money.

I think that this group should be investigated from the VERY TOP down, see where all the money goes, they have 14 Chapters in 17 States? What kind of money are they pulling in if all of the people work that much and pull in at least half that???

I am writing all the news papers and calling all the TV stations. Something has to be done to shut this group down. They opened a new office in Warwick a Few months Ago, where did they get the money for that? After looking into it I found out that it is also occupied by Nakowicz Finacial? How can a For Profit company work in a Non Profit Organization? Something is not right.

No one will talk to me they tell me to contact their PR Firm in Florida, Why? What are they trying to hide? I am a concerend Veteran and think i have the right to know where all the money goes, and why its NOT going to the Veterans.
I spoke with the Providence VA, They said that the VSO Does give money to them and that they are well like by them, I asked if they knew how the money was raised and they stated that they were aware of how the VSO raises funds.

I have spoke to a lot of Veterans in RI and MA, they are NOT happy with the VSO and would like to see them shut down. I think a full Congresional Hearing should take place and put the Executives on the Chopping block. They told me that they started here in RI back in 2001, I have lived in RI my entire life and I NEVER heard of them. Now they up and moved to Florida to start there? Yeah what does that tell you.
Nikisha Goodman Jones February 4, 2010
Fraud/Scam
I worked for the VSO from February 2002 - May 2005. During that time I witnessed money being pocketed by the CEO, and other employees of the veterans supports organization. The CEO makes 51, 000 per year. Does that include all the money he pockets? Now i hear his wife is the President of New Life Haven and a part of the Board of Directors. I wonder how much she pockets. Also, his two daughters are paid employees with the vso. This is a scam. This is a scam. This is a scam. This is a scam. This is a scam. This is a scam. They live in a 2.5 million dollar house in Florida. How can someone that reports to the IRS making 51, 000 per year afford a 2.5 million dollar house!!! If someone looks into the tax filing for the vso, they will see that they only started giving in 2006. From 2002-2005 the money was used for the board of directors benefits, then they realized " oh we have to give before we get caught ". I'm ashamed to ever work for this organization. They used the word "Veteran" to trick people into giving. I can't believe they are still around. I thought by now they would have been caught. I'm warning every community in South Florida, Florida and throughout the United States to be very careful with the veterans support organization and if you see them to please call your local police and explain what they do. I google their name and i find over 100 articles calling them a scam. Someone put an end to this scam.
SoMuchF1ghting January 21, 2010
SCAM
I posted a comment on 01/12/10 and I regret that comment. After talking to newspapers, and veterans in New York State, I am 100 percent sure that the Veterans Support Organization is a huge scam that we New Yorker's need to stop as soon as possible. This article is from December 27, 2009. It talks about how there scam is run. Please read below.

Mall solicitors irk local veterans groups

Richard Liebson and Jorge Fitz-Gibbon
[email protected]

They kind of look like soldiers, standing in The Westchester mall in their store-bought camouflage fatigues. But they aren't.

The first hint that they have nothing to do with the military is that their "uniforms" bear no rank, insignia or unit patches. The dead giveaway comes when they ask you for a cash donation to help veterans — active-duty service members are prohibited from panhandling.

For the past several weeks, members of the Veterans Support Organization have been soliciting money at The Westchester and other Lower Hudson Valley sites, claiming that they're providing holiday meals for local homeless veterans and making donations to veterans hospitals and other local programs to help veterans.

The fact is, 25 percent to 30 percent of what they collect goes into their pockets, as part of what the VSO describes as a "work program." The group's founder admits that many members have never served in the armed forces and could not provide proof that the VSO has made any contributions to local veterans.

Financial records obtained by The Journal News show that about 31 percent of the more than $1 million they took in annually nationwide in 2007 and 2008 went to veterans assistance and services. Much of the rest is listed as "programs" expenses used to pay for rent and office supplies, travel costs, subcontractors and compensation for VSO executives.

Although the group's literature lists an address in Mount Vernon, that office has not yet opened.

"I've never heard of them, " said Roger Paulmino, team leader of the Department of Veterans Affairs Outreach Center in White Plains. "They've never contacted us about making a donation or providing any kind of service. At this time of year, there are a lot of bogus groups out there. I usually advise people to contact the Attorney General's Office if they have suspicions."

Joe Waldron, commander of White Plains American Legions Post 135, was more blunt.

"It sounds like a scam to me, " he said. "Even if they're contributing 30 percent somewhere, that doesn't seem like much to me. And if the people collecting the money are keeping 25 percent of the take, that's very suspect activity. I think the state attorney general should take a look at them."

Waldron said his post raises $35, 000 to $40, 000 through its bar and uses the money to host parties and activities for patients at the Montrose VA hospital, a scholarship program and donations to local charities. "Virtually all of our money is spent on local veterans and community charities, " he said.

VSO insists it helps

Josh Bittleman, program and housing coordinator for the VSO New York chapter, maintained that nearly 70 percent of the funds raised by VSO helps veterans by expanding the organization and its varied services.

"We understand that the local groups sometimes don't like other groups coming in the area, " he said. "And that's just the way it is. We understand that."

Bittleman insisted that the VSO is helping veterans. He said it has pumped nearly $300, 000 into its planned learning center in Mount Vernon. Next week, he said, the group will donate 100 winter coats through the Veterans Affairs hospital in the Bronx.

Ivette Ocasio, program management officer at the Bronx hospital's volunteer services office, said she was not familiar with the VSO, or aware of its plan to donate coats.

"Normally, our office would be processing that type of donation, '' she said.

Bittleman said the donation was being made to a hospital outpatient program that is not overseen by Ocasio and offered to provide an invoice for the coats.

The Veterans Support Organization was founded in 2001 by Richard Van Houten. A Brooklyn native, Van Houten said he served in the Army from 1983 to 1991 and worked as a salesman for Schwan's Ice Cream after leaving the service. He started the VSO after a back injury left him with extra time on his hands.

"It wasn't for the money. I didn't start this to make money, " said Van Houten, who now lives in Florida and draws a salary from the VSO. "As a matter of fact, for the first seven, eight years, I took very, very minimal from it. Very minimal. Because it wasn't for that. It was just to stay busy."

Substantial growth

VSO has grown substantially in recent years. The group has chapters in Florida, Rhode Island and Georgia, and moved into New York over the past year. It runs Veterans New Life Haven, a homeless shelter in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and will move into the 8, 500-square-foot space at 31 South St. in Mount Vernon. It also plans to expand into Tennessee and Texas.

"So it's growing, " Van Houten said. "It went from me and another guy to like 250 people that are actually with the group right now."

But the organization has drawn criticism, in part for its mode of fundraising. VSO enlists down-and-out residents to stand outside shopping centers and in shopping malls and take contributions. Van Houten said the workers are recruited from America Works Inc., a national multi-service agency with a regional office in New York City.

The collectors are dressed in military fatigues with the group's logo emblazoned on the back, although many are not veterans. They also get a cut. Van Houten said they get 25 percent to 30 percent of what they bring in, depending on what they raise.

VSO officials said the sidewalk collection duties are the foundation of what the organization sells as its "work program, " which purportedly provides sales, marketing and entrepreneurial training, said Bittleman, the VSO program coordinator.

"Let me tell you this much, " Bittleman said. "When we get them they're living in homeless shelters. And when they leave us they're living on their own and independent, and in the interim we're housing them and we're also feeding them and they're also working, which they weren't doing. And most of them transition into employment."

"So you want to call it raising more money, you can, " he said. "It definitely does that. But it pays for their ability to not be in a homeless shelter or on the streets under a bridge. And that's where most of them came from."

Van Houten said periodic checks on their activities, sealed collection containers and the use of "marked bills" are routinely used as controls against theft. He also argued that it's not necessary for all of the collectors to be veterans — all they need, he maintained, is a desire to help.

"This is one of the things that makes us different, " he said. "I don't believe you have to be a veteran to help veterans. It's just like cancer. To raise money for cancer, you don't have to have it."

He also said VSO is careful not to have the collectors wear regulation fatigues. For instance, he said, they wear baseball caps and not regulation flat-top hats.

"Those fatigues are for unity, " Van Houten said. "We do not wear rank on them. We've gone to a lawyer. You can buy them at Walmart. You can buy them at any Army and Navy. You can walk right in and buy them, and a lot of people do wear them."

'IT'S LIKE A CON''

Armonk resident Bob Romano, who has seen VSO members collecting cash in The Westchester mall, said the fatigues deceive people.

"I'm not a veteran, but seeing these guys really made me angry, " he said. "When you see guys in uniform, you feel a debt of gratitude for the people who put their lives on the line to protect us. So of course, you want to give something back to them. For these guys, who aren't even veterans, to be doing something like this. It's like a con."

Bittleman said the VSO is legally prohibited from hiring only veterans, but said about 90 percent of the New York collectors are former military. The fundraising duties, he said, help foster people skills and lead to more complex duties, such as "booking" a store for fundraising or even negotiating leases for the group.

The VSO houses more than a dozen veterans in the area, and has enlisted at least that many for it's regional work program, Bittleman said. He said the group also provides emergency funding for vets through America Works and local VA offices. He did not provide specific examples, citing privacy.

In all, the organization brought in more than $1 million in 2008, and more than $2.5 million this year, according to John Nacowicz, a Warwick, R.I., accountant who serves as VSO's national treasurer. The New York Attorney General's Office, which monitors and oversees charities, said VSO is current in its filings. No complaints or investigations are on file.

A review of VSO's tax-exempt filings with the Internal Revenue Service for 2007, the most recent year available, shows that the organization raised $1, 040, 984 nationwide that year and spent $951, 175. The expenses include $491, 614 in "program services" and $403, 229 in fundraising costs. Those costs are applied to expanding VSO's operations, something the group sees as providing services to veterans.

According to the records, $311, 656 — or roughly 31 percent — went to direct services. The document said the money went toward "new television for needy veterans, reading materials, and coffee program at the VA. Help for homeless Vets: clothing, food and transportation. VA patient emergency financial help." It does not state specifically where the money was spent.

Officers get $116, 265

The records note that $116, 265 went to "compensation of current officers" in 2007, including $53, 810 to Van Houten.

"I collected a very minimal salary for seven years of doing this, " Van Houten said. "Now I work seven days a week. I put in more time in a week than most people put in in three weeks."

Nacowicz, VSO's treasurer, said highlighting the 2007 numbers would be unfair to the group.

"The numbers, actually, if we went back and redid them more appropriately, that number would probably be a lot higher, " he said. "It's just because we were new back then and we didn't understand the process. Now we're a little more adept and we're getting larger and we've got these audited statements."

In recent years, the VSO has been commissioning independent audits of its books. According to Nacowicz, those audits show that nearly 70 percent of the money collected is going back into programs — well above the 50 percent threshold that Van Houten said he insists on.

According to Restivo Monacelli, the Providence, R.I., auditing firm, the VSO raised $1, 025, 794, and spent $688, 096 in the year ended Sept. 30, 2008. Among the listed "program services expenses, " $317, 788 went for "donations." The rest was listed as costs for subcontractors, automobile expenses and uniforms, which cost $7, 458.

"They don't seem kosher to me, and it makes me mad, '' said Marine Corps veteran John Preiss, vice commander of Yonkers-based Disabled American Veterans Chapter 16. "All of the money we raise goes to the guys — we've never kept a dime. I think if people want to make a donation to help veterans, they should make it to local groups."
Reggie Miller January 21, 2010
Fraud/Scam
VETERANS SUPPORT ORGANIZATION IS A SCAM-

Veterans Support Organization purpose of the corporation, item 6; it says nothing about veterans although all of their videos insinuate they exist to support veterans:

http://ucc.state.ri.us/CORP_DRIVE1/2009/0508/000000000/1427/200945651110_1.pdf

See how a non-commercial TV station, School Board of Broward County's TV station (FL), has been duped; notice the professional way the solicitors are dressed insinuating they are veterans; listen to the president admitting that the collectors are semi-employees, probably listed as sub-contractors for the IRS; they are paid panhandlers:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcZsT1AUVB4

The Stolen Valor Act of 2005,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stolen_Valor_Act_of_2005

should be expanded to include this kind of activity.

Everyone in New York please go to " The Stolen Valor Act" website and complain about the VSO and their scam.
SoMuchFighting January 12, 2010
SCAM
READ THE FACTS NOT THE OPINIONS FROM THE SHAKE DOWN ARTIST WRITING HERE.

Nonprofit defends methods, donations
By Jorge Fitz-Gibbon • [email protected] • December 29, 2009

Comments (17) Recommend (3) Print this page E-mail this article Share
Del.icio.us Facebook Digg Reddit Newsvine
Buzz up!Twitter Text Size: Normal | Large | Larger

A Florida-based charity is defending itself against local critics who are questioning the group's fundraising techniques and its donations to veterans' programs.


The Veterans Support Organization on Monday provided dozens of letters it says were written by grateful recipients of contributions as high as $20, 000.


The VSO also provided about $3, 000 and 100 winter coats for veterans in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens since September, said Yvette Cintron, who runs volunteer services for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in the boroughs.


"I think that just makes a lot of the older organizations a little nervous, " Cintron said. "Sometimes it's like a defense mechanism, like it's on their turf."


"But they're trying to get jobs for veterans, " she said of the VSO. "All of this is commendable."


Cintron and VSO officials were responding to an article in The Journal News on Sunday in which local veterans groups and residents raised questions about the group and its fundraising.


Founded in 2001, the VSO enlists homeless residents — not all of them veterans — to dress in military-like fatigues and solicit contributions at shopping malls and shopping centers, including in the Lower Hudson Valley.


The collectors receive 25 percent to 30 percent of the money they raise, a practice that VSO founder Richard Van Houten says provides them with income and services and raises money for veterans.


It's part of what the group identifies as its "work program, " which purportedly provides sales, marketing and entrepreneurial skills.


But that doesn't sit well with some more established veterans groups, who said last week that VSO was nothing short of a scam.


The local groups say nearly all of the money they raise goes directly to area veterans services.


John Nacowicz, a Rhode Island accountant who serves as VSO's national treasurer, said that friction with existing groups is not uncommon — at first.


But he said VSO, which has branches in Rhode Island, Georgia and Florida, hoped it could work in conjunction with them.


"If the local groups want to work with us, we're willing to bend over backward to work with them, " he said.


Nacowicz said VSO puts nearly 70 percent of the more than $1 million it raised annually in recent years back into services.


Based on records provided by the group and on file with the state attorney general and the IRS, much of that includes money that is put back into the work program and into expanding the organization . According to the documents, about 31 percent of the money is donated directly.


A portion of the money goes toward expenses and compensation for the group's executives.


VSO says it's now working on a veterans services center in Mount Vernon.
DennisO January 7, 2010
Non-profit
If there are any ligitimate complaints against the Veterans Support organization they should take it up with the BBB. The VSO changed my life. I do not say they are perfect, but


The Better Business Bureau provides mediation services to help consumers and businesses reach a mutually acceptable solution when complaints arise. The BBB acts as a neutral third party, listening to both sides of the story. Companies are ALWAYS made aware of the complaint and given an opportunity to respond BEFORE a complaint is closed and reported. Online complaint boards do not work that way.


Irate consumers post complaints without any checking being done to verify they are even customers and without the company being given a chance to respond. Postings of unverified statements may come from disgruntled former employees, unethical competitors, and consumers who in fact are wrong in their allegations.


Recently we received information from a local accredited business who hasn’t had a complaint filed to the BBB in the last 36 months. This company was told that a negative report had been filed against them by a complaint board and that it could be changed to a positive report if the company:


1.admitted wrong doing,
2.did what the customer wanted, and
3.paid several thousand dollars to participate in what was labeled as “Business Remediation, Customer Satisfaction & Resolution Programs” to remove the complaint.

The complaint board also promised not to post future negative information about companies paying money. It is interesting to note that this complaint board has a BBB rating of an “F” and has not responded to any complaints.


“It’s gotten so bad that we’ve had to file a restraining order against this individual, ” said the owner of the local accredited business. “If that’s not bad enough, the complaint board wants us to pay thousands of dollars to remove the false information from their website.”


Again, when a complaint is filed with the BBB, the key is that the company ALWAYS gets to review and respond to allegations BEFORE any reporting of the complaint.


The BBB advises companies that are subjects of allegations posted on complaint boards to prepare a response to the allegations. Review the complaint and response with legal counsel before posting. Depending on circumstances, often the best response may be no response at all. Under no circumstances should companies knuckle under to threats by paying money. The BBB would welcome information about these kinds of tactics.
Nestor OMD December 27, 2009
SCAM
I also checked them out after reading about them. I called VSO and talked to people in the program. They change lives not just drink and have club houses.
Veterans Support Organization December 27, 2009
Are they Really Helping
At first I thought them a scam. They I talked to the guys working. They told me they were homeless before VSO gave them the ability to participate in a OJT Program with housing and stability. They said today they were off the streets, learning to fend for them selves and regaining self respect.

They told me to call the VA Volunteer Service Division, Assistant Director Mike Brennan in NYC VA or the Chief Ms. Cintron. I did, they checked out as being a group who donated funds for holiday meals and were giving away winter coats and had a grant process for assisting needy vets with funds for rent or utltities. I then called Miami and West Palm Beach VA Volunteer Services Division and found out they not only donated regularly, but were the largest shelter for homeless vets in Broward County.

I recently saw them in a mall and spoke to them, I asked them their stories, they all verified that because of VSO they were back on the road to self respect and stability. A couple said they were ready to die because of their lack of self respect. They all admitted to earning a stipend for participating in the VSO work program but said withoout it they would not be able to get off the streets into housing and function.

The group appears to be providing a legitimate help to the vets participating in the program, so maybe they do not give 100 percent like other groups but the 50-70 percent going to veterans services is providing more than just a meeting hall, bar or BBQ and is changing lives.
Randy Hart December 26, 2009
Fraud
The Veterans Support Organization is a big SCAM!!!.Everyone please be very careful. They are all over the New York- Tri-state area. They were at my hometown of Huntington, Long Island at the Walt Whitman Mall in NY. I approached the guy soliciting money. He said ONE HUNDRED percent goest to help Local Vets. Thats not true at all. These guys collecting money get PAY for their time and they are not volunteers at all. They are civilians, ex-cons, but not soldiers in most cases. The next day I went back, and another guy was there. This time I was told that they give all the money to the "FOOD PANTRY IN QUEENS". QUEENS??? Get the story right "VSO".If they are collecting money on Long Island, why don't they give money to Long Island soldiers. I know of 3 good Long Island not for profits that help soldiers, veterans ; not only with money but with food, and if the "Veterans Support Organization" are so concern to raise money for the food pantry, why dont they collect food instead of cash, and give it to the pantry on Long Island, NY!!! Seriously, the Charity bureau department of New York has to investigate these guys ASAP. They collected hundreds of thousands of dollars in the past few months. Also, in their incorporation papers it says they are incorporated in Rhode Island, but doing business in New York, which makes no sense. They have also changed their address three times since september 2009, and their phone number twice since then. They tell people lies, they wear cammies( uniforms ) with no name tag, or branch name on them to make the appearance that they are soldiers so people would donate huge bills to them, but it's just a big scam. All over the internet are stories how the Veterans Support Organization is a huge "mafia" scam, that started in Florida back in 2001, and they only donate when someone questions them. Enough is Enough, and someone please do something about the "Veterans Support Organization" and stop their fraud organization.

Write a Review for Veterans Support Organization

Rate it!
Review Title
You Review
Image
Type the numbers shown

RECENTLY UPDATED REVIEWS

permanently closed
Taxi To Heathrow & Heathrow Taxi Transfers
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Ride and Shine Detail
old ironsides fake id
Digital Marketing and Company Formation Services UAE | SEO and PPC Marketing
Escort ladyluck Frankfurt
Bulk SMS Gateway in UAE | Best Bulk SMS Service In UAE

REQUESTED REVIEWS

REVIEWS BY CATEGORY