Showing posts with label Bay Pines VA Medical Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bay Pines VA Medical Center. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Vietnam Vet blowing off steam may end up in jail

I often wonder when people dealing with these veterans ever understand how frustrating it is when claims are not approved or tied up? Can they understand that bills are not being paid? Families fall apart with the extra stress? Or that veterans end up so frustrated they just give up and vanish from the face of the earth one way or another? Some end up lost on the streets of our cities and towns living among the other homeless veterans. Others, their sadness and hopelessness leads them to suicide. Some snap, taking out their anger/rage on others. Some lash out at the people trying to help them because for all the "help" offered, the solution and relief never seem to come.

According to this report, it happened to one of them and he may end up in jail over it. Ronald Barnes, Vietnam vet, was in the Army, but when he wanted to intimidate he said he was a Marine and trained killer. He admits what he did was wrong but says that he was off his medication. He called in a bomb threat to the VA hospital and made threats to Senator Nelson's office.

I'm sure it could have been frightening for the other people at the other end of the phone line, but the rest of us have to ask why any veteran should ever have to feel so helpless they have to resort to anything like this?

Man says he regrets bomb threat to VA Hospital

By ELAINE SILVESTRINI The Tampa Tribune

Published: August 11, 2009

Ronald F. Barnes says he was just "blowing off steam" when he called the Veterans Administration and threatened to bomb the Bay Pines VA Hospital.

The disabled Vietnam veteran says he didn't mean it when he called Sen. Bill Nelson's office and the V.A. repeatedly and threatened to "whack" the person the government had appointed to help him handle his finances. "I was venting at the time," Barnes, 58, told a federal judge today.

Barnes, 58, is facing a possible prison term after pleading guilty to using a telephone to threaten to blow up a building, a charge which carries a maximum of 10 years behind bars.

At the V.A., he gave his name and his claim number, according to his plea agreement. He called Nelson's office so often, the people there recognized his voice.
read more here
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2009/aug/11/man-says-he-regrets-bomb-threat-va-hospital/news-breaking/


I didn't get too much posting done today because the emails were coming in fast and furious. Usually that's the case when you see sporadic posts during the day, or I have meetings to go to. Each one of them were heartbreaking stories about veterans falling apart from them and others searching for ways to help someone they love. It never seems to end.

We have the media picking up on the newer veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, along with so many new groups trying to help it makes my head spin trying to keep up with all of them. We also have this new generation reaching out across the state lines to connect with other veterans.

What we don't see enough of is reporting on the older veterans and what their lives are still like. While they are not all heartbreaking, some are while they search for help to heal when they should have received in many years ago.

We also don't see the reports about how older veterans were being pushed back to make room for the newer veterans as the staff at VA hospitals across the country were being pushed to get them in the door.

We have a very long, long way to go before we have taken care of all the veterans waiting their turn for what they earned. The problem is, too many will be gone before this happens.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Doctors win law suit against Bay Pines VA

Federal jury orders Department of Veterans Affairs to pay $3.7-million for retaliation at Bay Pines hospital
By William R. Levesque, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Jul 02, 2009 12:07 PM


TAMPA — A federal jury on Thursday decided the Department of Veterans Affairs retaliated against four employees at its Bay Pines hospital in St. Petersburg and awarded them $3.73-million in damages.

The four employees, three of them doctors, accused the VA of a broad pattern of discrimination against employees who file employment discrimination complaints.
go here for more
http://www.tampabay.com/news/military/veterans/article1015241.ece

Friday, May 8, 2009

President Obama taking care of Florida's veterans and all veterans

President Obama’s 2010 Spending Plan Initiates Transformation for VA Services

May 7, 2009
Record Budget Enhances VA’s Ability to Become a 21st Century Organization

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced President Obama’s 2010 budget for VA. The budget emphasizes a Veteran-centric commitment to expanded services with a 15.5 percent increase over 2009, the largest percentage increase for VA requested by a president in more than 30 years.

“Our 2010 budget represents the President’s vision for how VA will transform into a 21st Century organization that is Veteran-centric, results-driven, and forward-looking,” Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki said. “This transformation is demanded by new times, new technologies, new demographic realities, and new commitments to today’s Veterans. It requires a comprehensive review of the fundamentals in every line of operation the Department performs. We must be sure that valuable taxpayer dollars are invested in programs that work for our Veterans.”

The centerpiece of the $112.8 billion VA budget proposal is a dramatic increase in Veteran health care funding, with an 11 percent increase over the current year's funding (excluding one-time Recovery Act funds).

“Organizational transformation requires changes in culture, systems, and training,” Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs W. Scott Gould said. “This will require resources, but it will also demand commitment and teamwork. The entire Department is dedicated to serving the needs of Veterans, and every VA employee has a stake in transformation to meet those needs.”

That transformation is already underway. For instance, the enhanced use of automated tools, coupled with more efficient processes, recent staffing increases, and improved training is expected to reduce the compensation and pension claims processing time to 150 days in 2010, or 16 percent faster compared to 2008, while reducing the pending inventory and improving accuracy. VA anticipates an 8 percent increase in education claims in 2010 compared to this year due largely to the improved education benefits of the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act. Nonetheless, VA's goal is to complete all education claims without any increase in average processing days.

“We are making the smart choices today to improve the services that our Veterans receive tomorrow,” Secretary Shinseki said.

VA’s budget request contains four major categories of activities. These activities include: creating a reliable management infrastructure, delivering ongoing services, making progress on Departmental priorities, and instituting new initiatives critical to meeting the needs of Veterans now and in the future.

Nearly two-thirds of the increase ($9.6 billion) would go to mandatory programs (up 20 percent); the remaining third ($5.6 billion) would be discretionary funding (up 11 percent). The total budget would be almost evenly split between mandatory funding ($56.9 billion) and discretionary funding ($55.9 billion).

VA's new budget request provides for an estimated 122,000 more patients to be treated over the current year. Many of these patients will have multiple visits in the course of the year. VA expects to end fiscal year 2010 with nearly 6.1 million individual patients having received care, including 419,000 Veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan war zones who separated from service.

“VA has too often in the past been seen as difficult and bureaucratic as it relates to its charge of providing for our Nation’s Veterans,” Secretary Shinseki said. “Changing that perception will require a significant transformation. We will not nibble at the edges of this change. We must be bold and demand that we begin immediately showing measurable returns on investment in a responsible, accountable and transparent manner.”

The budget supports the administration's goal to gradually expand health care eligibility to more than 500,000 new enrollees by 2013, while maintaining excellent care quality and timeliness. In 2010, the transformation of VA health care will support scheduling of 98 percent of primary care appointments within a month of the desired date.

The new budget proposal places a high priority on initiatives aimed at making servicemembers' transition to civilian life and VA benefits seamless. This includes the President's initiative for VA and the Department of Defense to collaboratively develop and implement a joint “Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record."

The new system supports the administration's initiative for a uniform registration of all servicemembers with VA, will improve delivery of benefits by assuring availability of medical and administrative data useful both in future medical care as well as in the determination of service-connection in disability ratings.

“The Department’s number one priority is providing for our Veterans,” Deputy Secretary Gould said. “We have an obligation to make sure that every dollar goes to delivering timely, high-quality benefits and services to our clients—the Veterans. A strong corporate model will enable decentralized provision of services at VA by professionals in the field while providing integrated policy and coordination through a central office.”

The fiscal year 2010 VA budget fosters strong support for Veteran-focused information technology, providing more than $3.3 billion to ensure reliable, accessible and secure computer systems. In addition to improvements in VA's electronic health records, this investment will support the President's goal of making claims decisions timely, fair, and consistent with the extension of a new paperless processing initiative expected to lead to an electronically based benefits system by 2012.

VA-managed national cemeteries will be preserved as shrines while maintaining the current high level of service. The National Cemetery Administration would receive $242 million in operations and maintenance funding in the fiscal year 2010 request. The budget provides for activation of three new national cemeteries, Bakersfield National Cemetery in California, Alabama National Cemetery near Birmingham, and Washington Crossing National Cemetery in southeastern Pennsylvania. VA expects to perform 111,500 interments in 2010, a four-percent increase from the estimate for the current year.

The President's budget for construction projects and other capital programs in VA is more than $1.9 billion. This continues work on five major medical projects already in progress, begins seven new ones, and provides resources to support the cemetery system's expansion needs, including resources for improvements at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood, Illinois, and Houston National Cemetery.

It also contains $600 million for minor construction projects, $85 million in grants for construction of state extended care facilities, and $42 million in grants for state Veterans cemeteries.

The seven new medical facility projects move VA towards new construction or renovations at VA medical facilities in Brockton, Massachusetts; Canandaigua, New York; Livermore, California; Long Beach, California; Perry Point, Maryland; San Diego, California; and St. Louis, Missouri.

Capital funds also will support ongoing improvements at medical centers in Bay Pines, Florida; Denver, Colorado; Orlando, Florida; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and St. Louis, Missouri.


People wishing to receive e-mail from VA with the latest news releases and updated fact sheets can subscribe to the VA Office of Public Affairs Distribution List.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

VA hopes new shredding guidelines protect claims seekers

VA hopes new shredding guidelines protect claims seekers
By William R. Levesque, Times staff writer
In print: Saturday, November 1, 2008
The Department of Veterans Affairs is finalizing a sweeping new records policy to prevent the destruction of claims documents in benefits offices around the nation.

The policy comes as the VA continues to investigate improper shredding at a St. Petersburg veterans benefits office and 56 other regional offices in nearly every state.

The policy calls for the appointment of a records control team in Washington, D.C., to oversee the handling of documents. It also would lead to the hiring of records officers in each benefits office to do the same on a local level.

And before shredding any document, two VA employees, including a supervisor, would have to sign off, according to a draft of the policy obtained by the St. Petersburg Times on Friday.
The policy comes after the discovery last month of nearly 500 veterans' claims documents improperly set aside for shredding in 41 VA benefits offices.

The documents, which had no duplicates in VA files, could have been crucial in deciding if an individual veteran received a pension or disability payment.

That total includes 13 documents found in shredding bins in the VA's busiest benefits office at Bay Pines in St. Petersburg, where the agency's inspector general is still conducting an audit.

Bay Pines is the home benefits office for Florida's 1.8-million veterans and the 330,000 who live in the Tampa Bay area.

go here for more
http://www.tampabay.com/news/military/veterans/article884990.ece