Showing posts with label veterans health care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veterans health care. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2008

Ret. Col. Vic Ogilvie has high hopes for Obama and troops

Vic Ogilvie of Altamonte Springs is a retired U.S. Air Force colonel.
My Word, Orlando Sentinel
High hopes for troops under Obama
Vic Ogilvie
September 5, 2008
DENVER - As a pro-military, Hillary Clinton delegate from Central Florida, I went to the Democratic National Convention in Denver with the realization that she would not secure the nomination, but I was determined to get a better understanding of Barack Obama's plans for veterans and the military.

Having spent my entire professional life serving with the military and working for veterans in a health-care setting, I feel a strong bond with them and a keen awareness of their needs and concerns. The veterans I know are selfless individuals, who have made untold sacrifices for their communities and the nation. Many experience disruption or abrupt termination of their career plans, physical injury and deep emotional distress and some, even death.

Most know the risks when they enlist, but they do so out of a desire to serve a cause greater than themselves. Is it not then reasonable to expect that we, as a nation, will provide adequate benefits to restore employability and medical and mental health care to heal the terrible wounds of combat trauma?

Sadly, this has not been the case during the past eight years. The recent scandal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center involving patient care and building neglect was a shocking wake-up call for all Americans. The Department of Veterans Affairs does a good job treating traumatic brain injury, post traumatic stress disorder, burns and amputations -- the signature wounds of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan -- but it has always struggled for adequate funding, particularly under the Bush Administration.
click post title for more


This is also one of the biggest reasons why I am so appalled with McCain and the GOP. With all the speeches, all the talk about how bad Obama is over the convention (and before) none of them manage to address the dire needs of our veterans. I know I've said this way too much but considering McCain keeps talking about how being a POW, he should have cared more about his fellow veterans than he has. McCain always wants them standing behind him but never stands behind them when they needed him. kc

Friday, August 29, 2008

Groups decry DoD ‘betrayal’ of vets

Groups decry DoD ‘betrayal’ of vets

By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Aug 29, 2008 16:09:27 EDT

In a letter going out to members of Congress next week, the directors of two major veterans’ groups say the Pentagon’s personnel chief has intentionally withheld benefits from wounded service members.

“We need your immediate assistance to help end the Defense Department’s deliberate, systemic betrayal of every brave American who [dons] the uniform and stands in harm’s way,” states the letter, signed by David Gorman, executive director of Disabled American Veterans, and Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.

“Sadly, the 2007 Walter Reed scandal, which resulted mostly from poor oversight and inadequate leadership, pales in comparison to what we view as the deliberate manipulation of the law” by David S.C. Chu, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, and his deputies, the letter states.

Kerry Baker, legislative director for Disabled American Veterans, said Chu sent out a memorandum in March redefining which injuries qualify as “combat-related.”

The definition is important because Section 1646 of the 2008 Defense Authorization Act said service members with combat-related disabilities no longer must pay back any disability retirement severance they receive from the Defense Department before they become eligible for disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs, as has been the case under longstanding policy.

The policy affects service members who receive a disability rating of 20 percent or less from the Defense Department, and thus receive a severance payment rather than lifetime disability retirement pay.

Baker said he has seen cases in which, for example, a veteran receives a $30,000 severance payment from the Pentagon, uses it for medical care or education, and then, even if subsequently awarded a full 100 percent disability rating by VA, must pay the $30,000 back first before he can draw any VA compensation.
go here for more

http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/08
/military_veteransletter_defensedepartment_082908w/

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Tammy Duckworth, Wounded Iraq veteran rips Bush, McCain

Wounded Iraq veteran rips Bush, McCain
By CHRISTOPHER WILLS | Associated Press Writer
9:23 PM CDT, August 27, 2008
DENVER - Tammy Duckworth, an Army helicopter pilot who lost both legs in Iraq, told the Democratic convention Wednesday that Republican John McCain has unfailingly backed a Bush administration that "let our warriors down."

"Our troops are courageous, strong, fierce. This administration has redeployed them until they are overstretched, stressed and strained," said Duckworth, now director of the Illinois Department of Veterans' Affairs.

She berated McCain for backing President Bush's decision to invade Iraq, calling it a diversion from the true battle -- fighting in Afghanistan to destroy al Qaeda. And Bush has failed to give adequate care to the soldiers injured in that war, she charged.

"Too often they get bureaucracy, not benefits. They find inadequate access, inferior facilities and infuriating paperwork," Duckworth said.
click post title for more

Texas' Chet Edwards tells veterans: McCain is no friend to you

Texas' Chet Edwards tells veterans: McCain is no friend to you

07:07 AM CDT on Thursday, August 28, 2008
By ROBERT T. GARRETT / The Dallas Morning News
rtgarrett@dallasnews.com

DENVER – Waco congressman Chet Edwards assailed John McCain as no friend of veterans Wednesday, while hailing Barack Obama as the champion that veterans and military families need.


Capping seven days that most politicians can only dream of, Mr. Edwards snagged a prime-time speaking slot at the Democrats' convention.

With a video montage of the Alamo as his backdrop, he got four minutes to tout Mr. Obama's record on veterans' health and education benefits.



Mr. Edwards said he has "the greatest respect for the military service and sacrifice of John McCain in the Vietnam War."

But he said the Arizona senator "has received failing grades from some of our nation's most respected veterans' organizations. He has repeatedly voted against health care funding and benefits for his fellow veterans. And if elected, his plan could lead to the rationing of veterans' health care."
click post title for more

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

VA: $94 billion for 2009 and still $3.3 billion short

Vet care spending is at record level

By Gregg Zoroya - USA Today
Posted : Wednesday Jul 23, 2008 12:38:35 EDT

The federal government is spending more money on veterans than at any time in modern history, surpassing the tidal wave of spending following World War II and the demilitarizing of millions of troops.

Expenditures hit $82 billion in 2007 because of the rising cost of health care, the expense of caring for an aging population of mostly Vietnam veterans and a new crop of severely wounded troops from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

That exceeds the $80 billion in inflation-adjusted dollars spent in 1947 after most of the 16.1 million Americans serving in World War II left the service, according to a Congressional Research Service report submitted to Congress last month.

An 11 percent hike in spending is slated for this fiscal year to $91 billion and the Veterans Affairs Department has proposed $94 billion for 2009. And still more is needed, said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who is seeking another $3.3 billion for the 2009 budget proposal.

“While we are spending more than in previous years, we are still not meeting many of the health care and benefits needs of our veterans,” Murray said.

Last month’s passage of a new GI Bill will add $100 billion in education benefits for veterans over the next 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office said.

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain and his Democratic opponent Sen. Barack Obama clashed over the bill last month.
McCain opposed it, saying its increased education benefits might encourage troops to leave the military.

Obama backed the bill, saying it would boost the number of people interested in serving.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/07/gns_va_budget_072308/
One more case of McCain being wrong and then trying to take credit for what was done. He was wrong to not support it. He was also wrong on the reason he did not support it.

Obama was right to support it and right on the reason given to support it.

Friday, July 18, 2008

'Compassion in Action' White House Faith Base Round Table

I can't take credit for finding this. It came in an alert from here.
Faith-Based Meeting Announced
By Night Watch Ministries(Night Watch Ministries)



White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives to Host 'Compassion in Action' Roundtable on Addressing Needs of America's Veterans
Contact: Rebecca Neale, The White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, 202-456-7348



WASHINGTON, July 18 /Christian Newswire/ -- On Tuesday, July 22, 2008, the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (OFBCI), joined by U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs James B. Peake, will convene a Compassion in Action roundtable titled, "Serving Those Who Have Served: The Vital Role of Faith-Based and Community Organizations." Hosted by OFBCI Director Jay Hein, the Roundtable will focus on innovative and effective policies, programs and partnerships that address the needs of America's veterans, highlighting the vital role of faith-based and community organizations in these efforts.

A complete Compassion in Action Roundtable agenda is attached.

TUESDAY, JULY 22, 2008

WHO: Jay Hein, Director, White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

The Honorable James B. Peake, U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs

WHAT: White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

Compassion in Action roundtable

WHERE: The White House

Eisenhower Executive Office Building (EEOB)

Room 450

WHEN: Tuesday, July 22, 2008

10:30 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. EDT

Members of the press should arrive at the Northwest Appointment Gate by 10 a.m. EDT to ensure entry.

NOTE: Members of the press who do not have a White House press credential must fax his or her name (as it appears on his or her driver's license), Social Security number and date of birth on company letterhead to (202) 456-7019 no later than 6 p.m. on Monday, July 21, 2008. For additional credentialing or logistical questions, please call (202) 456-7348.

Serving Those Who Have Served: The Vital Role of Faith-Based and Community Organizations

10:30 a.m. Welcome and Introduction

Jay Hein, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director

White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

10:40 a.m. Keynote Remarks

James B. Peake, M.D.

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

10:55 a.m. Veterans’ Needs and Solutions

Moderator: Chaplain A. Keith Ethridge, Acting Director, National Chaplain Center, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Panelist: Laura Balun, Director, Voluntary Service Office, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Panelist: Craig Dykstra, Senior Vice President of Religion, Lilly Endowment

Panelist: Katherine Dunlap, Coordinator, McGuire Outreach Ministry

11:35 a.m. Snapshot of Success

Mark Johnston, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Special Needs Programs, Office of Community Planning and Development, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

John McWilliam, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Veterans' Employment and Training, U.S. Department of Labor

Milton Brown, Service Recipient, Maryland Center for Veterans Education and Training

11:50 a.m. Services and Partnership Successes

Moderator: Pete Dougherty, Acting Assistant Deputy Secretary for Intergovernmental Affairs U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Panelist: Reverend Michael M. Boland, Administrator, President and CEO,

Catholic Charities, Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago

Panelist: Anne Rea, Chief of Operations for Adult Services, Way Station

Panelist: Ruth Fanning, Director, Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Service, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Panelist: Jim Gibbons, President and CEO, Goodwill Industries International

12:40 p.m. Call to Action

Mike Vogel, Chairman, 2008 National Salute to Hospitalized Veterans
http://christiannewswire.com/news/656667232.html


Which is a great idea considering there has not been very much going on to meet the needs as great as they are. You would think this part would have been updated, but it is the Bush White House after all.

Jim Nicholson
Former Secretary of Veterans Affairs
November 10, 2006November 10, 2005May 31, 2005May 5, 2005

Anthony Principi
Secretary of Veterans Affairs, 2001-2005
November 9, 2004November 10, 2003
http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/veterans/


Clicking around on the links, this is what I found.
Faith Base grants section. This is what is there for veterans.

VETERANS
Homeless Providers Grant and Per Diem Program 73
New Grantee Homeless Veterans’ Reintegration Program 73
Non-Urban and Urban Homeless Veterans’ Reintegration Program 73
Veterans' Workforce Investment Program (VWIP) 74
US Department of Veterans Affairs 81


I know some of my friends are still reluctant to find the need for something like this but consider when you address the connection between mind, body and spirit, there is great healing. The problem is the clergy from all denominations are very reluctant to step up. This could be a very interesting meeting. I hope there are some members of the media there to give a full report on this. It should provide a greater understanding of how far the White House has come in addressing, with all seriousness, the needs of our veterans, or the lack of it.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

UK:Troops to get free education and priority NHS care

There needs to be a new rule from now on. If a nation cannot take care of the wounded combat will make, if they cannot and do not plan for them in advance, they can't send them until they are able to. Afghanistan was invaded in 2001 and Iraq in 2003. This is 2008! The UK has not gotten it right yet. The US has not gotten it right yet. Canada has not gotten it right yet. Australia has not gotten it right yet. The men and women serving these nations are worth all the money it takes to train them and arm them, deploy them into combat zones, but it would really be great if they were also worth whatever it costs to take care of them if they get wounded doing it!




The new report does not, however, provide any compensation for soldiers suffering from psychological damage. Chris Simpkins, director general of the Royal British Legion, said that "the legacy of those suffering from stress will be a very long one".



Troops to get free education and priority NHS care

By Kim Sengupta
Friday, 18 July 2008
Members of the armed forces will be entitled to free university education, fast track access to the NHS and double the compensation for those seriously wounded, under a benefits package announced yesterday.


Although the initiative was broadly welcomed by veterans and armed forces welfare groups, there was criticism that the measures had been slow in coming.

Yesterday also saw the release of a report by the Commons Committee of Public Accounts which found younger people leaving the services are not getting adequate support from the Ministry of Defence.

But Des Browne, the Defence Secretary, said the Command Paper, which for the first time involves other government departments as well as the MoD contributing to soldiers' welfare, "will make a real difference to the everyday lives of our forces and their families".

Under the new scheme the maximum lump-sum payment for the worst injuries will rise from £285,000 to £570,000 and a guaranteed income of £19,000 a year will raise the total lifetime earnings for some to about £1.5m. Other benefits include service personnel receiving free education up to A-level and degree standard and their children getting easier access to local schools; free bus travel for injured veterans; "key worker" status extended for 12 months for those leaving the service and improved access to NHS dentists for personnel and their families.

The new maximum injury compensation is expected to benefit about 80 individuals such as Lance-Bombardier Ben Parkinson, who lost both legs and suffered brain damage from a landmine explosion in Afghanistan in 2006.

go here for more



http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/
troops-to-get-free-education-and-priority-nhs-care-870842.html

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Veterans go after McCain on his record against veterans

Veterans on bus tour criticize McCain
Group sponsored by union slams his health care record.
Mike Penprase • News-Leader • July 13, 2008

Sen. John McCain is a veteran, but he doesn't have the care of other vets at heart, according to the survivors of several wars who made a stop Saturday in Springfield.

A national bus tour dubbed the Road to Health Care tour is sponsored by the Service Employees International Union, which has endorsed Democratic Sen. Barack Obama for president.

And the labor union's endorsement of Obama didn't escape the McCain campaign when it responded to claims that the presumptive GOP candidate doesn't support veterans.

The vets not only criticized McCain's record on veteran heath care and other benefits, they also questioned whether a plan for a Veterans Affairs mental-health clinic in Greene County would meet pressing medical needs at a time when it's more expensive to make trips to VA facilities.

Speaking during the tour's midday stop at the Greene County Courthouse, the veterans made a frontal assault on fellow vet McCain.

Jack Hembree, a 22-year Army veteran who fought in Korea and Vietnam, spoke out against turning veterans' medical care over to private providers.

A self-described "yellow dog Democrat," Springfieldian Hembree said he believes McCain's proposed changes to Veterans Affairs would be a swan song for the government body that has long overseen veterans' medical care.

click post title for more
Just because McCain enjoys the benefits of being a wounded veteran, he has not voted for the interests of other veterans. His record is what needs to be addressed. While he runs on his POW years, he's been running away from what other veterans need.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Florida VETS BLAST VA FOR EMPLOYING FULL-TIME INTERIOR DECORATORS

VETS BLAST VA FOR EMPLOYING FULL-TIME INTERIOR

DECORATORS -- In the Tampa area, VA has eight

interior decorators with total salaries of $660,000

a year. (with must-watch video)

This goes on all over the country!

My VA hospital has a half-time interior decorator.

What does she do? ..... "Let's see...should I paint this hall institutional gray, institutional brown or institutional green?"

You ABSOLUTELY must watch the video at the link below to see the reaction from a veteran.
click here for more
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfJUN08/nf062108-4.htm

Absolutely, positively, sickening! In Florida we have some hospitals that look like resorts but they don't hire full time decorators. When you listen to this report, they asked other hospitals nearby James A. Haley VA about this and they laughed! Who had this bright idea at the same time we have psychologist, psychiatrists and mental health workers donating their time free of charge because the VA doesn't have enough of them to go around?

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Agent Orange: HR5729 needs support now

Hello. It's us, the Nesler family again! Writing about the Agent Orange, Congress, the VA and Spina Bifida Children.

HR 5729 a piece of legislation to improve the health care services provided by the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) to the roughly 900 Agent Orange Spina Bifida children such as our daughter Honey Sue was recently passed by the House of Representatives. In the House it was sponsored by Congressman Brad Ellsworth (DEM of IN) and Co-Sponsored by Congressman Steve Buyer. (REP of IN)

The VA already acknowledges these children under existing law and provides them SOME health care compensation. But this bill (HR 5729) will improve and increase the level of care provided by the VA.

Now HR 5729, having passed in the US House of Representatives has been sent to the US Senate. The urgent need NOW is to prevent it from dying in a Senate committee. Which is often the fate in the Senate of House of Representatives' bills effecting only small politically insignificant numbers of war veterans and our families.

I am now asking that you help by writing to your two Senators asking that they provide real TANGIBLE support for this bill. Without which the bill will NEVER move out of committee for a vote. If you are willing to help you may use the suggested FORM letter below to contact your two Senators. If you will print out the suggested letter below, adding your name and address to the signature block, and send it to your two Senators it will help immensely.

Because of 9-11 paper communication with members of Congress has become difficult. So I am including this link Complete E-Mail Addresses for Congress, Senate, Governors & State Legislators to a list of Senatorial fax numbers. So that you may fax rather than mail the letter if you prefer. Faxing is easier and cheaper and does not require the months of security Hoop La required for a paper snail mail letter to get through to a Congressional office.

But ANY way in which you can get the letter into the office of your state's two Senators will help to get this legislation out of the Senate committee and on the way to the Senate floor for a vote. If we do not get the support of at least a few Senators the bill will die in committee without ever being voted on. Please take the time to help Honey Sue and the other 900 or so Agent Orange children.

Below is the suggested form letter. It is also attached to this Email as a file if you want to open the file to print it. Remember that to be of help you must add your name and address to the signature block to prove you are a constituent of your particular two Senators. Otherwise it will go into the trash can as junk mail.

Also if you chose to write your own letter in your own words please remember that it is necessary to request that the Senator take the three specific pro-active steps listed in the suggested form letter. If you contact the Senator WITHOUT requesting these specific three tangible acts of support your letter will only generate a computerized response thanking you for writing and telling you that the Senator will sagely "consider your comments" while "monitoring the progress of the bill in committee." Which translated to plain English means they will do NOTHING and the bill will die in committee without ever being voted on.

By requesting the three specific actions you will greatly increase the chances that your letter to the Senators will actually be read by an actual human staffer. Possibly even answered by a human person rather than with a meaningless computer generated form letter. And in today's political world that in itself is a major accomplishment!

Thank you for whatever level of help you can render. The suggested letter is below our signature block. And it is also attached to this Email as a file for you to view and print. .


Ron and Suzanne Nesler....... Parents, guardians and care givers for
Honey Sue

HERE IS THE SUGGESTED LETTER TO SENATORS

Senator,


I strongly support America’s war veterans and their families from all wars. Both past and present. I am very interested in HR 5729 also known as the Honey Sue bill. This is a bill to improve VA health care services for the fewer than 1000 children of Vietnam War veterans. These few children of Vietnam War veterans are already acknowledged by the VA to be afflicted with birth defects resulting from a birth parent’s exposure to Agent Orange during that war. But are neglected for fair health care compensation because they are so few in number.

As you know HR 5729 has easily passed in the House of Representatives with bipartisan support and it’s financial cost is reported as insignificant by the Congressional Budget Office. But as you ALSO know this bill will die in committee in the US Senate UNLESS it receives your tangible support in the form of a companion bill to HR 5729 and a letter of support to the Veteran Affairs Committee. As well as a request for mark up on the bill to that committee.

I am writing to ask that you show TANGIBLE support of America’s past war veterans by sponsoring a companion bill for HR 5729 in the US Senate. And that you send a letter of support to the Senate Veteran Affairs Committee and make a request for mark up on this bill to that committee.

Will you provide this small tangible support for America’s past war veterans and their families?


Thank you very much.






Home Of The Agent Orange"Quilt Of Tears"
A Traveling Tribute, Honor & Memorial to Veterans
To Visit Our Site! Click Here!
Agent Orange Victims & Widows Support Network, Inc.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Number of disabled vets up with Iraq, Afghan wars

AP IMPACT: Number of disabled vets up with Iraq, Afghan wars

AP IMPACT: Number of disabled veterans is on rise as wars in Iraq, Afghanistan wear on

JENNIFER C. KERR
AP News

May 11, 2008 09:30 EST

Increasing numbers of U.S. troops have left the military with damaged bodies and minds, an ever-larger pool of disabled veterans that will cost the nation billions for decades to come — even as the total population of America's vets has begun to shrink.


Despite the decline in total vets — as soldiers from World War II and Korea die — the government expects to be spending $59 billion a year to compensate injured warriors in 25 years, up from today's $29 billion, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated Press. And the Veterans Affairs Department concedes the bill could be much higher.

Why?

Worse wounds. More disabilities. More vets aware of the benefits and quicker to file for them.

Also, ironically, advanced medical care. Troops come home with devastating injuries that might well have killed them in earlier wars.

Time is also a factor when it comes to disability compensation costs. Payments tend to go up as veterans age, and an increasing number of soldiers from the Vietnam War will be getting bigger payments as they get older and are less able to work around their disabilities.

The number of disabled veterans has jumped by 25 percent since 2001 — to 2.9 million — and the cause really is no mystery.

"This is a cost of war," says Steve Smithson, a deputy director at the American Legion. "We're still producing veterans. We've been in a war in Iraq for five years now, and the war on terror since 9/11."

VA and Census Bureau figures show the previous six-year period, before hostilities in Afghanistan and Iraq, saw a more modest increase of 4 percent in the number of disabled vets. Veterans can make claims for disability benefits long after their military service has ended.

Today's veterans — disabled or not — number nearly 24 million. That population is projected by the VA to fall under 15 million by 2033, mostly because of dying World War II and Korean War vets. But costs are expected to rise.

Inflation accounts for a big chunk of the increase. But even when the VA factors out inflation, the compensation for disabled veterans would still grow from $29 billion to $33 billion in today's dollars — a more than 10 percent increase. And the department acknowledges the estimate could rise by 30 percent.

VA officials were not eager to talk about reasons for the increases. They declined several requests for interviews. In a written response to a handful of questions, the agency noted a few factors at play in the rising costs, such as the aging veterans population, an increase in the number of disabilities claimed and the severity of injuries sustained.

Outside experts provided more insight.

The American Legion's Smithson says the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are resulting in more severe injuries — amputations and traumatic burns — the kind of injuries that troops in Vietnam and earlier wars would not have survived. http://www.rawstory.com/news/mochila/AP_IMPACT_Number_of_disabled_vets_u_05112008.html

Only 24 million veterans and we, a nation of over 300 million, cannot take care of them?

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

VA Sec. Peake and Senator Tester address needs of veterans


Federal Veterans Affairs Secretary visits Billings
By TOM LUTEY
Of The Gazette Staff

Limited by staff and space, Veteran's health care services in Montana fall short, said U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., who today brought U.S. Veterans Affairs Secretary James Peake to Billings to meet with local veterans.

"What I'm getting at is the staff and the square footage is a big issue," Tester said. "That's not just here. It's the same in Great Falls and other places."

Tester and the secretary got a firsthand look at the tight cramped quarters of the Veterans Affairs Primary Affairs Clinic in Billings. Roughly a decade old, the King Avenue health care facility is no longer big enough to accommodate services for Billings-area veterans. Plans to relocate to a larger facility are in the works, but the VA Primary Care Center is also short on staff.

Wait time
Veterans speaking to Tester and Peake said phone calls to the VA Primary Care Center often go unanswered for half an hour. Getting in to see a counselor about war-related stress can take days.


Rural areas
Addressing veteran's care in rural areas specifically, Peake announced the creation of a rural health advisory committee to bring rural health care issues to the fore. Tester brought Peake to Montana to so the secretary could see challenges of veteran health care in rural areas first hand. Peake in turn said some areas of Montana went beyond rural and were actually frontier.


Release of medical records
The need for better mental health care was later driven home during a town hall meeting, in which the father of a suicidal Marine living in Billings pleaded for the release of his son's military records so the boy could get help. Trembling and near tears, the man barely made his request.


But this is the most troubling of all

The average time for processing claims currently is 185 days and only one in 10 claims are filed correctly.

go here for the rest

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2008/02/20/news/local/20-vavisit.txt



This last part is the biggest reason all veterans should seek the help of service officers to fill these claims out the right way the first time. It's too hard to know what the form is asking for half the time. While organizations like the DAV do not charge for their help, all they ask is that you consider joining them. That's all. They are not connected to the government but they know how the system works. They operate on donations. Most of them do.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Senator Murray Questions VA Secretary About 'Unacceptable' Budget

Senator Murray Questions VA Secretary About 'Unacceptable' Budget

Senator Patty Murray


Feb 14, 2008
February 13, 2008

One week before Murray brings Secretary Peake to Walla Walla, she asks for answers on lack of construction dollars and suicide prevention efforts.

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - U.S. Senator Patty Murray, a senior member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, today questioned VA Secretary James Peake about the President's deficit of dollars when it comes to caring for our nation's veterans.

Peake appeared before Murray's committee today to defend the President's VA budget and will accompany her to the Walla Walla VA Facility in Washington state next week.

"We know all too well what happens when the VA gets shortchanged. The men and women who have served us end up paying the biggest price," Murray said. "Our veterans are our heroes, and they deserve the best we can give them. I believe we can do a lot better than this budget."

In asking Peake about what the VA is doing to reach out to struggling veterans who may not know about VA resources available to them, Murray referenced a VA study that found that Guard or Reserve members accounted for 53 percent of the veteran suicides from 2001, when the war in Afghanistan began, through the end of 2005. The study was made public yesterday in an Associated Press story.

go here for the rest
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/9356

Monday, February 4, 2008

Bush's VA budget waiting for them to die


For veterans, the 2009 budget provides $47 billion in funding for veterans’ health care, benefits, and other services.


The President’s FY 2009 Budget By the Numbers

By IAVA Staff

However, starting in 2010, the budget predicts sudden (and unrealistic) drops in costs for veterans’ care. The administration’s argument is that the deaths of earlier generations of veterans will reduce expenses, but this line of........

click above for the rest. So in other words, he's waiting for them to die. If Bush thinks that there will be that many more dying so that the new generation of veterans will not over take their places, he is dead wrong. Isn't he taking into consideration the backlog of claims 650,000 deep will actually turn out to be veterans who do end up having their VA claims approved? Isn't he taking into consideration the hundreds of thousands who have their claims tied up on appeal or not even filed yet will also add to the numbers of the veterans needing care?

While Bush is waiting for the older veterans to die, he is failing on seeing the need of those who survive the two military operations he began and refused to fund.

Bush does seem interested in factoring in the figures of the PTSD veterans who will not show signs of PTSD for a couple more years and then will need to seek help, which is exactly what happened after Vietnam. Other health issues linked to depleted uranium will need to be addressed as well as birth defects in their children. Again, exactly what happened after Vietnam with Agent Orange. None of the needs foreseen by experts for ten years out are being factored in on any of this and it is deplorable that while he has yet to include Iraq or Afghanistan operating expenses in any of his budgets other than emergency supplemental demands, he does not take anything having to do with those who serve in any order of importance. The tax cuts he wants usually come first and he insists on making them permanent while refusing to make any of the necessary long range plans for the troops or their families.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Get This Out to all Viet Nam Veterans

Pass this on. Sent from email.

Got this through several friends - have not been able to verify it but thought best to forward FYI. As usual, check with your Doctor and the VA.

Subject: Get This Out to all Viet Nam Veterans
All:
Forwarded for your information. Please consider forwarding to those on you E-Mail list who may be impacted by this information. ~~ Semper Fidelis!!! . . .

-------------"Therefore I say; know the enemy and know yourself; in a hundred battles you will never be in peril. When you are ignorant of the enemy but know yourself, your chances of winning or losing are equal. If ignorant both of your enemy and of yourself, you are certain in every battle to be in peril." ~~ Sun Tzu


http://www.vva.org/veteran/0807/letters.html

PARASITE WARNINGI am writing to inform all Vietnam veterans about a potential health risk that they may have been exposed to while serving in Vietnam: the little-known danger from parasites.


My husband, who was otherwise healthy, passed away on January 20, 2006, from cholangiocarcinoma, cancer of the bile duct of the liver. It is very rare in the United States, but it is very prevalent in Vietnam and surrounding countries. There are two (2) known causes of this type of cancer: from contracting hepatitis C and from ingesting a parasite from the water supply in Vietnam. My husband did not have hepatitis C; therefore, it was determined that his cancer derived from a parasite. I have received official notification from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) that his death was service related, which is not something the VA determines without an overwhelming amount of evidence.This cancer does not manifest itself until later in life, when you are between 60 and 70 years old.

Once the symptoms occur, which usually include jaundice, it is very difficult to treat or beat. My husband was 58 years old when he passed away. If he had been informed that there was a possibility that he could have ingested a parasite while serving in Vietnam, he would have taken precautions to have his bile ducts examined, possibly extending his life. The parasite is long gone, but it left behind damaged cells, which developed into cancerous tumors in the bile ducts.If you spent time in Southeast Asia and are having gastrointestinal issues for no apparent reason, please have your physician check for damage within the bile ducts. It may save your life.

Mrs. Edward S. (Pete) Harrison

Horseheads, New York



There is a long list of problems Vietnam veterans faced and still deal with today. They were joined by Gulf War veterans and to this day, they still fight. Wonder when the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans will be able to say they don't have to fight to have their wounds treated and their illnesses taken care of because the government did in fact honor them?

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Barack Obama Hosts Roundtable Discussion with South Carolina Veterans

Obama noted that his commitment to veterans is grounded in his experience being raised in part by his grandfather, who served during World War II.

“I will never forget that everyone who wears the uniform deserves the opportunities that my grandfather got – to have a Commander-in-Chief who is accountable, and to have a grateful nation that helps you live the American Dream that you have defended,” Obama said.


January 24, 2008
Barack Obama Hosts Roundtable Discussion with South Carolina Veterans
Filed under: '08 Candidates SC Visits, Barach Obama, Press Release — schotline @ 3:33 pm
Tags: Barack Obama, Discussion, Hosts Roundtable, South Carolina, Veterans

Conversation Focuses on Importance of Judgment and Keeping our Sacred Trust with America’s Veterans
BEAUFORT, SC - Today in Beaufort, South Carolina, U.S. Senator Barack Obama hosted a roundtable discussion with South Carolina veterans about the need for a President that has the judgment to secure our nation and is willing to be held accountable for keeping our sacred trust with those who serve. Senator Obama detailed his comprehensive plan to give all of our veterans the care and support they have earned.
click post title for the rest

I do not endorse any candidate yet.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Presidential Candidates On Veterans

I would be a lot more impressed if they took a look back on what candidates promised veterans and what they delivered on already. Take Bush for example. He had a long, long history of talking a good game and we saw what he did. Like Biden said his father told him "Don't tell me what you value. Show me your budget and I'll know what you value." In this case, show us what they promised and what they did for veterans since all of them have a record to stand or fall on.

Posted Thursday, January 03, 2008 11:32 AM
Presidential Candidates On Veterans, Part II
David Botti
Yesterday we took at look at four presidential candidates and examples of how veterans issues factored into their campaigns. Today's post contains five more front-runners:


http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/soldiershome/
archive/2008/01/03/presidential-candidates-on-veterans-part-ii.aspx


As for politics right now I care more about what is being done today than what a bunch of people say they will do if they get the chance to do it. It matters more what they did do with the chances they already had.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Uninsured veterans and families in crisis

Health Insurance Crisis Hits Hard on Veterans; 1.8 Million Veterans are Uninsured and At Risk

By Dr. Henrie M. Treadwell


Atlanta, GA (BlackNews.com) - The health crisis in America, which has left 47 million people without health insurance, is devastating veterans and their families. What does it say about America when the men and women who have risked their lives for our nation can't get access to quality health care at home?

It means there is a crisis that must be addressed.

Our nation spends more than $2 trillion a year on health care and has the best medical researchers and most advanced technology in the world, but we haven't figured out how to provide health insurance for our citizens. This is nothing less than a monumental failure on the part of our society with everyone from state and federal leaders to the medical community at fault.


A study by Harvard Medical School recently documented the plight suffered by veterans and their families because of the health insurance debacle. Of the 47 million people without health insurance, one out of every eight, or 12.2 percent, is a veteran or member of a veteran household. Specifically, the study said 1.8 million veterans and 3.8 million household members are uninsured. And the number of uninsured veterans increased by 290,000 since 2000.

Moreover, the health data on veterans reflects the situation faced by many working families across the country: family income is too high for Medicaid, or in the case of veterans, means-tested care from the Veterans Administration. Yet families can't afford the skyrocketing cost of health insurance. Means testing for veterans benefits results in some veterans earning as low as $24,000 a year not qualifying.

It's unconscionable to think that we ship men and women off to fight wars, and then desert them and their families when they return home. If our nation goes to war, we absolutely must care for the people who fight those wars. Not only do we leave our gallant veterans with poor health-care options, but one out of every four of the homeless in America is a veteran, and countless others run afoul of the law and find themselves in our nation's prisons and jails.
go here for the rest
http://www.blacknews.com/pr/henriemtreadwell201.html