Saturday, December 12, 2009

Obama wants QRMC review of Guard, reserve pay

Obama wants QRMC review of Guard, reserve pay

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Dec 11, 2009 20:46:15 EST

President Barack Obama has ordered the next year-long Pentagon pay study to concentrate on improvements aimed at troops in combat, Guard and reserve members and those wounded in war, their caregivers and survivors.

Additionally, Obama wants the 11th Quadrennial Review of Military Compensation, scheduled to begin work soon, to look at pay incentives for people whose skills are highly needed in current operations. That includes linguists and translators, special operations personnel, the pilots of unmanned vehicles and mental health professionals.

The review will be carried out by a joint service task force that includes the representatives of the military services, Coast Guard, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association and Public Health Service. The task force will have a year to complete the work but are expected to have a preliminary report for the White House in six months.

In a Dec. 11 memorandum to the Pentagon setting the agenda for the study, Obama said, “In these times of unprecedented expectations and demands, our attention must be on the well-being of our personnel in uniform. The defense of the homeland and ongoing overseas operations require us to examine and determine whether compensation levels are sufficient to sustain current and future efforts to recruit and retain the right skill set and experience level.”
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/12/military_qrmcpay_121109/

Unemployment for young vets surpasses 20%

Unemployment for young vets surpasses 20%

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Dec 11, 2009 15:02:03 EST

With the unemployment rate for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans now exceeding 20 percent, a key Republican wants the Obama administration to use economic stimulus funding to create jobs for veterans.

The 20.8 percent unemployment rate for November for veterans ages 18 to 24 is an increase from the 17.3 percent rate for veterans in that age group reported for September, indicating a deteriorating jobs picture for entry-level positions.

The new numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics reveal there are more than 1 million unemployed veterans. “That is unacceptable,” said Rep. Steve Buyer of Indiana, ranking Republican on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, who has been pushing since December — without much success — to have stimulus funds used for veterans programs.

Buyer has introduced a bill, HR 4220, that tries on a number of fronts to help veterans find jobs.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/12/military_veterans_unemployment_121109w/

PBS report to understand Afghanistan

Even now stigma of PTSD lives on

How is this possible? How is it still possible for some people to actually think PTSD is bogus? Can they really be that hard to educate? Considering there are generals talking about their own PTSD, it is really stupefying how isolated some troops remain when it comes to the knowledge the vast majority of the troops have gained.

The rest of the population in the country has woken up to the fact trauma does need to be addressed as a preventive measure and we see this everyday. Crisis teams rush in so they are available to address anyone needing help. PTSD is an emotional wound, not a weakness, but caused by an outside force and it attacks because of the strength of ones compassion. How can anyone say it's bogus? How many times have these deniers talked to combat veterans, POW's or any other veteran? How many books have they read beginning with the Bible itself showing the strains of trauma effected even the most fierce fighter?

They need to actually pay attention to the different people in their own lives, in their own circle to know they will have a buddy they all usually go to with their problems, just as they have one they can depend on to tell a great joke. They have one they can depend on to lend a hand doing things but may not talk very much. Each one of their friends brings something different to the friendship and all are valued. Its the same thing in the military. One is rock solid but not very emotional at all. You can count on him during a bar fight but he's not much good when you have a problem at home and need someone to talk to. Another of your friends may be the kind of cowboy, more apt to shoot first and figure out who he's shooting at later. They are usually the ones to walk away from traumatic events seemingly untouched. They just don't have the heart for it, unable to care, find compassion or really grieve. This is why they cannot understand PTSD in others. They have no capacity to feel anything for anyone else.

If they looked closely at their friends/buddies, they would understand what they were like before the first IED or firefight. They would know how they acted, what they said, what their sense of humor was like, what their entire character was like. If they change after, it is because of the trauma hitting them harder and all they need is to have someone watching their back, being there to listen and not judge, being there in case more help is needed and then getting them to the help they need. Otherwise, the problem is not with the veterans ending up with PTSD, the problem is when others deny the reality of it. They do more harm than good and frankly, make lousy friends in the first place if they cannot bring themselves to feel anything for someone they address as brother, buddy or friend.

A critical mission: mental health care for soldiers
DAVE PHILIPPS
THE GAZETTE
In the campaign to help soldiers find normalcy after returning from combat, Fort Carson is preparing for the toughest battle yet — the return this spring of the 4th Infantry’s 4th Brigade Combat Team.

Since 2005, Colorado Springs has seen a rash of crimes by returning troops. Fifteen soldiers from the post have been arrested in at least 12 murders since 2005. The majority of the arrests came from the 3,500 soldiers of the war-weary 4th Brigade, known as the 4-4, now in Afghanistan.

Correctly identifying which returning soldiers need help and giving them effective health care are crucial if the community is going to avoid another bout of violence, military and civilian leaders said.

U.S. Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., called caring for veterans “a matter of life and death for our service members — and civilians.”

Fort Carson officials say they are ready.


“Things have changed,” said Capt. Samuel Preston, the 4th Infantry Division psychiatrist. “This is not the Fort Carson of two years ago.”

Perhaps the most striking change is the post’s acknowledgement of the connection between combat, mental-health problems, suicide and crime.

“It used to be tight-lipped,” said Paul Sexton, director of Pikes Peak Behavioral Health Group, which has treated some Fort Carson soldiers. “Now, it is much more out in the open.”

But reversing the trend in violence has proved difficult. Crime and suicide statistics are at, or above, their highest levels — even with the 4th Brigade out of town. And the stigma that often keeps soldiers from seeking help seems to be alive and well.

The Gazette contacted more than a dozen 4th Brigade soldiers in remote outposts in Afghanistan recently via e-mail. While most said they had more chances for treatment and mental-health education, many said post-traumatic stress disorder is a bogus label used by wimps and scam artists.

A specialist in the 3rd Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment wrote: “When you get 30 male infantryman all getting shot at by the same bullets and you go to combat stress (counseling), you look weak.”

A sergeant in the 2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment wrote that PTSD “is an excuse that someone came up with to get money out of the military.”

read more here

http://www.gazette.com/articles/soldiers-90692-mental-critical.html

Vietnam Vet, ex-POW, Robert Purcell

Vietnam veteran spent nearly eight years as a POW, keeping his honor and sense of humor

By CHRIS VAUGHN 

cvaughn@star-telegram.com

FORT WORTH — Sometimes the measure of a man comes from the stories people tell about him.

And there are a lot of stories circulating now about Robert Purcell, an Air Force pilot who spent an almost incomprehensible time — July 27, 1965, to Feb. 12, 1973 — in a North Vietnamese prison.

Col. Purcell — Percy to those who knew him — died in his home in Fort Worth on Sunday.

Here’s one of those stories.

A prison guard came into Col. Purcell and retired Air Force Col. Bernard Talley’s cell one day. He wanted them to bow.

Col. Purcell wouldn’t. Following his lead, Talley refused, too.

The guard slapped Purcell. Then he slapped him again harder. Then again.

"Why don’t you hit me harder?" Col. Purcell said.

The guard closed his fist and struck. Punch after punch followed.

Col. Purcell repeated his request. The guard kept complying, until he quit because his hands hurt.

When the guard left their cell, Col. Purcell asked Talley to tap out a message to the other prisoners using the code they developed to communicate with one another through walls.

"Tell them Magoo understands English," Col. Purcell said, using the nickname for that guard.

That was Col. Purcell to all who knew him — stubborn, tough as nails, loyal and witty in the darkest hours.

He’d had more than his fair share of dark hours.

After a fall he took at home the last day of 2005, Col. Purcell was paralyzed and considerably weakened physically. A bout of pneumonia finally took its toll last weekend. He was 78.

No one ever heard him complain.
read more
http://www.star-telegram.com/local/story/1817490.html