Luis Lujan sits at a table at the State of California Employment Development Department in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021. Lujan received assistance from the Swords to Plowshares Program and now works as a disabled veteran outreach program specialist. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

2021

No landlord would offer this veteran housing – Swords to Plowshares stepped in

After suffering from injuries during his military career and a car crash, Luis Lujan turned to a Bay Area nonprofit to get him back on his feet.

Bay Area News Group

Note: This story is from our 2021 campaign and has been fulfilled, but you can still donate to the Share the Spirit general fund.

Nine years ago, Luis Lujan was driving his two children home from daycare in Fullerton when all of a sudden, a pickup truck carrying watermelons pulled out right in front of him. Lujan’s 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee T-boned the other car at 45 mph.

“I slammed right sideways into him,” recalled Lujan, 50, a Navy veteran who lives in Fremont. “That threw me against the door jam and I hit my head.”

It was a moment that would forever alter his life. For two years, doctors repeatedly said he was fine. But Lujan kept going to the emergency room because of the pain from the crash. It wasn’t until he visited a veterans hospital in Palo Alto that an MRI revealed two ruptured discs and nerve impingement, injuries that stemmed from his time in the military in the early ’90s.

He received compensation for the military-related injuries, but obstacles still remained for Lujan. Though he was able to get a bachelor’s degree from San Jose State University through a post-9/11 GI Bill, and later a job at a security company, the gig ultimately didn’t work out and that left him in a particularly difficult situation. He had to find new housing after his in-laws, who he and his family were living with at the time, decided to sell their property.

But no landlord would accept Lujan’s income, which at the time amounted to just his disability payments from the military.

Luis Lujan is photographed at his desk at the State of California Employment Development Department in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021. Lujan received assistance from the Swords to Plowshares Program and now works as a disabled veteran outreach program specialist. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

It left Lujan with few options. So in 2019 he decided to reach out to a San Francisco nonprofit he had heard of while SJSU, an organization called Swords to Plowshares, which helps veterans with financial and job assistance programs, along with other services.

Established in 1974, Swords to Plowshares was started by Vietnam veterans who were returning home from war. Its name comes from a concept where potentially deadly military technology is then used for peaceful reasons, like GPS or nuclear fission.

The agency received funding this year from Share the Spirit, an annual holiday campaign that serves residents in need in the East Bay. Donations will help support 56 nonprofit agencies in Contra Costa and Alameda counties. The organization will use its grant to provide 125 veterans with backpacks full of winter supplies and toiletries.

Steven Culbertson, the associate director of programs and operations at the nonprofit since 2017, said that veterans are susceptible to homelessness, drug addiction and mental illness upon returning home. He said that Lujan’s story is very similar to what many other veterans experience that come to Swords to Plowshares.

Luis Lujan outside of the State of California Employment Development Department. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

“Often military service actually causes trauma,” he said. “They’ve gone into combat, they’ve seen things they wouldn’t have normally seen in a normal, civilian life. Then they’re released… boom you’re back. It is my opinion that the military does not do a very good job at transitioning these jobs into civilian life. Swords spends a lot of time helping people at that transition.”

The nonprofit currently enrolls about 500 veterans within the Bay Area per year, said Culbertson, and helps between 150 and 250 individuals get into permanent housing.

When Lujan reached out to Culbertson’s organization, it immediately got in touch with a landlord who was willing to work with the nonprofit. Lujan got his first month’s rent and security deposit covered by Swords to Plowshares, an amount that he said was around $6,200, as well as 35 percent rental assistance going forward.

“It was like heaven sent,” Lujan said.

Growing up, Lujan said that he didn’t have much of a choice of what to do after high school, nor did he have anyone encouraging him to go to college. Both his parents passed away before he turned 18. Born in Globe, Ariz., a small town east of Phoenix, Lujan said he had three choices when he graduated: join the U.S. Navy, join a gang or end up in jail. He chose the first option since his dad served in the Navy during World War II and fought at the Battle of Okinawa, the last major battle of the conflict.

In 1988, at 17-years-old, Lujan enlisted and was stationed in San Diego at Naval Air Station North Island. While he enjoyed some good times — he got to help with the 1990 submarine spy movie The Hunt for Red October starring Sean Connery — one accident would later leave him with extended health issues. In 1991, while Lujan was moving some heavy material, he heard a pop in his back.

“I went to medical,” he said. “They took x-rays. They said, ‘You’re fine.’”

The injury would come back to haunt him 12 years later. While in Arizona during a training exercise in the Army, which he joined later, Lujan was carrying some teammates in a fireman’s carry. The next day, he woke up with what felt like a “spear” had gone through his spine. And the car accident in 2012 only worsened those injuries, leaving Lujan in need of help.

In addition to rental assistance, Swords to Plowshares also helped Lujan find a job. In June 2021, Lujan started working for a branch of the state’s Employment Development Department, which helps people with unemployment benefits.

The work has come full circle, because Lujan now refers clients that he comes across during his EDD job to Swords to Plowshares.

“We’re partners in helping fellow veterans find employment,” said Lujan, who now lives with his wife and three children in Fremont. “It’s a really good feeling now that Swords and I… we work together.”

How to help

Donations will help Swords to Plowshares’ San Francisco and Oakland Service Centers provide emergency housing, food, counseling, housing placement, rental assistance, employment and training services, and legal assistance to Bay Area veterans.

Goal: $25,000

Note: This story was fulfilled, but you can still donate to the general fund, which will be distributed to local charities throughout the year.

2025

This holiday season, make their wishes come true!

2025

An East Oakland teen’s grades plummeted during COVID’s worst days. Then he met a soccer coach.

Donations to Oakland Genesis Academy will enable the nonprofit to provide soccer coaching and play opportunities alongside academic support to 275 boys and girls from ...
Read More →
2025

Animal Fix Clinic brings hope to those who fear losing their pets

Donations to Animal Fix Clinic will allow them to expand their operations from 4 days per week to all seven days. This would provide services ...
Read More →
2025

At the Bay Area Rescue Mission, a mother finds reasons to live

Donations will help the Bay Area Rescue Mission provide 75,000 hours of case management, life skills classes, trauma-informed counseling and vocational training to women living at ...
Read More →
2025

Finding shelter, and a community, when she needed it most

Donations to Winter Nights Family Shelter will enable the nonprofit to provide financial assistance to around 10 homeless households for urgent needs, like car repairs, ...
Read More →
2025

For children exiting foster care, this local organization offers a critical lifeline

Donations to First Place for Youth will help fund their programs that assist young people who grew up in foster care with safe, stable housing ...
Read More →
2025

From unredeemable to trusted mentors, Academy of HOPE gives former inmates a soft place to land

Donations to Options Recovery Services will be used to enhance the Academy of Hope, a reentry program that provides up to 24 former inmates at ...
Read More →
2025

Goodness Village In Livermore helps the formerly homeless rebuild their lives

Donations to Goodness Village help to cover staff costs needed to provide 24/7 care at this permanent supportive housing community for formerly unsheltered people, which ...
Read More →
2025

Hijas del Campo helps to uplift farmworkers in east Contra Costa County

Donations to Hijas del Campo will enable the nonprofit to buy and distribute 500 food bags to 378 low-income farmworker families in Contra Costa County ...
Read More →
2025

How a new East Bay nonprofit is caring for caregivers

Donations will help Caregiver OneCall serve about 125 caregiver families in Alameda and Contra Costa counties with 24/7 support calls, caregiver wellness kits, respite-focused activities ...
Read More →
2025

Immigration Institute of the Bay Area makes citizenship goals a reality

Donations to Immigration Institute of the Bay Area will help fund 250 legal immigration consultations and cases including naturalization, DACA, Employment Authorization Document and U ...
Read More →
2025

Las Trampas helps those with developmental disabilities advocate for themselves

Donations to Las Trampas will cover salaries, onboarding and training for increased staffing at the nonprofit, enabling 20 more adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities ...
Read More →
2025

Meet the Bay Area nonprofit creating housing for people with special needs

Donations to Sunflower Hill will support the nonprofit’s programs at its Hagemann Ranch garden in Livermore, offering 10 months of programming for one of the ...
Read More →
2025

Mercy Brown Bag Program delivers health and hope to East Bay seniors

Donations to the Mercy Brown Bag Program enable the nonprofit to buy food for low-income older adults, providing a full month of nutritious groceries at ...
Read More →
2025

Nonprofit offers enrichment for the neurodivergent

Donations to the Social Justice Sewing Academy will support The Social Connection’s mission to provide innovative social, educational, and vocational opportunities for neurodivergent adults in ...
Read More →
2025

Paws In Need helps families pay for critical pet care

Donations to Paws In Need will help the nonprofit to keep animals safe, healthy and out of shelters by providing low-cost spay and neuter services ...
Read More →
2025

Reaching to those who want to teach amid Bay Area educator ‘shortage’

Donations will help Early Childhood Education Substitute Teacher Empowerment & Placement (ECE STEP) to expand its East Bay operations, training and supporting 6 substitute teachers ...
Read More →
2025

Spectrum Community Services brings companionship, valuable help to Tri-Valley seniors

Donations to Spectrum Community Services will provide about 1,670 home-delivered meals to low-income, homebound seniors in the Tri-Valley area, offering them nutrition, human contact, and ...
Read More →
2025

Trinity Center in Walnut Creek was ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ for homeless couple

Donations to Trinity Center Walnut Creek will help the nonprofit to pay for space to expand its Workforce Development Program, set to accommodate up to ...
Read More →
2025

Unlocking higher education for low-income, first-generation tutors and students

Donations to Elevate Tutoring will enable the nonprofit to provide 400 hours of free STEM tutoring and mentorship to up to 200 K-12 Alameda County ...
Read More →
2025

Where Bay Area human trafficking survivors turn for help

Donations to Love Never Fails will help the nonprofit provide 75 teens and adults who are trafficking survivors and vulnerable individuals to access safe, restorative ...
Read More →

Previous Stories