Friday, July 16, 2010

Vietnam Vet's struggle, traffic stop and a fatal ending

40 years of struggling to overcome what happened to him during war, during the time when he served this country and the country, in turn, let him down. We can excuse it anyway we want to but the truth is, what we see happening to our veterans everyday is all tied back to the Vietnam veterans like Clifton Salter.

There was nothing for any of them when they came home from this war with no clear enemy army to fight. The rules of combat were tossed out when the other side decided they would fight with all they had including old women and children. When they came home, they didn't have the support other generations had but no matter how badly we treated them, they never lost faith in us. They knew, somehow, the American people would finally honor their service and try to help them heal. All we see today is because they didn't give up on us.

With all we've learned about PTSD, how far we've come in overcoming the stigma attached to it, the support sites online and shared experiences to eliminate isolation, we still have much work to be done for the newer generation or we will be reading reports like this and the end of their lives 40 years from now. We need to take care of the newer generation but not at the expense of the older generations still trying to heal. If we can't take care of all of them, then we don't deserve any of them.

"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington


Why does peace after combat come only with the end of their lives?

A vet's struggle, traffic stop and a fatal ending
Man shot by trooper, self had history of mental illness, was known to carry a gun
Louis Cooper

"Most of the people I see are, Army aviation, infantry guys, all the Marines, the medics and the corpsmen — those for whom the war is really personal," he said. "There is a burden of war all across your life — the wear and tear, and the grief of losing very dear friends in a bond that we can't really understand, and the moral injury of doing something against all of the values you were raised on."



Cottage Hill resident Clifton Austin Salter returned from combat in Vietnam in 1970, but the last shot of that war for him may have come in a confrontation with a state trooper on Wednesday morning.

Salter, 60, died from gunshot wounds suffered during a traffic stop by a Florida Highway Patrol trooper on Pine Forest Road near Longleaf Drive. Preliminary findings indicate that both Salter and Trooper Michael Black fired their weapons. Salter sustained at least one self-inflicted shot.

The victim's brother, Santa Rosa County Commissioner Don Salter, said his brother suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and was known to keep a gun in his car.

While Clifton Salter never attempted suicide, he had spoken about ending his life, his brother said.

"When he got back from Vietnam in 1970, he was never the same," he said. "As he got older, as a lot of veterans do, they go back in time and dwell on the war. In the last five or six years, he had become more depressed."

Both Don and Clifton Salter served in Vietnam. A third brother died in the war. Clifton Salter served as an Army specialist in 1969 and '70. His duties included serving as helicopter door gunner.
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A vets struggle traffic stop and a fatal ending

Filner Challenges VA Leadership at Hearing Over John Cochran VA

Filner Challenges VA Leadership at Hearing
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 15, 2010

Washington, D.C. – House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Filner (D-CA) released the following statement following a Congressional hearing to examine an incident involving reusable dental equipment and veteran patient safety at the John Cochran VA Medical Center in St. Louis, Missouri:

“I would like to thank the veterans who bravely told their stories of receiving a certified letter in the mail from the Department of Veterans Affairs notifying them of possible exposure to deadly diseases following routine dental procedures at a VA medical facility. After 1,812 veterans received this letter, they were directed to a hotline to answer their personal questions and orchestrate their follow-up care. To learn that VA employees that answered that hotline were not prepared with facts – much less the necessary compassion to attend to these veterans – is shameful.

“I remain concerned with VA’s lack of transparency. When mistakes are made, honesty and truthfulness are the only way to begin to rebuild trust with the public. Success is measured by veteran service, not bureaucratic preservation. “I challenge the leaders at the John Cochran VA Medical Center, and the leaders at VA Medical Centers around the country, to step up their game. The time is now – to ensure safety procedures are in place, to establish strong employee training programs, to continue to strengthen their national oversight structure, to improve their veteran notification process, to provide timely information to veterans, and to prove to our veterans that these problems are not systemic of the VA medical system.“The VA’s response at the hearing was instructive. Only when Under Secretary Petzel abandoned his prepared remarks, and responded directly to the personal struggles of our veterans, were we able to begin to address the issues at hand. My biggest concern is that we have been here before. It is my commitment to deliver accountability to the veterans of St. Louis and across the country. I will be back in six months to ask the tough questions, speak directly with these veterans, and monitor the progress of this Department in caring for those who have so bravely borne the battle for our country.”
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Filner Challenges VA Leadership at Hearing

House Committee Reviews Effectiveness of VA’s Outreach Efforts on Suicide Prevention

Committee Reviews Effectiveness of VA’s Outreach Efforts on Suicide Prevention
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 14, 2010

Washington, D.C. – On Wednesday, July 14, 2010, Chairman Harry Mitchell (D-AZ) conducted a hearing of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee to examine the progress of suicide prevention outreach efforts at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The Subcommittee evaluated the current state of VA’s ability to educate the public of VA services concerning suicide prevention and discussed the effectiveness of the media campaign to encourage veterans to seek help at the VA.

Public Law 110-110, The Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Act, required VA to develop a pilot program encouraging veterans battling suicide to seek help at the VA. As a result, VA advertised its suicide hotline using Washington, D.C. metro area buses and metro subway trains, in addition to creating a Public Service Announcement for network television use.

“As you know, many of our newest generation of veterans, as well as those who served previously, bear wounds that cannot be seen and are hard to diagnose,” said Chairman Mitchell. “Proactively bringing the VA to them, as opposed to waiting for veterans to find the VA, is a critical part of delivering the care they have earned in exchange for their brave service. No veteran should feel they are alone,” said Chairman Mitchell.

The two witnesses of the hearing’s first panel were Warrant Officer Melvin Cintron, USA (Ret.) who has served multiple tours in Iraq, and also Ms. Linda Bean, who tragically lost her son to suicide after he returned from his second tour in Iraq. Mr. Cintron observed that while the VA’s suicide hotline is a valuable and much needed service, there should be other equally accessible resources offered by the VA that service intermediate levels of urgency prior to the final resort of calling the suicide hotline. Ms. Bean stated that to improve suicide prevention and outreach, the VA must publicize civilian mental health counseling alternatives that might better suit some veterans who are either not located near a VA facility, or who may otherwise choose not to approach the VA for help.

Bob Filner (D-CA), Chair of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, said, “The Department of Veterans Affairs has made significant progress in its effort to address the tragic problem of veteran suicide. However, until we can be confident that an effective system is in place to reach 100% of our veterans who may be contemplating suicide, this Committee will not stop in its efforts to ensure that a more robust and all encompassing VA outreach program has been developed and implemented. To only help the veterans who walk through the doors of a VA facility is not enough. The Department must vigorously reach out to the entire veteran population and educate those not currently enrolled in the VA health care system about the services available and how to go about accessing them.”
read more here
Outreach Efforts on Suicide Prevention

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Children fared worse when mothers struggled with PTSD

Mom's Mental State Influenced Kids' Well-Being After 9/11: Study
Children fared worse when mothers struggled with PTSD, depression, researchers say
By Jenifer Goodwin
HealthDay Reporter
THURSDAY, July 15 (HealthDay News) -- For New York City preschoolers, having a mother with lingering mental health issues after the 9/11 attacks influenced how they fared emotionally more than whether the children had actually witnessed the attacks, a new study finds.

Kids whose mothers struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression after the 2001 assault on the World Trade Center were more likely to have behavioral problems three years later than children whose moms coped better with the attacks, the researchers said.

"With young kids, you have two possible sources of trauma: what they experienced directly, and how they react to the impact on their mother from what she experienced," said lead study author Claude Chemtob, director of the Family Trauma Research Program at New York University. "What we learned was, in fact, that if the mom's experience with 9/11 led to her having depression or PTSD, it had more of an impact than whether the kids saw it or not."
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Children fared worse when mothers struggled with PTSD

VA finally changing for the better

Martin Schram: VA finally changing for the better
Published: Thursday, July 15, 2010


By Martin Schram
Scripps Howard

Viewed through the media's close-up lens, this week's bureaucratic mid-course correction at the Department of Veterans Affairs looked like just another slow-mo replay of a proverbial ocean liner turning, ever so slowly, on the high sea.

But viewed through a contextual big picture prism that has monitored the VA's decades of dysfunction and injustice for those who fight our battles, watching the change happen was like witnessing that same ocean liner flipping up like a teenager's skateboard executing a 180-degree reversal and plopping back into the sea, without even making a splash.

President Barack Obama's VA Secretary, Gen. Eric Shinseki, showed decades of top-level VA non-doers how easy it was to end decades of official inaction and unfairness. Just act. Which is to say, just care enough to act.

Shinseki issued a simple regulation declaring an end to the old rule that VA adjudicators used for decades to deny service-related benefits to tens of thousands of veterans who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder. The old rule required that veterans had to provably identify a specific combat-related "stressor" incident that caused their PTSD.

But the reality of war, as psychiatrists have long maintained, is that there often isn't one single stressor that can be cited definitively as having caused a service member's PTSD — even though the affliction is real and requires treatment. House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Filner, D-Calif., said Shinseki's action "will immediately help combat veterans get the help they need."
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VA finally changing for the better

Troubled vets need help sooner, lawmakers told

Finally someone started to ask why so many would need to contact the Suicide Prevention Hot Line in the first place! As they have talked about the success of this no one seemed willing to ask why so many would be brought to that point instead of helped before it got that bad. I've been screaming about this since the reports of the number of calls began to surface. It just didn't make sense to see so many calling and so few "rescued" in the end. It's good the hotline is there but we need to notice how huge of a problem we have when so many have to reach the brink.

Troubled vets need help sooner, lawmakers told
Army Times
By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Jul 14, 2010 18:04:51 EDT

Even as Veterans Affairs Department officials offered testimony that 10,000 people have been saved by VA’s suicide hotline, veterans themselves said help should come long before a person needs to make that call.

“The suicide hotline is too much of a last alternative,” said Melvin Cintron, an Army veteran who served as a flight medic in Desert Storm and in aviation maintenance in the current war in Iraq. “Either you don’t have enough of a problem and you can wait for weeks for an appointment, or you have to be suicidal.”

Cintron spoke Wednesday before the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s oversight and investigations panel.
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/07/military_suicide_va_071410w/

Indian veterans memorial dedicated in Pablo

Images of service, strength: Indian veterans memorial dedicated in Pablo

By VINCE DEVLIN of the Missoulian

PABLO - The vision of the coyotes came to artist Corky Clairmont 20 years ago.

He just didn't know what it was for at the time.

On a warm Wednesday, hundreds of people saw part of Clairmont's vision etched in granite as the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes dedicated the Clairmont-designed Warrior/Veterans Wall of Remembrance at Eagle Circle in front of tribal headquarters.

Tepee poles 65 feet tall rise over the memorial, and serve to welcome Indian veterans both alive and dead back home to their reservation.

Inside the monument, the head of an eagle occupies the tallest piece of granite, and other pieces form the wings that circle around to protect those inside.

On those inside walls, the names of more than 1,200 Indians from the Flathead Reservation who have served their nation are carved into the stone.

There's Louis Charlo, the young man from Evaro who help raise the first American flag on Iwo Jima in 1945, and was killed in action there a week later.
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Indian veterans memorial dedicated in Pablo

Bill would give tax credit to some spouses

Bill would give tax credit to some spouses

By Karen Jowers - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Jul 15, 2010 10:59:34 EDT

A new Senate bill would give military spouses a federal tax credit of up to $500 when they have to pay to renew or transfer a professional license when moving with their military members on official reassignment orders.

“The Military Spouses Job Continuity Act will help ease the transition of relocation for families and allow military spouses to more easily re-enter the workforce,” said Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., in a statement announcing he had introduced the legislation July 14.
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Bill would give tax credit to some spouses

Fox News Kilmeade should be ashamed of himself

For starters, when I lost my job at a church 2 1/2 years ago, I didn't get unemployment checks. As a church they didn't pay into the system. I thought I was lucky when I got a temp job here or there but otherwise, after working all my life and being unemployed once before in my adult life, I ended up not being able to afford to do what I do as a Chaplain. I work on average 35 hours a week online for free but it used to be over 70. Now much of my time is spent trying to find work and worrying about how to pay my bills.

Kilmeade has said a lot of stupid things in the past but this one really made me sick. It's not about me because even if benefits are extended, it won't do me any good, but it will do a lot for other people through no fault of their own found themselves out of work while people like Kilmeade get paid to make fun of them and use them as part of some kind of sick, twisted political game. Still it gets worse than that. Does Kilmeade ever read actual news or is he too busy reading talking points? See the problem is, veterans have a higher unemployment rate than civilians do.


June unemployment rates rise for veterans

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Jul 2, 2010 12:39:16 EDT

The unemployment rate for veterans rose slightly in June, to 8 percent overall and 11.5 percent for Iraq and Afghanistan-era veterans, a sign that expanding programs aimed at helping veterans find work are not working in a stagnant job market.

June employment statistics released Friday by the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics show the overall unemployment rate for veterans rose slightly from 7.8 percent in May. Still, the unemployment rate for veterans remains lower than the overall national rate of 9.5 percent.

The national rate shows a slight improvement over the 9.8 percent unemployment rate reported for May. The Labor Department report shows, however, an overall decline in the number of jobs in the U.S. after only about 83,000 new jobs were created in the private sector and the federal government eliminated 225,000 temporary positions for Census workers.

For Iraq and Afghanistan-era veterans, many of whom are entering or re-entering the job market after overseas deployments, the June unemployment rate is 11.5 percent, up from 10.6 percent in May.
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June unemployment rates rise for veterans


While I end up reading real news and seeing reports like this, I then get to hear what people end up claiming like the people over at FOX. I get to know what real suffering is like and what price is being paid by our troops and veterans. I get to read about their lives but people like Kilmeade end up being paid to avoid the truth because it does not fit their agenda. People like him only understand what it's like when they have to go thru it and then they wonder where their help is going to come from. I wonder what it was like for an unemployed veteran to hear those words said on TV?

Kilmeade: Maybe expiring unemployment benefits will make people ‘sober up’
By David Edwards and Ron Brynaert
Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Fox guest bashing benefits can't keep talking points straight

Covering the standoff on unemployment benefits, The Huffington Post's Arthur Delaney has complained about lawmakers on both sides of the aisle "who suspect the jobless of preferring not to work."

Pundits and guests on Fox News Channel, in particular, have been advancing similar opinions.
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Maybe expiring unemployment benefits will make people sober up

Shock Waves, PTSD book that tells it like it is





When it comes to PTSD the best therapists either have PTSD or live with someone who does. There are many things that you can't understand just by reading books or talking to someone from time to time. The frustration of living with mood-swings, walking on eggshells, constant turmoil and heartbreak, glimpses of hope shattered by reality, the constant worry for their safety, the list goes on. No one understands this better than the people living with it. When it comes to books on PTSD, it follows along the same reasoning. If you want to know what it is like living with PTSD, read it from someone who does and not some casual observer just copying news reports or interviewing people without really understanding what questions should be asked. I've been living with the good and bad for 26 years. When I'm pulled into a book I'm reading, into their world and their pain, that's when I know they get it.

Cynthia Orange gets it. In her new book Shock Waves, she shares her life and uses quotes from others to help healing. She shares her life along with research to get others to know the life we live everyday. It's well written and flows without hype and needless words just to fill pages.

It's the best $14.95 you can spend if you want to learn more about PTSD.

I am asked all the time to review books and usually I cringe a bit when I get an email about the newest book coming out. I don't give bad reviews, so I don't mention the books I find more self-promoting than helpful. One recent book came to me and when I read about full names being printed along with personal information by a therapist, I just about fell off my chair. That one almost made me reach the point of stopping reviewing books all together. Other books left me feeling as if they just don't know enough about it. Shock Wave just restored my faith in good people writing for the right reasons.

Mom Recognized Hand of Dying Soldier Son in ABC News Video

Mom Recognized Hand of Dying Soldier Son in ABC News Video
Emotional Meeting of Vanessa Adelson and Reporter Who Recorded Son's Death in Afghanistan

By KAREN RUSSO
NEW DELHI, India July 14, 2010
She recognized his hands. In the dark. In less than ten seconds. The way only a mother could.

That's why I met Vanessa Adelson, mother of Specialist Stephan Mace who died on Oct. 3, 2009. She had seen a soldier in a clip of video I had shot in almost complete darkness on the back of a Blackhawk helicopter. She was convinced it was her son.

A colleague in New York emailed me several months ago, asking about my story on the attack on Combat Outpost Keating, a small American base in eastern Afghanistan. I hadn't reported that specific story, but I had shot the medevac flight video used in it.

Vanessa had seen the piece and somehow, in watching just a few seconds of video, glimpsed one of the medevaced soldier's hands and knew it was Stephan. She connected with someone at ABC News who connected her with me.
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Mom Recognized Hand of Dying Soldier Son in ABC News Video

Marine Corps sees big drop in monthly suicide statistics

UPDATE Aug. 5 2010

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Marine suicide rate up again
Hopes just crashed to the ground. I was wrong to think they finally got it last month,,,,,,



Please, please tell me it is because they get it and are going for help instead. Tell me they are getting the support they need from their CO and their buddies. Tell me they are getting support from their families and friends back home. Tell me that they are finally, once and for all, hearing what they need to know to heal and live. Above all, tell me that this is not just a fluke and the numbers will stay down.

MILITARY: Marine Corps sees big drop in monthly suicide statistics
By MARK WALKER - mlwalker@nctimes.com


The U.S. Marine Corps recorded one suicide in June and nine attempted suicides, the lowest monthly figures of the year.

The numbers are down substantially from May, when the service recorded seven suicides and 16 attempted suicides.

Marine Corps officials designated to speak about the trends were not available Wednesday, but a local civilian counselor cautioned it's too early to say if efforts to identify troops experiencing psychological stress are responsible for the June decline.

"We'll have to wait for two or three more months to see if it is in fact a trend or just an aberration," said the counselor, Bill Rider of the Oceanside-based American Combat Veterans of War. "I would like to think the Marine Corps' efforts are doing something, but there is no question that suicide comes along with war."

Last year, the Marine Corps recorded 52 suicides, the highest number since 2001, when 30 Marines took their own lives. That rate of 24 suicides per 100,000 troops surpassed the 20 per 100,000 in the civilian population.
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Marine Corps sees big drop in monthly suicide statistics

In Country Vietnam Motorcycle Club poker run

Vets' poker run to benefit PTSD program at Roseburg VA

Kathy Korengel
The News-Review

John Horwath knows what it's like to go to war. He has gone and come back and learned to live with some of the consequences.

“You go to another country and call them enemies and kill someone who's your age, or God forbid, younger than you,” Horwath, a Vietnam War veteran from Sutherlin, said. “I live with that every day.”

But he and several other Vietnam War combat veterans are doing their part this weekend to make it easier on returning vets. The veterans, all members of the Southern Oregon Chapter of the In Country Vietnam Motorcycle Club, are holding a benefit poker run on Saturday.

Any proceeds raised will go toward buying iPods for veterans in the residential posttraumatic stress disorder unit at the Roseburg Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

“Everything we do is for the veterans,” Horwath said. “Being Vietnam veterans who know how tough it is.”

Sandra Llecholech, chief of Mental Health Service at the VA Roseburg Healthcare System, said in an e-mail, “I am always touched by the compassion and brotherhood that is displayed each and every day by veterans who want to make a real difference in the lives of emotionally wounded veterans.
read more here
http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20100714/NEWS/100719905/1063/NEWS&ParentProfile=1055

The Late Army Sgt. Coleman Bean's Mom Fights For Others

Mother of N.J. veteran who killed himself testifies before Congress
Published: Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Rohan Mascarenhas/The Star-Ledger
Today’s hearing came at a crucial time for the American military, which has struggled with a troubling wave of suicides among veterans and service members.


WASHINGTON, D.C. — Linda Bean went to Washington today on a mission.

Nearly two years ago, her son, Army Sgt. Coleman Bean, committed suicide after serving two tours in Iraq. As she grieved, Bean heard from her son’s former comrades, many of them describing situations they were dealing with, ones similar to those her 25-year-old son could not endure.

Recalling her family’s experience — the delayed appointments at the Department of Veterans Affairs, the "daunting" website she could not navigate — she worried about their futures.

Something had to change, the East Brunswick resident told herself.

"If Coleman were here, he would have wanted to do whatever he could to help his friends," said Bean, who was featured in the Star-Ledger in November chronicling her son’s ordeal. "We owe them."
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Mother of NJ veteran who killed himself testifies before Congress

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Arlington Cemetery official retires amid probe

Arlington Cemetery official retires amid probe of botched contracts, site problems

By Aaron C. Davis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Arlington National Cemetery's deputy superintendent has retired before Army officials could compel him to meet with a Senate Homeland Security subcommittee investigating contracting irregularities, including more than $5 million paid to a series of minority-owned start-up companies that failed to produce a digitized system for cataloguing remains.

Thurman Higginbotham, the cemetery's longtime second-in-command, submitted paperwork last week to make his retirement retroactive to July 2, the week Army officials were notified that congressional staffers were seeking to interview him regarding dozens of botched contracts.

Higginbotham had been placed on administrative leave last month pending disciplinary review after Army investigators found more than 100 unmarked graves, scores of grave sites with headstones not recorded on cemetery maps, and at least four burial urns that had been unearthed and dumped in an area with excess grave dirt. Investigators found that those and other blunders were the result of a "dysfunctional" and chaotic management system, poisoned by bitterness between Higginbotham and the cemetery's superintendent, John C. Metzler Jr.
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Arlington Cemetery official retires amid probe
linked from Stars and Stripes

Newly-released documents from Vietnam era resonate even now

Newly-released documents from Vietnam era resonate even now
In the thick of the Vietnam War, senators harrumphed about White House arrogance, fretted over their own ineffectiveness, complained bitterly about misleading information from the Johnson administration and debated the value -- and potential damage -- of telling Americans the truth.

Deaths of Texas city mayor, daughter ruled murder-suicide

Deaths of Texas city mayor, daughter ruled murder-suicide
By the CNN Wire Staff

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Mayor, daughter both die of gunshot wounds, says medical examiner
NEW: Mayor's death is suicide, daughter's a homicide, ME says
NEW: Police "not ruling out anything" in investigation, spokeswoman says
Police checking on the family's welfare found Coppell mayor, daughter dead

(CNN) -- The Dallas County Medical Examiner's Office ruled Wednesday that a Texas mayor's death was a suicide and her daughter's a homicide.

Coppell Mayor Jayne Peters and her daughter Mary Corinne were found dead Tuesday evening by officers who had been sent to check on the family's welfare. The officers had gone to the home at the request of the city manager's office after the mayor did not show up for a scheduled council meeting.

Police in Coppell have not said if the mayor killed the daughter before turning a gun on herself.

"The case is still under investigation, and we have established no classification with regards to the incident," spokeswoman Sharon Logan said. " We are not ruling out anything at this time."
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Deaths of Texas city mayor, daughter ruled murder suicide

VA, vets groups oppose new idea to speed claims

VA, vets groups oppose new idea to speed claims

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Jul 14, 2010 14:07:02 EDT

The Veterans Affairs Department and major veterans groups showed a united front Wednesday in the battle to reduce the large and growing backlog of benefits claims.

They agree that the 17 percent increase since Jan. 1 in the number of pending claims — including 207,568 pending for more than 125 days — is a sign of serious problems in the claims system.

They also agree that the Claims Processing Improvement Act, S 3517, introduced in June by Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee chairman, is not the answer.

Testifying on behalf of major veterans’ groups, Joseph Violante of Disabled American Veterans told Akaka and the veterans’ committee that there are “grave concerns” over the bill, which attempts to improve and speed payments by developing a new standard for determining the severity of disabilities — adopting the same procedures currently used for Social Security disability benefits and workers’ compensation.
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VA, vets groups oppose new idea to speed claims

Medal of Honor recipient Vernon Baker, 90, dies

Medal of Honor recipient Vernon Baker, 90, dies

By Rebecca Boone - The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jul 14, 2010 14:22:03 EDT

ST. MARIES, Idaho — Vernon Baker, who belatedly received the Medal of Honor for his role in World War II, died at his home near St. Maries, Idaho. He was 90.

Baker died Tuesday of complications of brain cancer, Benewah County coroner and funeral home owner Ron Hodge said.

President Clinton presented the nation’s highest award for battlefield valor to Baker in 1997. He was one of just seven black soldiers to receive it and the only living recipient.

“The only thing that I can say to those who are not here with me is, ‘Thank you, fellas, well done,’ ” Baker told The Washington Post after the ceremony. “ ‘And I will always remember you.’ ”
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Medal of Honor recipient Vernon Baker 90 dies

Women, barred from combat but still in danger

More vets may get treatment for PTSD
Women, barred from combat but still in danger, stand to benefit from change.

By Jeremy Schwartz
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF


Like tens of thousands of her fellow soldiers, Serena Hayden, 28, filed a claim for service-related post-traumatic stress disorder when she left the Army in 2008 and moved to Pflugerville. As a military public affairs officer in Iraq, she traveled in convoys susceptible to roadside bombs and viewed the war's horror in hospitals and mortuaries. In one of the attacks that marked her deployment during the bloody 2007 surge, a mortar fell about 30 feet from the trailer she called home.

During her 14-month deployment, she arranged for a public affairs soldier to ride in a convoy. The soldier was killed when the convoy was attacked.

"I sat curled up next to his body bag, crying and crying because of the guilt I felt," she said. "I still to this day feel responsible. I don't know when it's ever going to end or get better."

Because she didn't serve in a direct combat role, Hayden had to prove to Department of Veterans Affairs officials that her PTSD stemmed from incidents during her deployment. A VA official rejected her PTSD claim.

But Hayden and thousands of service members might find some relief with a regulation that went into effect Tuesday that changes how the VA treats claims for PTSD. The new regulation, hailed as a sea change by some veterans organizations, will make it easier for the more than 2 million service members who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan to get benefits for PTSD, which affects an estimated 20 to 30 percent of returning troops.
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More vets may get treatment for PTSD

24 hours in Afghanistan, 8 troops killed

8 U.S. troops killed in 24 hours in Afghanistan

By Mirwais Khan - The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jul 14, 2010 13:50:26 EDT

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Eight American troops died during a 24-hour span in attacks in southern Afghanistan, including a car bombing and gunfight outside a police compound in Kandahar, officials said Wednesday as the Taliban push back against a coalition effort to secure the volatile region.

The deadly 24 hours for U.S. troops came a day after three British soldiers were killed when one of their Afghan army allies attacked them with gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades. A senior Afghan army officer identified the man as a Shiite Hazara — an ethnic minority usually opposed to the Taliban — and said his motive was still unclear.
go here for the rest
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/07/ap_afghanistan_071410/

A predictable suicide at Camp Lejeune

Comment often left on this blog boggle my mind. I wonder how some people can be so oblivious to what PTSD does to men and women that they feel defending them is reached by denying reality. They seem more bothered when a reporter writes a story on a suicide, or a suicide by cop, domestic violence or other crime committed than the reason why it happened. Keep in mind these are not average citizens dealing with their own problems and issues, but individuals dealing with their own problems and still willing to lay down their lives for others. For them to have no history of violence, crimes or behavioral red flags before they deploy, to ending up with all of them after, there is a reason behind it. It is called war and war changes people, changes the way they think, the way they feel and their total outlook on their lives. Denying these deaths are happening is ending up killing more of them. Thinking they have something to be ashamed of, is killing them. Treating them as if they are broken makes them give up. Yet knowing what it is, why it is and what can be done to help them heal, plus doing something about it, that is really defending them. We owe them that much.

A predictable suicide at Camp Lejeune
A doctor warned that mental health care for violent, disturbed Marines was inadequate. Sgt. Tom Bagosy proved it
By Mark Benjamin

Marine Sgt. Tom Bagosy stepped out of his black GMC Sierra pickup and onto the gray, speckled pavement of McHugh Boulevard, a busy thoroughfare in the heart of Camp Lejeune, N.C. He held a pistol in his right hand.

The military police car that had pulled him over idled on the shoulder a safe distance behind him. The midday traffic stopped. Bagosy stood for a moment on the warm pavement under a cloudless May sky. Then he raised the pistol, pointed it to the right side of his throat just below his jaw, and pulled the trigger.

The bullet sliced through his jugular vein, traveled through his skull and exited near the top left side of his head. He crumpled down in the road. Even if the bullet had failed to rip through his brain, shooting through the jugular was solid insurance. He would have bled out in minutes anyway.

Bagosy, 25, who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan, had become another statistic in the war-fatigued military and its steadily escalating suicide rate. Last year, 52 Marines committed suicide. The suicide rate among Marines has doubled since 2005, and the Corps has the highest suicide rate in the military. The circumstances of Bagosy's death, however, provide a particularly poignant case study in what many critics say is the military's inadequate response to that suicide crisis.
read more here
A predictable suicide at Camp Lejeune

Reducing The Stigma Of PTSD In Army Culture


Reducing The Stigma Of PTSD In Army Culture
by Ron Capps



Courtesy of Ron Capps
Ron Capps spent 25 years in the Foreign Service and the Army Reserve. Like many other soldiers, he suffers from PTSD, but unlike some others he asked for help.


July 14, 2010
Ron Capps retired from the Foreign Service and the Army Reserve in 2008, after a 25-year career serving in Kosovo, Rwanda, Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan. He now works for a small NGO in Washington D.C. His full essay appeared in the July issue of the journal Health Affairs.

When the phone rang I jumped a little, startled, and nearly shot myself. This would have been ironic because I was holding the pistol in my hand planning to kill myself — but I would have pulled the trigger while it was pointed at my foot rather than my head.


This was in 2005. I was a soldier on active duty. I spent more than 20 years working in places like Kosovo, Rwanda, Afghanistan, Iraq and Darfur. I've seen some bad stuff, and somewhere along the way, my brain stopped working right. I have post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

I remember lying on my cot in my tent in Afghanistan bundled into my sleeping bag, terrified because the dead had come to talk with me. They came every night, wresting me away from a warm, comforting sleep into a series of wretched, tormenting, wide-awake dreams.

On one night, it would be a farmer and his wife burned Bible-black and twisted into hideous shapes who asked, "do you remember us?" Oh, most certainly. On another, 42 men all shot in the back or in the head and left to die in rocky ditch on a frozen January morning. "Why didn't you do more to save us?" they asked. Why, indeed.

The images terrified me mostly because I couldn't stop them from taking control of my mind. I knew I needed help but I didn't ask for it because I thought I would be ridiculed, considered weak and cowardly.

In Army culture, especially in the elite unit filled with rangers and paratroopers in which I served, asking for help was showing weakness. My two Bronze Stars, my tours in Airborne and Special Operations units, none of these would matter. To ask for help would be seen as breaking.
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Reducing The Stigma Of PTSD In Army Culture

Do you want a stronger, spiritual life

When people ask me what a Chaplain is, I tell them that we take care of people, listen to their problems, help with what they need within our means, offer a caring, listening ear, and love them. A Chaplain works 24-7.

At the local Publix I know the manager well and when I was dressed in shorts and a T-shirt, she used to ask if I had the day off. I told her, if I'm awake, I'm working. My Chaplain ID hangs from a hat on my dashboard for when I arrive at an accident or called to visit someone at the hospital. Most of the time I'm just going about my daily business and not dressed up in Chaplain gear, so having some kind of identification to let people know who I am is vital. It reassures them that I am trained and ready for any crisis they have.

Yet as a Chaplain, no matter how much faith I have in God and Christ, no matter how much I pray and put my faith in God's hands, I know I am subjected to the actions of others. Sometimes they are angry and take it out on me. Sometimes they are grieving so much, there isn't much I can say to ease their pain, but I offer a listening ear and all the time they need while I pray for them.

The work I do online is mixed between heartache when I read about another suicide or veteran on the brink, yet I am fed when I read stories about how far we've come in taking care of our veterans or stories about other people stepping up to help. I go to bed each night, praying and saying Thank You to God for the blessing I do have even as I pray for help with what I need, and I wake up with prayers sitting quietly as the day begins. I grieve. I rejoice. I beg. I rejoice. I cry and feel hopeless thinking about how much I mess up my life and then I rejoice knowing God can fix even people like me.

On this I am reassured simply by what He managed to do with the people we call heroes of the Bible. Each one of them messed up. They all made mistakes. They were all simple humans but no matter how much they messed up, God had not given up on them and the world was better off for them having lived.

Yet even with what I know, what I believe or how strong my faith is, there are times when I want to just go home to God unable to carry this burden and times when I regret I asked Him to use me. Times when it feels as if the entire world has turned against me so I would be better off not getting out of bed. I see how mean people can be, how selfish and uncaring, but the next moment I see how unselfishly they reach out to offer comfort to someone else and then, then I know I want to be counted among the caring and belong right where I am.

One of them is another Chaplain in the Brevard County Chaplains' group I belong to. Papa Roy sends out daily reminders of faith to offer support to other Chaplains. Today it was a message too beautiful to not share. He sends them everyday no matter what is going on in his life or what pain he has. He lets nothing stop him from getting up way too early to share the love of God.



Good morning, thank Him for your blessings!
Do you want a stronger, spiritual life?

The more ministry involves working with people, the more we need quiet time with God. In the previous verses in Mark 1, Jesus has been highly involved in people-intensive ministry as he teaches, preaches, heals, and casts out demons. This is exhausting work. Yet there is always more work with people than any one of us can complete. There will always be another need, broken heart, hurting soul, and desperate problem. For us to continue to minister, we desperately need to get alone and be with God to renew our relationship, to restore our soul, and to rekindle our passion in the presence of God. (Phil Ware)

Now in the morning, having risen a long while before daylight, He went out and departed to a solitary place; and there He prayed. (Mark 1:35)

Our response to the normal, ordinary demands of life and the power to cope with those demands must come from our reliance upon Him at work within us. This is the secret: All power to live the Christian life comes not from us, doing our dead-level best to serve God, but from Him, granted to us moment by moment as the demand is made upon us. Power is given to those who follow, who obey. The Father is at work in the Son; the Son is at work in us. As we learn this, then we are given power to meet the demands and the needs that are waiting for us in the ministry yet to come. (Ray Stedman)

Thank You, Father, that the same power is available to me today, making me ready so be your instrument in any and every situation in which demand is laid upon me.

Depending on His grace.

Papa Roy

July 14, 2010

In God we trust


We are not supposed to be prefect. We are simple humans, complicated by living.


Our identification is not what we are paid but what we make different. Our lives are not perfect but we put our faith in Perfect Love. We do not rejoice always but rejoice we have God to turn to when people let us down. We do not judge others as evil but understand what it is like to also do things we are not proud of. We look at the possibilities in others just as much as we look at how far we've come from the days when we lived for ourselves.


Chaplain Kathie
PTSD Consultant
Senior IFOC Chaplain
DAV Chapter 16 Auxiliary Chaplain

Marine killed in armed police confrontation laid to rest

Marine killed in armed police confrontation laid to rest
Sarah Delage, Multimedia Journalist


MEDWAY, Maine (NEWS CENTER) -- James "Bing" Popkowski was laid to rest with full military honors Tuesday.

The thrity-seven year-old marine veteran from grindstone was shot and killed during an armed confrontation with police near the togus V.A. Hospital last week. Hundreds of people attended services, including family, former classmates from Schenck high school, fellow veterans, and his young daughter Vianca, who was presented with the American flag. Skip Cram is Popkowski's former boss. He says he will remember him as a hard worker and devoted friend.
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Marine killed in armed police confrontation laid to rest


Friends recall life of ex-Marine killed at Togus

Marine Corporal Paul Fagundes died trying to save others

Marine put others first, widow says



Cynthia Marie Fagundes held her son, Cazzian, as a Marine escorted her into a Fall River church for her husband’s funeral. Corporal Paul Fagundes died July 4 in Guantanamo Bay. She is pregnant with the couple’s second child. (Kayana Szymczak for The Boston Globe)

By Alex Katz
Globe Correspondent

FALL RIVER — Cynthia Marie Fagundes mostly kept her head down yesterday — before her was the casket holding her 29-year-old husband.

Sitting beneath a tent at Notre Dame Cemetery, she suddenly lifted her gaze as a voice pierced the silence. “Mommy!’’ her 2-year-old son, Cazzian, belted out. She smiled at the little boy, scooping him up onto her lap.

Together they said farewell to Corporal Paul Fagundes, who drowned July Fourth while trying to save two fellow Marines caught up in an undertow while swimming at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

He enlisted in the Marine Corps about a year ago, serving a 60-day tour on an antiterrorism team that was training in Guantanamo Bay.

Mourners gathered to pay their respects to a man who always put others before himself, his widow said.

“He was an angel on earth, and now he is an angel in heaven,’’ she said during a funeral Mass at St. Anne Parish, wearing a black dress and her husband’s dog tag as she delivered the eulogy.
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Marine put others first, widow says

also on this story

U.S. Marine from Camden dies in swimming accident in Cuba
Published: Tuesday, July 13, 2010,
Military officials say a U.S. Marine from Camden has died in a swimming accident at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The military says 22-year-old Lance Cpl. Giovani "Gio" Cruz drowned while swimming off a recreational beach at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay on July 4.
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US Marine from Camden dies in swimming accident in Cuba

Florida vets with PTSD need boosted grass-roots response

Post-traumatic stress disorder takes a 'village'
Florida vets with PTSD need boosted grass-roots response.


In a long overdue move, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs officials took shears to the red tape that tangled up veterans pursuing disability benefits for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Noncombat veterans who served in war zones no longer need produce backing documents or buddies to vouch for a specific event that triggered their PTSD. Now, it's presumed that a combat-zone veteran's claim of PTSD is service-connected.

Certainly, the VA would have made an even bigger splash had it also lightened the load of its understaffed ranks of mental-health professionals by blessing PTSD diagnoses from private-sector therapists.

Still, relaxing the claims process is progress. Progress that VA Secretary Eric Shinseki insists "goes a long way to ensure that veterans receive the benefits and services they need."

If only that were wholly true. While nearly 20 percent of troops in our two current wars struggle with PTSD, fewer than half ever seek treatment, according to a 2008 RAND Corp. study. The lingering stigma attached to mental-health counseling is partly to blame. But so is the VA's struggle to trot out trained counselors fast enough to keep pace with the mounting need.

In a recent assessment, U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command researchers (using a strict definition of PTSD) found symptoms severe enough to cause "serious functional impairment" in 10 percent of Iraq War veterans. A disturbing figure, considering more than 1 million U.S. troops have served in Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11.

With Florida already home to America's third-largest veteran population — and growing — more citizens must enlist in the state's grass-roots army of helpers that stand ready to help vets battle PTSD.

Fortunately, grass-roots groups like Give an Hour have begun filling Florida's gaps. The nonprofit recruits mental-health therapists around the country who donate an hour of counseling to veterans.

"Unfortunately, the tremendous number of people affected makes it impossible for the military alone to respond adequately to the mental-health needs in its greater community," says psychologist Barbara Van Dahlen, founder and president of Give an Hour.
read more here
Florida vets with PTSD need boosted grass-roots response


UPDATE
Reading the Sentinel there was a comment in the Letters to the Editor section with the title "Veteran doubts PTSD is authentic disorder." It makes me want to scream every time I hear someone make such a claim. It is not that they don't understand but more a case of they just don't want to know. That's the biggest problem with people having the ability to learn but refusing to do it. It's a lot easier to just say something isn't real than to invest some time in learning what the truth is.

I've been tracking this since 1982. PTSD is as real as it gets and there is a reason for it. You could have three people in the same exact place at the same exact time and find all three have different things going through their minds. One will thank God it wasn't them and walk away soon afterward forgetting all about the feelings felt in that one moment of trauma. Another will be more touched by it finding it harder to just get over, but eventually, the feelings are gone and life goes on. For the other, they take it all in, more than just a passing moment for them but it is the life changing moment when all they felt, all they believed in, all they trusted was obliterated. They walk away with the emotions they felt for themselves and the pain they felt for the other people in that traumatic event. They are not weaker than the others but their emotions are stronger, able to feel things more deeply, sensitive, caring, compassionate, beyond what the others are able to feel.

When you hear a veteran denying the reality of PTSD, it is also because they have not heard enough about it. The numbers are staggering right now because of the fact the Army released a study years ago about the increased risk of PTSD being raised by 50% for each time they are sent back. Many of our veterans have been sent back 3-4-5 times increasing their risk more and more. The other factor is the general public is more aware of PTSD, so fewer suffer in silence and there are more reports than every before. It's not that the troops have grown weaker, but communication has grown stronger. We know about more of them than we did during all other wars this nation has fought.

If you watched Ken Burns, The War, you would have heard WWII veterans talking about their own wound we now call PTSD, but for them it was "shell shock" and there was little help for them with even less information. This is a big reason why people are astounded by the reported numbers. It's no longer a secret veterans felt they needed to keep secret and now they know there is nothing to be ashamed of. It has more to do with the fact their character was so strong they could not walk away and just get over it.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Chicago Police officer, Vietnam Vet tells why he serves

A cop's life: Police blotter

BY MICHAEL SNEED Sun-Times Columnist
The hero file: Sneed's Friday column on the life of a cop netted the following letter from a Chicago Police officer that's worth sharing. The column was written in response to the killing Wednesday of Officer Thor Soderberg on the South Side. Here's the letter:

I am a Chicago police officer about to hit 20 years next month and also a Vietnam veteran, which often times seemed to be the same thing while on the job.


All of those things you mentioned were more than true . . . but I wanted to add just a few things. When we get up in the morning and put the uniform on, we don't plan to encounter trouble, we don't plan to run for blocks through gangways and streets in the dark after offenders. We don't plan on being told by a victim they don't want an offender arrested while holding their hand over a swollen eye, and we don't plan on having to stare down the barrel of our gun at someone who is staring down theirs.

We do what we did yesterday and today and will do tomorrow even in the light of another officer being murdered. We put on the uniform, go to roll call and into the street to serve and protect. We will think of Soderberg and other officers who have passed on but won't lose our focus because we still have to serve and protect.
read more here
Police blotter

Current TV to Explore PTSD-Violence Linkage Among Combat Vets

If you cannot understand then you need to look on the web for Veterans Courts. This is a big deal because these men and women would lay down their lives for someone else so when they commit crimes, there is a reason behind it.

Current TV to Explore PTSD-Violence Linkage Among Combat Vets

By David Bois
Wednesday, July 7, 2010 10:59 AM ET

The exploration of how PTSD may tie to violent crime among war veterans promises to offer a chilling but invaluable expose on the mental health challenges and needs of our returned servicemen.

Some stories of servicemen returned home from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are inspiring and uplifting to the point where it feels as though they write themselves. Even when having experienced the horror and hazards of war presents lingering physical and emotional challenges to the combat veteran's return to civilian life, we're able to celebrate acts of compassion for those less fortunate and displays of remarkable endurance undertaken in an effort to raise the public profile of the challenges the returned veteran faces.

Vanguard, an investigative report airing on Current TV, may be expected with tonight's episode entitled War Crimes to deliver precious little in the way of a feel-good depiction of the experiences of an increasing number of our combat veterans.
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Current TV to Explore PTSD Violence Linkage Among Combat Vets

When you care enough to send the best, remember that

When you care enough to send the best, remember that.

by
Chaplain Kathie

Deciding to send men and women into combat, especially in someone else's country, means that doing something about something requires we send the best trained and equipped military in the world. They are the best. We cheer them, honor them and most of us claim to support them but when it comes time for them to return home, we don't seem to remember they were the best and gave us the best they had. We let them languish in a flood of paperwork and in long lines. We let them have to fight the government to have their claims approved.

Some in this country want to suggest that anyone claiming PTSD is a fraud yet no matter how much evidence to prove otherwise, they cannot even manage to understand that they were regarded as the best and not the kind of person to be wanting a free ride off anyone. They risked their lives for others, but some forget that. They stepped up and went where we sent them while the rest of us were able to stay home and complain about how much it was costing or how long it was taking. The time for those thoughts was before they were sent. The time to honor them is always and the time to value them is more when they come home.

PTSD Claims: Making the Process Easier for Our Veterans

By Tammy Duckworth
We often hear the cliché, “the fog of war”—a simplified expression used to describe the chaos and confusion so often found in a combat zone. It’s something all combat Veterans understand.

Whether you’re running toward a hardened shelter during a mortar attack or gripping the wheel as your truck races through an area known for ambushes, combat is not a place where troops often stop to document the details. Those details may be forever burned into our minds, but we often don’t come away with hard copy proof of what occurred.

Unfortunately, for years now, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has required Veterans filing disability claims for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) to do just that—to document in detail what caused them to become symptomatic. We call it a “stressor.” Our rules have been even more stringent for Veterans who didn’t serve in a combat branch of the military—like the infantry, artillery, or armor.

Essentially, if a former military intelligence soldier is continually late for work because he can’t sleep at night, we ask him to provide photos or a written radio log proving he was rocketed when he says he was. If he can’t, we might deny the claim. If a former medic shows signs of depression and blames it on having watched people bleed to death, we ask her to get a written statement from her former boss. Again, if she can’t, we may not award her benefits. But starting today, we’re making this process.
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Making the Process Easier for Our Veterans


There are some people in this country who reduce everything down to a Democrat or Republican but this is about the right thing, knowing it, believing it and proving it. There are Democrats and Republicans and Independents risking their lives everyday to defend this country. Bullets, bombs and traumas do not ask for a voter registration card. They do not know blue state from red state from island. All that war offers includes men and women serving side by side with people they disagree with politically but agree with their lives.

They have been told they had a "preexisting condition" and diagnosed with "personality disorder" even though they were able to pass every mental health screen and had no history of mental illness before being deployed. They have been discharged for using alcohol and drugs when they were trying to kill off the pain PTSD caused. They have been told by the DOD and the VA they were not believable when they filed claims because they couldn't remember if it was the first, second or third IED that was the one too many times their life was on the line. They were told that when they didn't know if it was the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th or 5th deployment that was the one that did it. Vietnam Veterans will be able to file claims without having to remember every detail from 40 years ago. Now they have a chance to be really honored they way they were treated when they were sent into combat. Remembered as being not your average citizen but the best we had to send.

Back home, female vets fight for recognition

Back home, female vets fight for recognition

By Natalie Bailey - Medill News Service
Posted : Tuesday Jul 13, 2010 13:58:07 EDT

With her copper hair, pale skin and small stature, Army Reserve Sgt. Jennifer Hunt, 26, stands out in the Veterans Affairs Department hospital waiting room filled with Vietnam War-era veterans.

She’s there for treatment of shrapnel injuries she received two years ago, after a roadside bomb hit her Humvee as she drove through West Rashid in Baghdad.

She said it’s not uncommon for her to be the only woman in the hospital waiting room, and to hear comments like, “You’re the prettiest vet I’ve seen all day.”

Although that brings unwanted attention, at least it shows the men take her for a veteran. Camouflaged by their gender both inside and outside VA hospital doors, women in the military are routinely mistaken for spouses and daughters — anything but combat veterans.

“It makes us feel invisible,” said Army Reserve Staff Sgt. Genevieve Chase, 32, founder of American Women Veterans. “It makes these women feel like their service didn’t matter.”
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Back home female vets fight for recognition

LA police teach Marines how to train Afghan police

LA police teach Marines how to train Afghan police

By: Associated Press

By JULIE WATSON

Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES — A tough-talking, muscular Los Angeles police sergeant steadily rattled off tips to a young Marine riding shotgun as they raced in a patrol car to a drug bust: Be aware of your surroundings. Watch people’s body language. Build rapport.

Marine Lt. Andrew Abbott, 23, took it all in as he peered out at the graffiti-covered buildings, knowing that the lessons he learned recently in one of the city’s toughest neighborhoods could help him soon in the war against the Taliban in Afghanistan.

“People are the center of gravity and if you do everything you can to protect them, then they’ll protect you,” he said. “That’s something true here and pretty much everywhere.”

Abbott was among 70 Camp Pendleton Marines in a training exercise that aims to adapt the investigative techniques the LAPD has used for decades against violent street gangs to take on the Taliban more as a powerful drug-trafficking mob than an insurgency.

The Marines hope that learning to work like a cop on a beat will help them better track the Taliban, build relationships with Afghans leery of foreign troops and make them better teachers as they try to professionalize an Afghan police force beset by corruption.
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LA police teach Marines how to train Afghan police

Veterans Affairs Officer Accidentally Wounded

Veterans Affairs Officer Accidentally Wounded
Staff: Officer Shot Himself In Hand

CHEROKEE COUNTY, S.C. --

A Cherokee County Veterans Affairs officer was injured Monday when a gun he was handling accidentally went off, according to Veterans Affairs staff members.

Staff members said Officer Todd Humphries was handling a gun at his desk in his office in Gaffney when the gun went off, hitting him in the hand.
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Veterans Affairs Officer Accidentally Wounded

Plan should help soldiers receive PTSD treatment

There is no doubt that the new rules for filing a PTSD claim will make it easier for our veterans to get through the process, but we cannot forget the Vietnam veterans. There is no way to make up for the time it took them to struggle needlessly to have their claims approved and we need to acknowledge that. Above that, we also need to let them know that had it not been for them, much of what the newer veterans are able to receive would not be there. Their struggle and long, hard fight, brought us to this point. Because of them, no other generation will have to suffer the way they did.

When you read the numbers, notice that there are 247,486 Vietnam veterans being treated. There are many more who have not sought help to heal. Many more have committed suicide.

Veterans' benefits process shortened
Plan should help soldiers receive PTSD treatment
BY R. NORMAN MOODY • FLORIDA TODAY • July 13, 2010

By the numbers
Veterans receiving care for PTSD with VA in 2009

World War II: 22,500
Korea: 12,360
Vietnam: 247,486
Peacetime: 12,875
Other/Gulf war: 91,661



It took Vietnam Veteran Larry Symington decades to get the help he needed when he returned home from war.


After struggling to prove he had post-traumatic stress disorder, Symington only recently began receiving treatment.

Although a new regulation making it easier to access healthcare for PTSD won't make a difference for him, his wife, Debbie, said it is a welcome change for veterans, especially those returning from wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and for older veterans who have fallen through the cracks.

The Department of Veterans Affairs announced Monday a simplified process that should make it easier for veterans to receive benefits and treatment for PTSD.

Before this change, veterans who applied for disability benefits had to prove what caused their PTSD by providing evidence of a particular bombing or attack. Now, it will be enough to show that the conditions in which they served could have contributed to the diagnosis.

"It's a long time coming," said Scott Fairchild, a Melbourne psychologist who treats veterans with PTSD. "It really eases the process."

PTSD is a medically recognized anxiety disorder that can develop from experiencing an event that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury to which a person responds with intense fear, helplessness or horror. It is not uncommon among war veterans, even those who didn't directly see combat.
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Veterans' benefits process shortened


VA Simplifies Access to Health Care and Benefits for Veterans with PTSD
WASHINGTON (July 12, 2010) - Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K.
Shinseki announced a critical step forward in providing an easier
process for Veterans seeking health care and disability compensation for
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), with the publication of a final
regulation in the Federal Register.

"This nation has a solemn obligation to the men and women who have
honorably served this country and suffer from the often devastating
emotional wounds of war," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K.
Shinseki. "This final regulation goes a long way to ensure that
Veterans receive the benefits and services they need."

By publishing a final regulation in the Federal Register to simplify the
process for a Veteran to claim service connection for PTSD, VA reduces
the evidence needed if the trauma claimed by a Veteran is related to
fear of hostile military or terrorist activity and is consistent with
the places, types, and circumstances of the Veteran's service.

This science-based regulation relies on evidence that concluded that a
Veteran's deployment to a war zone is linked to an increased risk of
PTSD.

Under the new rule, VA would not require corroboration of a stressor
related to fear of hostile military or terrorist activity if a VA doctor
confirms that the stressful experience recalled by a Veteran adequately
supports a diagnosis of PTSD and the Veteran's symptoms are related to
the claimed stressor.

Previously, claims adjudicators were required to corroborate that a
non-combat Veteran actually experienced a stressor related to hostile
military activity. This final rule simplifies the development that is
required for these cases.

VA expects this rulemaking to decrease the time it takes VA to decide
access to care and claims falling under the revised criteria. More than
400,000 Veterans currently receiving compensation benefits are service
connected for PTSD. Combined with VA's shorter claims form, VA's new
streamlined, science-based regulation allows for faster and more
accurate decisions that also expedite access to medical care and other
benefits for Veterans.

PTSD is a medically recognized anxiety disorder that can develop from
seeing or experiencing an event that involves actual or threatened death
or serious injury to which a person responds with intense fear,
helplessness or horror, and is not uncommon among war Veterans.

Disability compensation is a tax-free benefit paid to a Veteran for
disabilities that are a result of -- or made worse by -- injuries or
diseases associated with active service.

For additional information, go to www.va.gov or
call VA's toll free benefits number at 1-800-827-1000.

Monday, July 12, 2010

University keeps vets story project alive

University keeps vets story project alive

By Janese Silvey - The Columbia (Mo.) Daily Tribune via AP
Posted : Monday Jul 12, 2010 14:47:12 EDT

COLUMBIA, Mo. — As a veteran of Afghanistan and an active member of the Army National Guard, Rep. Jason Kander knows the importance of sharing stories from combat. But he isn’t keen on the idea of doing that on taxpayers’ dimes — 6 million dimes, to be exact.

Kander was one of the state lawmakers who helped scrap $600,000 from the upcoming state budget that had been requested to support Missouri Veterans Stories, a project that records Missouri veterans talking about their war experiences.

Now, he and several other representatives are teaming up with the University of Missouri to recreate that veteran video program in a way that benefits students and saves taxpayer dollars.

Missouri Veterans Stories debuted in 2007 and has since produced about 1,300 videos of men and women sharing their memories from World War II. It has been operated out of Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder’s office and managed by a private video company, Patriot Productions.

When Kander began questioning the allocation during a budget committee meeting this past session, he learned that the state was the company’s only client. Further investigation revealed that those affiliated with Patriot Productions also made campaign contributions to Kinder, said Kander, D-Kansas City.
read the rest of this here
University keeps vets story project alive

VA official to clinics: Stop gaming the system. Thank you Larry Scott

VA official to clinics: Stop gaming the system

By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Jul 12, 2010 13:38:45 EDT

After years of complaints from veterans who say they aren’t getting VA medical appointments within 30 days even if Veterans Affairs Department records show they are, a top VA official sent out a memo asking employees to quit “gaming” the system.

“It has come to my attention that, in order to improve scores on assorted access measures, certain facilities have adopted use of inappropriate scheduling practices sometimes referred to as ‘gaming strategies,’ ” wrote William Schoenhard, VA’s deputy undersecretary for health for operations and management, in the April 26 memo.

The “gaming” came after VA required its employees to ensure patients were given initial appointments within 30 days of entering the VA system. Instead, several clinics came up with ways to make it look as if the veterans had canceled their appointments or hadn’t asked for one until within 30 days of when the appointment was made.

“As we strive to improve access to our veterans, we must ensure in fact that improvement does not focus or rely on workarounds,” Schoenhard wrote. “Workarounds may mask the symptoms of poor access and, although they may aid in meeting performance measures, they do not serve our veterans.”

The memo, first reported by Larry Scott of VAWatchdog.org, comes in the wake of exceptional gains in reducing appointment waiting times announced by VA officials.
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VA official to clinics: Stop gaming the system

Female shooter killed herself, five others in workplace attack

Police: Shooter killed herself, five others in workplace attack

[Updated 2:12 p.m., July 12] A former employee shot and killed five people at a business Monday in Albuquerque before turning the gun on herself, New Mexico authorities said.

Police said officers responded to a 911 call at 9:26 a.m. (11:26 a.m. ET) that multiple shots had been fired. When officers entered the building, they found a total of 10 people shot - four were dead, including a woman believed to be the shooter, officials said.

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Two people have since died as a result of gunshot wounds, two are in stable condition and two others are receiving emergency medical attention, police said.

"We believe this incident to be a domestic-violence workplace situation," Albuquerque Police Chief Ray Schultz said.
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Shooter killed herself, five others in workplace attack

Twilight series, Harry Potter and Monty Python defeat Westboro Baptist protests against heroes

Counterprotests Drown Out Westboro
July 12, 2010
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

ARLINGTON, Texas -- Protests at two Arlington churches organized by Westboro Baptist Church on Sunday morning were drowned out by more than 100 counterprotesters who rebuked the controversial group.

About a dozen members of Westboro Baptist Church picketed at Fielder Road Baptist Church and later at Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, two of four North Texas religious institutions they planned to visit Sunday. Most of the group's members were children related to Fred Phelps, the church leader, who was not there. The group has gained notoriety for protesting at military funerals and alleging that U.S. Soldiers' deaths are God's punishment for America's acceptance of homosexuality.

At both Arlington events, Westboro members were outmatched more than 10-to-1 by counterprotesters, many of whom opted for irreverence over anger as their weapon against the Topeka, Kan., group's message.

Westboro members' signs included: "Your Pastor is a Liar," "You Hate God," "God Hates Israel" and "Pray For More Dead Soldiers."

Some of the signs from counterprotesters were: "God Hates Signs," "I Love Pie" and "Cheerios Lowers Your Cholesterol." Counterprotesters also held signs featuring pop culture references including the Twilight series, Harry Potter and Monty Python.
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Counterprotests Drown Out Westboro

PTSD veterans have new battle now

PTSD veterans have new battle now
by
Chaplain Kathie

How long can you tell the truth, be doubted, yet somehow find the strength to keep telling the truth hoping tomorrow will be the day you're believed? How long can you suffer, knowing help is supposed to be there for you to heal and to be able to pay your bills? Bills that you could have paid if you were not suffering and able to work but the job you had was serving the country pile up while you keep telling the truth, keep trying to find the help you thought were promised to you. Not easy. Never has been. But now it will be easier to prove you're telling the truth.


"That is our sacred trust with all who serve – and it doesn’t end when their tour of duty does."
President Obama


Weekly Address: Help for Vets with PTSD
Posted by Jesse Lee on July 10, 2010 at 06:00 AM EDT
President Obama announces that the Department of Veterans Affairs, led by Secretary Shinseki, will begin making it easier for veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder to receive the benefits and treatment they need.


The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release July 10, 2010
Weekly Address: President Obama Announces Changes to Help Veterans with PTSD Receive the Benefits They Need

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama announced that on Monday the Department of Veterans Affairs, led by Secretary Shinseki, will begin to make it easier for veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder to receive the benefits they need. For many years, veterans with PTSD have been stymied in receiving benefits by requirements they produce evidence proving a specific event caused the PTSD. Streamlining this process will help not just the veterans of the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, but generations of veterans who have served and sacrificed for the country.


The audio and video of the address will be available online at http://www.whitehouse.gov/ at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, July 10, 2010.



Remarks of President Barack Obama
As Prepared for Delivery
Weekly Address
July 10, 2010

Last weekend, on the Fourth of July, Michelle and I welcomed some of our extraordinary military men and women and their families to the White House.

They were just like the thousands of active duty personnel and veterans I’ve met across this country and around the globe. Proud. Strong. Determined. Men and women with the courage to answer their country’s call, and the character to serve the United States of America.

Because of that service; because of the honor and heroism of our troops around the world; our people are safer, our nation is more secure, and we are poised to end our combat mission in Iraq by the end of August, completing a drawdown of more than 90,000 troops since last January.

Still, we are a nation at war. For the better part of a decade, our men and women in uniform have endured tour after tour in distant and dangerous places. Many have risked their lives. Many have given their lives. And as a grateful nation, humbled by their service, we can never honor these American heroes or their families enough.

Just as we have a solemn responsibility to train and equip our troops before we send them into harm’s way, we have a solemn responsibility to provide our veterans and wounded warriors with the care and benefits they’ve earned when they come home.

That is our sacred trust with all who serve – and it doesn’t end when their tour of duty does.

To keep that trust, we’re building a 21st century VA, increasing its budget, and ensuring the steady stream of funding it needs to support medical care for our veterans.

To help our veterans and their families pursue a college education, we’re funding and implementing the post-9/11 GI Bill.

To deliver better care in more places, we’re expanding and increasing VA health care, building new wounded warrior facilities, and adapting care to better meet the needs of female veterans.

To stand with those who sacrifice, we’ve dedicated new support for wounded warriors and the caregivers who put their lives on hold for a loved one’s long recovery.

And to do right by our vets, we’re working to prevent and end veteran homelessness – because in the United States of America, no one who served in our uniform should sleep on our streets.

We also know that for many of today’s troops and their families, the war doesn’t end when they come home.

Too many suffer from the signature injuries of today’s wars: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury. And too few receive the screening and treatment they need.


Now, in past wars, this wasn’t something America always talked about. And as a result, our troops and their families often felt stigmatized or embarrassed when it came to seeking help.

Today, we’ve made it clear up and down the chain of command that folks should seek help if they need it. In fact, we’ve expanded mental health counseling and services for our vets.

But for years, many veterans with PTSD who have tried to seek benefits – veterans of today’s wars and earlier wars – have often found themselves stymied. They’ve been required to produce evidence proving that a specific event caused their PTSD. And that practice has kept the vast majority of those with PTSD who served in non-combat roles, but who still waged war, from getting the care they need.

Well, I don’t think our troops on the battlefield should have to take notes to keep for a claims application. And I’ve met enough veterans to know that you don’t have to engage in a firefight to endure the trauma of war.

So we’re changing the way things are done.

On Monday, the Department of Veterans Affairs, led by Secretary Ric Shinseki, will begin making it easier for a veteran with PTSD to get the benefits he or she needs.

This is a long-overdue step that will help veterans not just of the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, but generations of their brave predecessors who proudly served and sacrificed in all our wars.


It’s a step that proves America will always be here for our veterans, just as they’ve been there for us. We won’t let them down. We take care of our own. And as long as I’m Commander-in-Chief, that’s what we’re going to keep doing. Thank you.

This has been a long, hard fought battle. While it has been about justice for hundreds of thousands of veterans from different generations, it is also for the veterans of tomorrow. It began when Vietnam veterans came home and started fighting for it. It will end when every man or woman serving this country is treated for what war does to them.

Many of the veterans I've been helping will now be able to have their claims approved and they have hope restored. For some, this comes too late to matter to them or their families. They have already died waiting for the help that never came. Yet there is hope the mistakes and mistreatment of our veterans will not be repeated.

The only problem is, there may not be enough help to be there for them. When veterans had PTSD but were refused help, they dropped out of the system and out of the lines waiting for help. They will begin to seek help again with this rule change and I doubt anyone is ready for what is to come.

There is one more thing this weekly address by President Obama did. It managed to get the media to pay attention. Almost every newspaper across the country has something to say about PTSD and I bet that reporters will be looking for stories this week about veterans and PTSD.

Just some of the headlines

Expanding PTSD benefits is the right call Washington Post
New Regulations May Ease Vets With PTSD NPR
Rules changes help vets The News-Press
New rules go into effect today for PTSD claims Kansas City Star
Vets to get post-traumatic stress help KVOA Tucson News
New rules give veterans easier path to disability benefits Dayton Daily News


This is a wonderful thing and a great step in raising awareness but the interest will be replaced by the next celebrity scandal, so savor the focus for now. Maybe this may even get communities to finally step up and help? Maybe a family will begin to understand their veteran was telling the truth all along and the VA was wrong? Maybe a family on the verge of falling apart will find another glimmer of hope that things will get better?

There will be floods of veterans entering into the system again, trying to finally find the justice they have been denied and get the help they've needed all along. Yet all these years between the traumas of combat and the rest of what life has done, will take a long time to recover from. The good news is, it has begun and this is a new battle they have a chance of winning.

UPDATE
Looks as if my fears were well founded.....

VA expects no claims spike under new PTSD rules

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Jul 12, 2010 14:55:42 EDT

Veterans Affairs Department officials who are lowering the bar for veterans to receive benefits related to post-traumatic stress disorder say they don’t expect more people to try to jump over it.

But VA may be underestimating a potential flood of claims that could result from an Obama administration decision to make it far easier for veterans who served in noncombat jobs to prove their mental health issues are service-connected.

Final rules are expected to be published in Tuesday’s Federal Register, and will apply to any PTSD-related claim filed beginning Tuesday or that is pending before VA, including those under appeal at any step in the process. As a result, retroactive benefits claims are possible for some veterans, because the effective date for benefits is the date a claim is filed.

Veterans whose PTSD claims were denied will have to reapply, with their benefits effective from the day of the claim.
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VA expects no claims spike under new PTSD rules

Marine Mom Forced To Choose Between Injured Son, Job

The law allows family members of injured service members up to 26 weeks unpaid leave to care for their loved one.



This is something every injured serviceman or woman's family needs to know. They do have rights under the law to protect their jobs. This is also something every parent should pay attention to. Think of how much you help your own adult kids. Getting them through college, supporting them when they don't make enough money on their jobs or when they lose the jobs. Helping them make car payments and insurance premiums. What average people are willing to do for their 20 something offspring's is astonishing but then add in when they are in the military and ended up wounded serving this country.

IED blasts have blown off limbs, bullets hit brains and other body parts and fires have burnt off skin. Add in the fear these parents have to go through when their kids are deployed and then the fear of the unknown when they are able to survive but then having to worry about keeping their jobs and paying their bills. It is a story that is repeated over and over again across the country.

Marine Mom Forced To Choose Between Injured Son, Job
By Nicole Ferguson

HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. – A Hopkinsville Marine mom said she was given an ultimatum in June. She could leave her injured son's bedside or lose her job.

"Before this happened I'd only missed a one day in over a year's time, and that was the day they put my mother on life support," said Susan Powell, a CNA at Western State Hospital. "I'd work overtime, never called in, so I just never thought they'd tell me my job was at risk."

On May 24, her 21-year-old son, Lance Corporal Franklin Powell, stepped on an IED in Afghanistan. Doctors determined much of the young Marine's leg would need to be amputated.

Powell said Western State Hospital had no problems letting her go to her son's bedside at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda Maryland on May 30.

The problems began a week into her second trip beginning June 16.

"They told me if I couldn't come back by Friday to work, my job would be terminated," said Powell of the phone call she received from Crown Services, a corporate office of Western State Hospital. "Once my situation allowed, I could come back and reapply."
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http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=12788050

Sgt. Rafael Peralta's brother says "I have big shoes to fill" as he becomes a Marine

Marine hero's brother makes good on his promise

By Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times
Updated: 4:36 AM 7/12/2010

Reporting from Camp Pendleton-- At his brother's funeral nearly six years ago, Ricardo Peralta made him a promise: He would join the Marine Corps and carry on in his example.

On Friday, Peralta, now 19, fulfilled that promise as he graduated from the school of infantry.

He will now report to a battalion in Twentynine Palms, Calif., and, like his brother, probably deploy to a war zone as an infantry "grunt."

"I have big shoes to fill," Peralta, a Marine private first class, said quietly.

His brother, Sgt. Rafael Peralta, was killed at age 25 during the battle for Fallouja, Iraq, in November 2004. He is revered by the Marine Corps as one of the true heroes of the long battle in Iraq.

His story is told to every recruit at boot camp in San Diego — how he saved the lives of fellow Marines by smothering an enemy grenade with his body. Marine brass, famously stingy in recommending battle citations, nominated him for the Medal of Honor.
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Marine hero brother makes good on his promise