Saturday, January 30, 2016

Space Coast Attorneys Step up for Veterans

Local attorneys unite for veterans' causes 
FLORIDA TODAY
R. Norman Moody
January 29, 2016
"It makes people more aware of where a veteran can get help," said Dennis Vannorsdall, Brevare County Veterans Services manager.
VIERA As an Army veteran, Viera-based attorney Sara Goodin knows of some of the issues former service members face both in and out of the judicial system.

But many of the veterans, and the attorneys who serve them, don't know of the benefits available to veterans on the Space Coast.

So in conversation with other members of the Brevard County Bar Association, it was decided that sharing information while at the same honoring military men and women was a good way to better serve veterans.

"She mentioned that people did not know about their benefits," said Kim Torres, an attorney with Torres Mediation in Melbourne. "Our attorneys don't even know what available for their clients."

The Bar Association presented Salute to Our Military, a dinner and gathering Thursday night for attorneys, judges, leaders of military units in Brevard County, and veterans groups and organizations that provide services to veterans.
read more here

Report on Wounded Soldier Lacking Information

There are so many pull at your heart stories on our veterans that just don't seem to add up.

On this one, there are a few paragraphs with a "feel good" read to them however it doesn't really say much at all.
Hundreds gather to support Whitman veteran injured in Iraq WFXT News Jan 29, 2016
"Hundreds of people packed the Whitman VFW to help raise money for Paul Skarinka's family to pay for the cost of Paul's recovery at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington."
Pay for cost of recovery at Walter Reed? Really? Walter Reed does not charge for wounded soldiers to get care. Skarinka was wounded in 2004, 12 years ago. Is he a veteran or still in the military? Is the reporter talking about the cost for his wife and child? Then why couldn't they go to Fisher House or any of the other charities funding places to stay nearby? Plus if "hundreds" gathered to raise funds for this wounded soldier, do you think they deserved more than a few paragraphs?

Florida Veterans Charities Feeling Sting After Wounded Warrior Project Report

Florida Veterans Charities Paying the Price of Service
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
January 30, 2016

If you donated because of a commercial pulling at your heart then BOHICA if you never noticed one simple fact. Wounded Warrior Project never says what they are doing with your money. They make no claims about why they even need your money other than to "honor and empower them to aid and assist each other."

They omit the fact that they only "serve" post 9-11 veterans but it is in their website. They have not hidden the fact they are getting huge sums of money donated to them as well as donating huge sums of money to other groups with the money you gave them to other groups.

See, the thing is, as much as all the CBS reporting may have you upset, you really need to blame yourself for not doing your own research just as all the major donators should have done.

The American Sniper Movie about Chris Kyle promised $1 million to Wounded Warrior Project by Warner Brothers instead of the Chris Kyle Foundation in April of 2015.

If you think the reports from CBS on Wounded Warrior Project are new, think again.

CBS WTVR News did another report last year. It showed the troubling accounting they were doing on fundraising and expenses included in on "services" they reported.
CEO responds after watchdogs give Wounded Warrior charity low marks APRIL 29, 2015, BY WEB STAFF
Nardizzi said the best way for a potential donor to gauge a charity is to research the charity directly, without relying on charity-watchdog web sites. But our investigation shows how a charity and a charity-checking organization can review the same data and come up with different results.

On the Wounded Warrior Project’s website, the charity says it spends 80 percent of its donations on its main services. But tax records show it also includes some fundraising expenses in that mix. Charity Navigator subtracts the fundraising and — in its most recent report — said the Wounded Warrior Project spends less than 60 percent on its services. The rest, according to Charity Navigator, went to fundraising and administration.
June 2015 UCLA received a grant from Wounded Warrior Project
Wounded Warrior Project has approved a $15.7 million grant over three years for UCLA Health to expand its Operation Mend program.
But there are others and they are proud to say how many grants they have given out with the funds you thought were going to the veterans they show in those famous commercials with the blankets covered with their famous logo.

November 2015
Southeastern Grocers Customers raise $526,825.66 for Wounded Warrior Project Grocers’ Wall of Honor campaign aids injured veterans and their families
May have sounded good but what they didn't tell you is that not all veteran mattered enough for the Southern Grocers to donate to a charity that excludes older veterans waiting even longer for help with the same wounds.

WWP not run by a veteran and according to reports, only about a third of their employees are veterans.
Steve Nardizzi bio on WWP shows no military service.
A Richardson Scholar, Steve graduated from Brooklyn Law School and was admitted to the New York Bar in 1997 and the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in 1999. He attended New York University, where he was a Trustee Scholar, and earned a bachelor’s degree in political science in 1993.
Maybe that's why he has no problem admitting that this charity is treated more like a business than a not for profit charity doing the work for the sake of veterans.

The majority of charities out there are not successful fundraisers.  However they are doing the work they promised to do, putting veterans needs ahead of getting your money.  All these reports have stung these groups, plus many more, more interested in veterans than raising awareness about themselves.
Local veterans advocates fear impact from Wounded Warrior reports
Tampa Tribune
By Howard Altman
Tribune Staff
January 29, 2016

TAMPA — As both a wounded veteran and a fund-raiser helping people like him, Pete Quintanilla says reports about lavish spending by the cause’s biggest charity — the Jacksonville-based Wounded Warrior Project — is making a tough job even tougher.
The Combat Wounded and Injured Veteran Challenge Team successfully climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest in Africa, in 2013. The group is worried recent news about the Wounded Warrior Project will make their job more difficult. Combat Wounded and Injured Veteran Challenge Team

“There’s veteran fatigue,” said Quintanilla, director of operations for Combat Wounded Veteran Challenge, a St. Petersburg-based non-profit helping veterans through expeditions and research.

“People are tired of giving money for veterans because they don’t know what the money is being used for and they are not sure their dollar is going to help the veteran.”

This week, CBS and the New York Times ran reports raising questions about how the Wounded Warrior Project spends the money it takes in, largely from small donors.

CBS said financial reports show the Wounded Warrior Project spent more than $26 million in 2014 on conferences, meetings and events for staff members — “almost the same amount they spent on combat stress recovery, its largest program for veterans.”

Supporters locally still stand by the Wounded Warrior Project, including a severely wounded Iraq war veteran the charity has helped and the Winn-Dixie supermarket chain, which questions the fairness of the news reports.
Quintanilla and others who run local charities helping veterans say the questions about the Wounded Warrior Project spending leave them as collateral damage. They also have raised their own questions publicly before the news reports appeared.

“It’s going to be harder to raise money now,” said Quintanilla, a medically retired Army Ranger staff sergeant who was shot in the left ankle in Panama during a live-fire training exercise in 1997. His leg was amputated in 2004.

Quintanilla said his organization, which has about $80,000 in the bank, spends 86 percent of the money it raises directly on programs for veterans. That compares to 60 percent spent by Wounded Warrior Project, according to independent charity monitoring groups.
That’s also a concern for Bob Silah, a retired Navy captain who runs Operation Helping Hand, a Tampa-based charity providing assistance to wounded, ill and injured troops at the James A. Haley Veterans’ Hospital in Tampa.

Every month since 2004, the organization has hosted a dinner at the hospital honoring these troops and their families. As he collects donations at these gatherings from corporations and groups, Silah is quick to tell them 96.5 percent of the money raised by Operation Helping Hand goes to the troops and their families.

Unlike the Wounded Warrior Project, he adds, he and everyone associated with Operation Helping Hand do their work for free.
read more here
As for the roots of WWP this is how it started.
The Wounded Warrior Project’s roots are more humble. Its founder, John Melia, was a Marine veteran who had been injured in a helicopter crash off the coast of Somalia in 1992. When wounded troops began returning from Iraq in 2003, Mr. Melia remembered how he had arrived in a stateside hospital with only his thin hospital gown, and began visiting military hospitals to distribute backpacks stuffed with socks, CD players, toothpaste and other items.

As the backpack project grew, Mr. Melia hired a few employees, including Mr. Nardizzi, a lawyer who had never served in the military but was an executive for a small nonprofit, the United Spinal Association, which served disabled veterans.
WWP got the attention to help them raise all that money while other groups didn't even get attention for good works they were doing. Now WWP doesn't like the attention it is getting while other groups are paying for what they did. Doesn't seem fair at all.

Friday, January 29, 2016

Top Charities Do More For Veterans With Less Awareness For Themselves

Just to focus on something positive for a change, Top charities give larger portion to services than Wounded Warrior Project" on Stars and Stripes covered WWP but also covered what others do, so in a way, a valuable report to know next time you want to write a check.
“The donors’ money, they want it to go to the mission of Homes for Our Troops. So, if they give us $10, they want to know most of it is going to build that home,” said retired Army Gen. Richard Cody, chairman of the board for the charity, which builds specially equipped homes for veterans across the United States.
David Coker, president of the Fisher House Foundation, said his charity largely operates by word of mouth without marketing. It spent about 2 percent of its money on fundraising in 2014.
“We think if we just focus on meeting the needs in our lane that good things are going to happen,” he said.
Meanwhile, 91 percent of Fisher House expenses went directly into free lodging for military families so they can be close to a loved one during an illness or medical treatment. The group operates 67 locations and served about 25,000 families in 2014.
So pretty much, money has been donated to raise awareness about WWP while others do more work with less and don't advertise for themselves.

Seat Saved At Soldier's Field for Missing in Action

Empty seat at Soldier Field dedicated to POWs, MIAs
Chicago Tribune
Brianna Gurciullo
January 28, 2016
The open seat, which is fenced off between an American flag and POW/MIA flag, honors prisoners of war and service members declared missing in action.

Rolling Thunder, Illinois Chapter One, members Kandice Jacobs, from left
Gary Bills and Dina Derman look at a chair dedicated to prisoners of war
and missing in action military personnel after a ceremony at Soldier Field
on Jan. 28, 2016. (Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune)
Rolling Thunder members, donning leather jackets with biker patches, hats and sunglasses, filed by a lone chair, plaque and set of flags Thursday afternoon at Soldier Field.

Some stopped and saluted. A man and woman stood arm in arm and looked at the arrangement.

"America the Beautiful" played over speakers. Later, snow flurries began to fall as several members posed for a photo together.
More than 83,000 military personnel remain missing from conflicts as long ago as World War II, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency.
read more here