Thursday, June 21, 2012

Motorcycle ride to raise funds for children of troops killed in war

Motorcycle ride to raise funds for children of troops killed in war
By JAKOB RODGERS
The (Colorado Springs, Colo.) Gazette
Published: June 20, 2012

An upcoming motorcycle ride aims to help children whose parents have died in war.

The Freedom Seekers Association will host a 200-mile motorcycle ride across Colorado on July 7, said Jeff Holt, a member of the club. A portion of the proceeds will go to the Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund. The rest will be donated to children in the Pikes Peak region who have lost a father in combat.

The ride will stop at a handful of war memorials along the Front Range, as well as in the mountains just west of Colorado Springs, Holt said.
read more here

Family needs help getting body of Michael David Copeland out of Iraq

Update

Iraq releases body of US contractor after dispute
June 27, 2012
CBS News

BAGHDAD — The body of an American contractor who was found dead in Baghdad was flown back to the U.S. on Tuesday after a two-week bureaucratic debate over whether the Iraqi government would perform an autopsy on his remains.

Officials said Michael David Copeland, 37, is among a handful of Americans working for the U.S. government to die in Iraq since December. That's when a security agreement between the two nations expired, eliminating immunities that shielded the U.S. military from local laws.

Copeland's case is a snapshot of the new reality of working in Iraq for Americans who, over the years, were accustomed to vast privileges and influence that disappeared when the U.S. troops left.

Officials said Copeland, of Colbert, Okla., moved to Iraq within the last month to take a job on an aviation project with DynCorp International under a State Department contract. His body was found in his bed on June 9, family members said. No foul play was suspected.
read more here
Michael David Copeland served this nation as Marine and then in the National Guards. Had he been killed wearing either uniform, the government would make sure his body came home soon afterwards, but he died working for a defense contractor in Iraq instead. His family needs help getting his body home.

Family of Oklahoma contractor who died in Iraq seeks help getting his body returned
By JERRY WOFFORD
Tulsa World, Okla
Published: June 20, 2012

Family members of a civilian contractor who died in Iraq this month are asking for government officials to put pressure on the Iraqi government to release the body to them.

Michael David Copeland - from Colbert in southern Oklahoma, who served in the Marines and with the Oklahoma Air National Guard - was found dead June 9 in his living quarters in Baghdad. His cause of death has not been released, said Ashley Burke, the vice president of communication for DynCorp International, the company at which Copeland worked.

Michael Wayne Copeland, his father, said his family has spoken with officials from the U.S. State Department and the congressional delegation, but he hasn't seen results.

"Everyone is sorry for our loss and his concern; however, his remains are still in Baghdad," his father said. "All we're interested in is knowing what happened to him and getting him home to lay him to rest."

Copeland's father said he was contacted June 9 by DynCorp officials and notified of his son's death. He said his son had been in Iraq working as an airplane mechanic about a week before his death.

Copeland, 37, served two tours of duty with the Marines before he left and joined the Oklahoma Air National Guard, where he served on another tour. His total military career spanned 13 years, his father said.
read more here

Retirement might unleash PTSD symptoms in Vietnam veterans

Retirement might unleash PTSD symptoms in Vietnam veterans
By LEO SHANE III
Stars and Stripes
Published: June 20, 2012

WASHINGTON — It took Sam Luna more than 35 years to get treatment for his post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I didn’t realize anything was wrong,” the combat-wounded Vietnam veteran said. “I thought I had adjusted well after I came back. I had a job, I had a family, everything looked great from the outside.”

But shortly after he retired in 2004, his anxiety attacks and stress levels increased.

A trip to his local Veterans Affairs hospital triggered war memories. The former soldier started to notice the hair-trigger temper his wife had complained about for years.

He found himself thinking more often about the war — and the friends he lost.

“It was like I had a black box on the mantel for years, but I could ignore it when I left for work every day,” he said. “When I retired, it was still sitting there, waiting for me.”
read more here

VA to Increase Mental Health Care Access


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  
     
VA to Increase Mental Health Care Access through 200,000 Telemental Health Consultations in 2012

WASHINGTON (June 20, 2012)– In a continuing effort to increase Veterans’ access to mental health care, the Department of Veterans Affairs has set a goal to conduct more than 200,000 clinic-based, telemental health consultations for all mental health specialties in fiscal year 2012.  This follows VA’s announcement last month that it would no longer charge Veterans a copayment when they receive care in their homes from VA health professionals using video conferencing. 

“Telemental health provides Veterans quicker and more efficient access to the types of care they seek,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “We are leveraging technology to reduce the distance they have to travel, increase the flexibility of the system they use, and improve their overall quality of life.  We are expanding the reach of our mental health services beyond our major medical centers and treating Veterans closer to their homes.”

The clinic-based telehealth program involves the more than 800 VA community-based outpatient clinics (CBOCs) where many Veterans receive primary care.  If the CBOCs do not have a mental health care provider available, secure video teleconferencing technology is used to connect the Veteran to a provider within VA’s nationwide system of care. 

As a result, Veterans can arrange appointments at times more in synch with their schedules.  The program improves access to general and specialty services in geographically remote areas where it can be difficult to recruit mental health professionals.

“As technology is improving people’s lives in many areas, telemental health is making access to health care and support easier for Veterans with mental health conditions,” said Dr. Robert A. Petzel, Under Secretary for Health.  “For example, one combat Veteran from Iraq cites telemental health as a critical factor in rebuilding her life and coping with the aftermath of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and military sexual trauma.  Telemental health offered her a safe and convenient setting to receive gender sensitive services that helped her fit back into civilian life after three months of therapy.”

Since the start of the Telemental Health Program, VA has completed over 550,000 patient encounters.  In Fiscal Year 2011 alone, more than 140,000 encounters were conducted with 55,000 Veterans via CBOCs, where providers at 150 hospitals delivered care to veterans at more than 500 clinics. 

The Telehealth Expansion Initiative launched in May 2011 called for an additional 21 regional leads, 144 facility coordinators and 1,150 clinical technicians to VA’s workforce.  When fully implemented, the expansion will provide a potential capacity of 1.2 million consultations annually. 

Video to the home is currently projected to grow to 2,000 patients by the end of fiscal year 2012, with 1,500 using innovative new Internet Protocol (IP) video connected to Veterans’ personal computers. 

In addition to supporting these current programs, the VHA National Telemental Health Center in West Haven, Conn., has pioneered additional new programs that delivered 1,000 specialized patient encounters from mental health experts at multiple VA sites to Veterans throughout the nation.  These include over 100 compensation and pension exams, 700 clinical encounters to over 165 Veterans enrolled in behavioral pain treatment programs, and 200 clinical-video and telephone encounters to over 70 Veterans enrolled in a bipolar disorder treatment program.

This campaign is part of VA’s overall mental health program.  Last year, VA provided quality, specialty mental health services to 1.3 million Veterans.  Since 2009, VA has increased the mental health care budget by 39 percent.  Since 2007, VA has seen a 35 percent increase in the number of Veterans receiving mental health services, and a 41 percent increase in mental health staff.  

In April, as part of an ongoing review of mental health operations, Secretary Shinseki announced VA would add approximately 1,600 mental health clinicians as well as nearly 300 support staff to its existing workforce of 20,590 to help meet the increased demand for mental health services.  The additional staff would include nurses, psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers. 

For more information, on VA’s telemental health, visit the Office of Telehealth Services athttp://www.telehealth.va.gov/.

More than 24,000 Jobs Will Be Offered to Veterans at Detroit VA for Vets Event


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE       

VA to Host Veteran Hiring Fair at the National Veteran Small Business Conference and Expo in Detroit

More than 24,000 Jobs Will Be Offered to Veterans at Detroit VA for Vets Event

WASHINGTON (June 20, 2012)– The Department of Veterans Affairs Veteran Employment Services Office (VESO) will host its largest hiring fair to date at Detroit’s Cobo Center, June 26-28, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. 

The unique format of this event is one way the VA for Vets program is helping Veterans get career ready.  Veterans can visit www.VAforVets.VA.gov/Detroit now and apply for public and private sector jobs being offered nationwide.  Qualified Veterans will be contacted by employers and scheduled for interviews in advance of the event.

“We are committed to improving the lives of our Veterans and their families, and that means helping them find meaningful employment,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “VA is taking a lead role in seeking innovative ways to bring more Veterans into the civilian workforce.”

VA is hosting three major events at Detroit’s Cobo Center June 26-29:  The VA for Vets Hiring Fair, the Veteran open house, and the National Veterans Small Business Conference and Expo.   The events are expected to attract thousands of Veterans, business owners and federal employees, with an economic impact estimated at $11 million for the city.

More than 24,000 federal and private-sector job openings across the country will be available at the free Veteran Hiring Fair June 26-28.  VA will bring together partners like the First Lady’s “Joining Forces” initiative and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, along with private sector companies, during the fair.  Not only will the fair provide Veterans an opportunity to showcase their skills to potential employers, it will also assist Veterans with resume preparation, interview techniques and career coaching. 

VA hosted a similar event Jan. 18 in Washington, D.C., which attracted over 4,100 Veterans and resulted in over 2,600 on-the-spot interviews and more than 500 tentative job offers.

The open house gives Veterans and their families the chance to find out about the wide range of financial and health care benefits, services and resources that are available from federal, state and community agencies. Veterans can conveniently enroll in VA care, sign up for MyHealtheVet, and get their questions answered face to face.

The National Veterans Small Business Conference and Expo is the premier government event for Veteran-owned businesses.   Last year’s conference in New Orleans drew almost 5,000 attendees, and more than 6,000 participants are expected this year.  VA will provide Veteran-owned and Service-Disabled Veteran-owned businesses with a wide range of information to help them maximize opportunities in the federal workplace.

Known historically as the world’s capital for the transportation industry, the Detroit metro area is reinventing itself with six booming industries: medical research, defense, entertainment, green tech, urban farming, and aeronautics.  About 330,000 Veterans are served by the city’s VA medical center, and more than 704,000 Veterans live in Michigan.

VA invites all interested persons and businesses to attend.  More information about the small business conference is available at www.nationalveteransconference.com. Information and registration for the hiring fair is available atwww.VAforVets.VA.Gov/Detroit.

Orlando VA is a Multi-Million Dollar Debacle

Miller: New Orlando VA is a Multi-Million Dollar Debacle
For more information, contact: Amy K. Mitchell, (202) 225-3527
JUN 15, 2012
Issues: Health Care, Veterans

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Today, Rep. Jeff Miller, Chairman of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, issued the following statement regarding the construction of the new Orlando Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center, which will serve approximately 300,000 veterans and is already two years behind schedule:

“VA has painted a rosy picture for the public and the veterans of Florida for the past two years regarding the construction of the long-overdue Orlando Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center. VA’s confidence in the timely and on-budget completion of this project was so great that it devoted ‘bid savings’ from this project for use elsewhere around the country. Needless to say, that confidence has given way to a somber reckoning of serious delays and potential cost-overruns.

“A Contract Cure Notice issued today by the Department of Veterans Affairs has the potential to stop construction at the Orlando site and increase the costs moving forward exponentially, if a resolution is not reached. The Committee was assured by VA officials on March 27, and again on May 18 of this year, that VA was working collaboratively with the contractor to ensure issues surrounding the construction of the facility would be resolved and the new timeline set forth by VA would be met. That was clearly not the case.

“This project has been a multi-million dollar debacle, and a failure of this magnitude deserves accountability at the highest level. Unfortunately, we have seen this pattern before. VA management and oversight of large construction and IT projects across the country has been sorely lacking and fraught with incompetence.

“The current situation in Orlando is inexcusable. Pointing fingers and laying blame will not build the medical center the veterans of Central Florida deserve. I expect answers immediately from VA on the status and cost of this project, and the implication of today’s decision on the delivery of care and services to our veterans.”

Soldier healing after suicide bomber killed friends

Wounded G.I., Bartram Trail grad making 'amazing' progress
Bartram Trail grad injured by suicide bomber overseas tells family 'I love you'
Posted: June 19, 2012
By SHELDON GARDNER

Bartram Trail grad injured by suicide bomber overseas tells family ‘I love you’

After spending two weeks in a coma, U.S. Army Lt. Ryan Timoney, 26, is awake. He is asking for food and drinks — power bars, apples, ice. He has said “I love you” to his family. He can write, and he is using a motorized wheelchair on his own.

“It’s amazing, it’s amazing what he’s doing,” his mother Diane Timoney said over the phone, her voice upbeat, her speech interspersed with laughter.

Her family has hope now, after two weeks of watching Ryan, a Bartram Trail High School graduate, in a hospital bed — silent, motionless, as he struggled to recover from injuries he suffered after a suicide bomber attacked him and 12 other soldiers in Tarin Kowt, Afghanistan. He is being treated at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Bethesda, Md.
read more here

Marine saved woman in Lake Michigan

Marine who rescued woman from lake: 'She asked me to please find Leo'
By Deanese Williams-Harris
June 19, 2012

A Marine from suburban Lockport who saved a woman Monday at an Indiana beach said this evening that he didn't want to return to shore without the woman's friend, who also went into Lake Michigan when a raft the two were on capsized.

"I'm humbled by the praise and recognition, but I'm pretty sad that I wasn't able to help both of them," Marine 2nd Lt. Nicholas Dominguez said in a telephone interview.

Monday afternoon, Dominguez along with relatives were visiting the Beverly Shores area in Indiana where his mother and uncle were raised, he said. While visiting neighbors, they decided to take their dogs out to play on the beach.
read more here

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Wounded Warriors press release nothing new

Where is there anything new in this press release from Wounded Warrior Project? We keep waiting for something to come out of this group that is worth the money that has been donated to them and this is what they put out?

Sorry but they still have not lived up to what they could actually do. I am sure they have the passion but they lack imagination and knowledge.
June 15, 2012 01:08 PM Eastern Daylight Time
10 Tips for Helping Someone with PTSD from Wounded Warrior Project™
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--You don’t have to be a member of the armed forces to have post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but nearly 20 percent of service members deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan reported having symptoms. In recognition of June as PTSD Awareness Month, Wounded Warrior Project™ (WWP) is offering 10 tips for how to help someone who may be suffering from PTSD.

“It is a sign of strength for a returning service member to acknowledge they may have PTSD and ask for help”

“It is a sign of strength for a returning service member to acknowledge they may have PTSD and ask for help,” said John Roberts, executive vice president, mental health and family services for Wounded Warrior Project™. ““These 10 tips are meant to directly help those dealing with PTSD,” added Roberts. “They are also to help others understand that PTSD can be treated and is a normal human reaction to abnormally stressful situations. PTSD can happen to anyone.“

10 Tips for Helping Someone with PTSD

1. Let the veteran determine what they are comfortable talking about and don’t push.

2. Deep breathing exercises or getting to a quiet place can help them cope when the stress seems overwhelming.

3. Writing about experiences can help the veteran clarify what is bothering them and help them think of solutions.

4. Alcohol and drugs may seem to help in the short run, but make things worse in the long run.

5. Crowds, trash on the side of the road, fireworks and certain smells can be difficult for veterans coping with PTSD.

6. Be a good listener and don’t say things like, “I know how you felt,” or, “That’s just like when I…” Even if you also served in a combat zone. Everyone’s feelings are unique.

7. www.restorewarriors.org is a website where warriors and their families can find tools on how to work through combat stress and PTSD issues. Learn about more mental health support resources that ease symptoms of combat stress.

8. Remind warriors they are not alone and many others have personal stories they can share about their readjustment. Talking to other warriors can help them cope.

9. Allow and encourage warriors and their family members to express their feelings and thoughts to those who care about them.

10. Let them know that acknowledging they may have PTSD says they’re strong, not weak.

Wounded Warrior Project

The mission of Wounded Warrior Project™ (WWP) is to honor and empower wounded warriors. WWP’s purpose is to raise awareness and to enlist the public’s aid for the needs of injured service members, to help injured servicemen and women aid and assist each other, and to provide unique, direct programs and services to meet their needs. WWP is a national, nonpartisan organization headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida. To get involved and learn more, visit Wounded Warrior Project.


UPDATE June 21, 2012
Free advice for Wounded Warrior Project if you really want to help PTSD veterans heal.

Forget what you read in a textbook! These are the questions they need answers for.

Q Why do I have PTSD but the others I was with don't?
A It is because you feel things more deeply than they do. You don't all have the same anger level, love the same, think the same, have the same sense of humor any more than you all have the same talents at equal levels. Some of your friends may walk away able to "get over it" but if you don't it does not mean you are weaker than they are but you have stronger feelings than they do.

Q Doesn't that mean I'm a sissy?
A No. It means you have compassion and without that, all the courage in the world won't mean anything. Let's say you are the bravest brute in the neighborhood but don't care about anyone. If you saw a kid in the middle of the street, you'd just watch what happens. You have to have compassion to care enough to act and the courage to do something about it. There are a lot of your peers you regard as heroes with some level of PTSD but they just haven't acknowledged it yet.

Q Why do I push people away?
A Some feel they do not deserve to be loved when they have PTSD. Others push people away so they won't get hurt again. Having someone close to you die is a feeling you don't want to suffer from again, so you shut yourself off and emotionally disconnect. Some believe the less they feel the less they'll hurt. This does not make for a very happy life and adds to the miserable thoughts you have.

Q Does it mean I didn't train right if I have PTSD?
A Resiliency Training is a boatload of crap telling you that you can train your brian to prevent PTSD and is a huge part of the problem. I've had Marines telling me they didn't train right and believe they are weak because of this. You need to remember that most of you do not allow yourself to feel the pain as long as your buddies are in danger. Most of you push past it, do your duty to the fullest everyday you are deployed until you are all back home. It is only then that you take down the barrier and allow yourself to feel. That took great courage and dedication to your buddies. It also means that you are unselfish when you could do all you did with that pain inside of you.

Q How do I heal?
A From the inside out. PTSD is caused only one way. From an outside force you had no control over. It hit you. You have to fight it from the inside with all you've got. Mind, body and spirit.
When you get cut, if you don't take care of the wound, it gets infected, spreads out eating away more tissue, getting into your blood stream and hits more parts of your body. It gets worse until you treat it. When you put on an antibiotic, it stops getting worse, begins to heal and as it does, it gets itchy. Once it is gone, how long it was allowed to get worse, predicts how big the scar is.
PTSD works the same way. If you leave it alone and just wait for it to get better, it is getting stronger. If you numb it with alcohol or drugs, you get temporary relief but it gets stronger. You had to learn how to walk leaning on someone you trust, you have to heal the same way and lean on someone you trust now. Talk about it.

That's just the start of what they need to know. I'm not just a consultant. I've lived with what combat does for the last 30 years. I've seen the worst and have been blessed to have been able to stay to see the best come shining through. PTSD does not always win when people have the right kind of weapons to fight it.

If you want to know more, just email me or call me at 407-754-7526.

Gary Sinise foundation building smart house for wounded veteran

Gary Sinise concert to benefit construction of 'smart home' for wounded Whitehall Township veteran
Published: Wednesday, June 20, 2012
By Dustin Schoof
The Express-Times


Express-Times Photo MATT SMITH
U.S. Army Sgt. Adam Keys, of Whitehall Township, who was wounded in Afghanistan in 2010, is greeted by hundreds of community members during a homecoming ceremony back in April.


Adam Keys needs a new home and actor Gary Sinise is helping to build it.

The "Forrest Gump" and "Apollo 13" star and The Lt. Dan Band will perform Aug. 17 at the State Theatre in Easton, organizers announced Tuesday during a news conference at the theater.

Proceeds from the show will go toward the building of a "smart home" for Keys, a U.S. Army sergeant from Whitehall Township who was wounded in 2010 while serving in Afghanistan.

The concert, which will include a performance by tenor Daniel Rodriguez and performance artist Scott LoBaido, is a joint partnership between the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation and the Gary Sinise Foundation.
read more here

"Violence and the Military" only part of the story

Violence and the Military by Elspeth Cameron Ritchie on Time's Battleland seems to be more about headline grabbing than anything else. As I read it, I wondered why it was not mentioned that with over 2 million veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, there are very few committing crimes?

Why would this simple fact be left out? Easy. It doesn't bleed so they won't let it lead.

Ritchie writes
I certainly do not want to add to the stigma by highlighting these examples of violence. Veterans are already too high on the list of those who are unemployed. But if there is a trend, we need to know about it. Read more


Ritchie's article is part of the reason so many of them are unemployed. It is reporting like this that will leave the impression our veterans are someone to fear.

In 2011 the population of the USA was 311,591,917 but we only have about 24 million veterans and less than 1% serve in the military today. While the media loves to make sure they mention Iraq Veteran or Afghanistan Veteran in their headlines, much as they did with Vietnam Veterans linked to crimes, no one seems willing to also mention the fact that as veterans are rare in this country, those committing crimes are even more rare.

One other thing that keeps getting omitted from reports is that if the serviceman or woman has been discharged, they are no longer counted by the military in any reports including suicides. If they are not in the VA system, they are not counted by the Veterans Affairs either. In other words, with all the figures we read, the majority of this minority are not counted by anyone.

The data has been in for a long time going back to Vietnam veterans but reporters didn't seem to care about the vast majority coming home, raising families, going to work, contributing to their communities, joining forces to make life better for all veterans all while living with the memories of combat.

I usually love to read what Ritchie writes but this time I closed the link pissed off.

Yes, they need to report on a lot of things from medications linked to suicides and crimes just as much as they should be investigating the failure of "Resiliency Training" brainwashing these men and women into believing if they end up with PTSD it is their fault and there is something wrong with them. They need to report on the homeless veterans because they are not getting the right kind of help for PTSD, have to turn to drugs and alcohol so they get numb to the pain just as much as they need to investigate the failures of the VA, millions of tax dollars being wasted on what does not work along with charities taking in donations for the veterans while giving very little to veterans.

They need to report on things that do actually work, veterans taking their own pain to the public so that other veterans won't have to go it alone along with the general public benefitting from their work. If you've seen a mental health worker, psychologist or had a crisis responder come to your aid, it is because Vietnam Veterans fought for it. When civilians are in trouble, it is usually a veteran showing up to help.

Veterans join the National Guards and they show up after a natural disaster. National Guardsmen usually go into law enforcement and fire departments or work as emergency responders in other fields. Then there are the medical advancements accomplished by government funding for the VA in burn units, taking care of amputees and research in TBI and PTSD. None of these things we talk about everyday get into the reporting done as much as the trouble thy get into.

The above article is part of the problem, asking questions that do not lead to answers as much as they lead to conclusions.

WWII Montford Point Marines Receive Congressional Gold Medal

WWII Montford Point Marines Receive Congressional Gold Medal
Coral Anika Theill
Salem-News.com
Jun-19-2012

"The Montford Point Marines' selfless service and sacrifice during a time when their contributions to our nation were not fully appreciated or recognized have made this country a better place for all Americans.” –Commandant of the Marine Corps General James F. Amos


L to R LtCol Joseph Carpenter, USMC (Ret), Sgt Earl Evans, USMC (Ret), SSgt Eugene Groves, USMC (Ret), and GySgt Reuben McNair, USMC (Ret) on the Capitol Steps. (Photo: Courtesy of the office of Rep. Corrine Brown)

(WASHINGTON DC) - Seventy years since the first African- American Marine recruit reported to train at the segregated camp called Montford Point at Camp Lejeune, N.C., the Montford Point Marines are finally getting the recognition they deserve.

The fact that African-Americans went through the rigorous training of Marines when the Corps was segregated and while they were treated as inferiors in our society, speaks loudly about the courage and dedication of each and every one of the Montford Point Marines.

There are approximately 500 surviving members of the almost 20,000 original Montford Point Marines. Every properly documented surviving Montford Point Marine or lineal descendant of one who was alive as of Nov. 23, 2011 when the President signed the bill into law will receive an invitation to the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony.

The Congressional Gold Medal ceremony, in honor of the original Montford Point Marines, is scheduled for Wednesday, June 27 at 3 p.m. at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, Washington D.C. The Montford Point Marines will be recognized by Congress for their contributions to the Marine Corps and our nation. At this ceremony, one Congressional Gold Medal will be accepted on behalf of the Montford Point Marines. Attendance at this event is by invitation only.
read more here

I interviewed Charles Foreman at the Orlando Nam Knights Clubhouse when he came for a visit.

Navy Cross recipient gets Father’s Day surprise

Navy Cross recipient gets Father’s Day surprise
JUNE 19TH, 2012
BATTLE RATTLE
POSTED BY GINA HARKINS

Cpl. Christopher Farias received a Father’s Day surprise after he threw out the first pitch at the Dodgers game on Sunday — his dad was behind the catcher’s mask.

Farias thought he was throwing out the first pitch as “veteran of the game,” but there was a bigger plan in action.

According to his dad, this was the first Father’s Day in eight years that the 11th Marines Field Artillery School instructor wasn’t called away on duty. So he hid behind the catcher’s gear and got behind the plate to catch his son’s ceremonial first pitch.

Farias, based in Dodger-territory at Camp Pendleton, Calif., said he could tell it was his dad as soon as he caught the ball and started walking towards him. Check out the video capturing the surprise.
read more here

Digital Nation Changing Nation

Digital Nation Changing Nation
by Chaplain Kathie
Last night I was watching Digital Nation on PBS. They were talking about how everyone is hooked up into a digital world from school age, to college to senior citizens. The show focused on a lot of the negative aspects with people multitasking, believing they are mastering all but it turned out they were falling short in thinking.

As I watched it had me doing a lot of thinking. This digital world has the power to connect people to stories they would have never known about.


Watch Digital Nation on PBS. See more from FRONTLINE.


Sure there are a lot of fun things going on, stupid stuff wasting time but had it not been for this new world of digital technology and a lot of really smart people changing it on a daily basis, this country wouldn't be stepping up to help veterans. No one would be talking about PTSD, combat, families suffering, along with all the bad that comes but they wouldn't be helping each other heal either.

When Vietnam veterans came home, no one knew what they were going through, so it seemed as if they didn't care. The journalists were focused on all the times a Vietnam veteran got into trouble because as the value the "bleeds" stories putting them into the headlines, stories about these veterans rising above all we did to them, waging another battle to have PTSD treated as a wound caused by combat, were happening all across this country. No one knew about any of it. This made their battle harder to fight than if they had this ability to connect across the country.

Stop and think for a second about our view of these veterans. No one wanted anything to do with any of them because they were an oddity topped off with the only reports released about them in the press were painting them all as drug addicts and criminals. They wouldn't give up on us and fought to make their suffering known so we turned around and actually did something about it.

Most of what they achieved happened because of the introduction of the Web enabling them to connect to other veterans beyond the limited, narrow view of the press. Sites started to link them together. Army Lost and Found is just one example of the sites I visited in the 90's. It is a posting site helping veterans find each other. I used it when I was researching PTSD, reading their stories and discovered how much they still need each other, watch over each other and learn.

While the media ignored all of this, they found ways of connecting and there was an underground railroad of information flowing between veterans.

Today we see this and we still witness the greatness of our veterans. If you only watch cable news, you're missing out on most of what is going on in this country. The digital world will kill off MSNBC, FOX and CNN because they are all focusing on politics more than anything else forcing viewers like me to stop watching. Yet even they occasionally report on a veteran's story that captures the nation's attention.

Every morning I read the emails, alerts about what is going on, press releases, you name it, and every morning I see how this technology is changing this country for the better. We don't just read about stories, we actually do something about what we're reading.

They returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with an abundance of ways to connect and share. The problem for most of them is the information overload leaving them to feel overwhelmed not knowing where to click to find what they need. But this technology is also feeding people in need, giving them shelter, compelling groups to offer support and even saving lives.

Thirty years ago, I had to go to the library and buy books to do research. Twenty years ago, it was searching online and emails. Today it is a growing list.

When I finished college, I posted on my blog updated my profile, Facebook and because of the way my blog is set up, it automatically updated Twitter. I changed my profile on Linked In. I use YouTube for videos and Great Americans because this generation doesn't want to read much and is used to being able to find what they want with a click off their phones and laptops.

While I do agree we have information overload, there is a lot happening in this country that would not have been possible without it.

I just had to laugh considering in 1993, my brother gave me my first computer and I couldn't figure out how to use the mouse! The new generation of veterans coming home are connecting with each other but they are also connecting to my generation and we in turn connect to our parents generation. We learn, we teach, we lead, we follow and we grow. We don't have to sit and wonder how we can help, we just do it. We don't have to go off on our merry way assuming there is nothing to do for our veterans. We know better. In ways great and small, we manage to change this country for the better but the media giants are slow learners. They'll stay focused on the people in politics wanting to run this nation but we are the ones making this nation better.

Most of the good things being done in this country are being done because veterans got involved with it and the digital world hooked them up.

Veterans raising funds for Iraq Veterans Memorial

Veterans raising funds for Iraq Veterans Memorial in Riverview


YVETTE C. HAMMETT/STAFF
Air Force and Iraq War veteran Mark Goujon, left, and Army veteran Mike Zaffino are helping to raise money for the Iraq war memorial.

By YVETTE C. HAMMETT
The Tampa Tribune
Published: June 20, 2012
RIVERVIEW

For Mark Goujon, heading up the committee to raise funds for an Iraq Veterans Memorial is a labor of love for the six teammates he lost during Operation Enduring Freedom.

"My motivation is those six people that I served with that didn't come back," the Air Force Iraq War veteran said.

Goujon served beside those fallen comrades on teams sent out to gather intelligence on roadside bombs and, after bombings, to seek evidence to determine who set off the explosives.

"With this memorial here, we won't have to go to Washington, D.C., to honor them, and our kids and grandkids will know the effort we put into this," Goujon said.

Army veteran Mike Zaffino didn't serve in Iraq, but he was at the Pentagon the day the plane hit — Sept. 11, 2001. "And I had many friends who served and have fallen" in Iraq, he said.

Joining them on the committee to raise $250,000 for an Iraq Veterans Memorial in Veterans Memorial Park are Tim Lawn, who is in the Army and preparing to deploy to Afghanistan; Bosnia and Iraq Army veteran Mike Graham; and Iraq Army veteran Chris Harrington.

This memorial will be the second of 12 theaters of war set to be constructed at the park on U.S. 301 next to the Tampa Bypass Canal.

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was completed in 2011.

Goujon wants to have the Iraq memorial completed in time to dedicate it on Veterans Day 2013.
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DAV and American Legion have concerns on claims scanning

Official: VA Would Need Staff of 4,000 to Scan All Its Backlogged Benefit Records
By Bob Brewin
Nextgov.com
Updated: June 19, 2012


Jeffrey Hall, assistant national legislative director for Disabled American Veterans, said “NARA's decision to stop performing this work caught [the Veterans Benefits Administration] somewhat by surprise.”


The Veterans Affairs Department would have to employ 4,000 more workers in order to scan billions of pages of paper benefit claims, William Bosanko, a top executive at the National Archives and Records Administration, told a hearing of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee on Tuesday.

NARA has performed sophisticated scanning operations for the department at five sites for the past two years under contracts valued at $9.7 million, Bosanko told lawmakers at the hearing. The system NARA developed for VA not only scans documents, but also has been taught to recognize and compile data from 170 different forms the Veterans Benefits Administration uses, he said. VA’s contracts with NARA expires next week.

Bosanko said NARA has recommended VA seek help from the private sector for meeting its systemwide scanning requirements.

VA holds records on millions of veterans dating as far back as World War II. Bosanko estimated the department would have to scan 60 million pieces of paper a month so that records could be used with VA’s new paperless claims-processing system, the Veterans Benefits Management System -- a feat that would require a staff of 4,000. He did not say how long the process could take.
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More help coming for veterans with Combat PTSD in Florida

Viera VA clinic to nearly double mental health staff
More help coming for war-weary
Written by
R. Norman Moody
FLORIDA TODAY
Jun 19, 2012

Since 2007, VA nationally has seen a 35 percent increase in the number of veterans receiving mental health services and as a result, increased its mental health staff by 41 percent. In the past three years, it increased its mental health care budget by 39 percent and last year, provided mental health services to 1.3 million veterans.


Just as the number of troops returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan swelled with the end of one war and the draw-down from the other, so did the number of veterans seeking mental health care.

More than one million troops served in those conflicts during the past decade.

A plan announced last week by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to address the growing need for better mental health care for U.S. veterans will mean the Viera VA Outpatient Clinic will almost double its mental health staff.

The national recruitment effort that already has added some mental health professionals at the Viera clinic — a facility that had 23,000 mental health visits last year — will culminate in about six months with 14 positions added to the previous 16.
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Problem arises for veterans job training program

UPDATE June 21, 2012
VA fixes problem with vets job training program
By Rick Maze
Staff writer
Army TImes
Posted : Wednesday Jun 20, 2012
With just 10 days before a new education benefits is launched to help unemployed veterans learn a new skill, the VA has rushed to fix a problem that could have left community colleges in 18 states and Puerto Rico ineligible for participation.

Veterans Affairs Department officials told Congress late Wednesday they were revising their eligibility criteria for community colleges to be part of the Veterans Retraining Assistance Program so that schools that offer a limited number of four-year bachelor degrees would not be left out.

Four-year colleges and universities will remain ineligible but community colleges listed by the U.S. Education Department’s National Center for Educational Statistics College Navigator as a two-year school will be covered, VA officials said in a note to the House Veterans Affairs Committee, which raised questions about eligibility on Tuesday.
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Problem arises for vets job training program
By Rick Maze
Staff writer
Army Times
Posted : Tuesday Jun 19, 2012

A problem has arisen for a veterans’ training program expected to launch July 1: Classes at community colleges in 18 states and territories will not be covered because those schools also provide bachelors’ degrees.

The Veterans Retraining Assistance Program, created by Congress to provide one year of training and education benefits to certain unemployed veterans to prepare them for work in high-demand fields, was to be limited to short courses that could yield big results.

However, “using VA’s narrow definition of ‘community college,’ if a school awarded one bachelor’s degree along with hundreds or even thousands of associate degrees, that school would not qualify for VRAP training,” said Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., the second ranking Republican on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Bilirakis said some community colleges are allowed by state law to provide a small number of four-year degrees. For example, 23 of Florida’s 28 community colleges are not eligible for VRAP, the chancellor of the Florida College System has warned.

“The reason given for this denial is that each of those 23 community colleges awards a very limited number of bachelors’ degrees, most often in technical and health care fields, such as a bachelor of nursing degree,” Bilirakis said.
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This came in from the Department of Veterans Affairs

Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Hosts Workshops during Detroit VA for Vets Hiring Fair

WASHINGTON ( June 19, 2012) – The Department of Veterans Affairs Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment program (VR and E) will host several workshops aimed at helping Veterans understand the many benefits and programs that promote Veteran employment during the VA for Vets Hiring Fair being held in Detroit June 26-28.

As part of the Veteran Open House, VA will educate Veterans on vocational rehabilitation and employment services, register them for VA’s online employment toolkit, www.VetSuccess.gov , and provide tools that help Veterans find meaningful careers, receive accommodations for disabilities at their place of employment, and start a small business.

“At VA, we know the skills and characteristics Veterans bring with them to a new career can only benefit an organization,” said Under Secretary for Benefits Allison A. Hickey. “Our VR and E program is committed to assisting Veterans find meaningful careers, whether in the federal government or in the private sector.”

VA is hosting three major events at Detroit’s Cobo Center June 26-29: The VA for Vets Hiring Fair, the Veterans Open House, and the National Veterans Small Business Conference and Expo. The events are expected to attract thousands of Veterans, business owners and federal employees, with an economic impact estimated at $11 million for the city.

More than 24,000 federal and private-sector job openings across the country will be available at the free Veteran Hiring Fair June 26-28. VA will bring together partners like the First Lady’s “Joining Forces” initiative and Hiring Our Heroes, along with private sector companies, during the fair. Not only will the fair provide Veterans an opportunity to showcase their skills to potential employers, it will also assist Veterans with resume preparation, interview techniques and career coaching to help Veteran attendees become career ready. VA hosted a similar event Jan. 18 in Washington, D.C., which attracted over 4,100 Veterans and resulted in over 2,600 on-the-spot interviews and more than 500 tentative job offers.

The Open House gives Veterans and their families the chance to find out about the wide range of financial and health-care benefits, services and resources that are available from federal, state and community agencies. Veterans can conveniently enroll in VA care, sign up for eBenefits and MyHealtheVet, and get their questions answered face to face.

The National Veterans Small Business Conference and Expo is the premier government event for Veteran-owned businesses. Last year’s conference in New Orleans drew almost 5,000 attendees, and more than 6,000 participants are expected this year. VA will provide Veteran-owned and Service-Disabled Veteran-owned businesses with a wide range of information to help them maximize opportunities in the federal workplace.

Known historically as the world’s capital for the transportation industry, the Detroit metro area is reinventing itself with six booming industries: medical research, defense, entertainment, green tech, urban farming, and aeronautics. About 330,000 Veterans are served by the city’s VA medical center, and more than 704,000 Veterans live in Michigan.

VA invites all interested persons and businesses to attend. More information about the small business conference is available at National Veterans Conference. Information and registration for the hiring fair is available at VAforVets.

Horseshoe GM says vet's vest, military uniforms OK at casino

Horseshoe GM says vet's vest, military uniforms OK at casino
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
By Thomas Ott
The Plain Dealer

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- If a security guard barred a Vietnam veteran wearing a military-themed vest from the Horseshoe Casino Cleveland last week, it was because the guard misinterpreted policy on proper dress, General Manager Marcus Glover said Monday.

The Horseshoe allows vests like the one worn by Marine veteran Gerald Doris, Glover said. He said the casino also does not bar active military personnel in uniform, as alleged by a friend of Doris'.

Doris, who lives in Florida but spends half of the year at a campground near Lodi, said he was stopped at the door to the casino early Wednesday afternoon because he was wearing a leather vest adorned with a Marine Corps emblem and a map of Vietnam. He said a guard ruled his vest violated a ban on clothing with "colors."
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Rain didn't stop Patriot Guard Riders

Rain does not dampen Patriot Ride’s spirit
By Eric Hagen
June 19, 2012


Thousands of people Saturday showed veterans and current service members that their service to America will not be forgotten.

An estimated 2,000 motorcyclists drove a 60-mile round trip between Ham Lake and Cambridge June 16 in honor of military veterans and the current service members during the seventh annual Patriot Ride.

It was raining when the Patriot Ride first began in 2006 and it was lightly raining again during the beginning of the seventh annual ride June 16.

Doug Bley admitted he was not among one of the approximately 100 people who braved the rain in 2006, but he has been to every one since then and now serves as the president of the Minnesota Patriot Guard. This organization and the Minnesotans’ Military Appreciation Fund (MMAF) split the proceeds of the Patriot Ride, which has raised about $600,000 the first six years, according to Bley.
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