REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS AS A CABINET AGENCY
Department of Veterans Affairs, Washington, D.C.
2:20 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. To Jim Benson for helping to organize this; for Mahdee for your service to our country — a Pledge of Allegiance that you’ve shown in your own commitment to protecting this country; and obviously, to Secretary Shinseki. It is an honor to join you and the hardworking public servants here at the Department of Veterans Affairs as we mark a milestone in the distinguished history of this department.
You know, 20 years ago, on the day the Veterans Administration was officially elevated to a Cabinet-level agency and renamed the Department of Veterans Affairs, a ceremony was held to swear in the administrator of the old entity as Secretary of the new one. And in his remarks that day, President George H.W. Bush declared that the mission of this agency is "so vital that there’s only one place for the veterans of America: in the Cabinet Room, at the table with the President of the United States of America." I could not agree more.
I could not be more pleased that Eric Shinseki has taken a seat at that table. Throughout his long and distinguished career in the Army, Secretary Shinseki won the respect and admiration of our men and women in uniform because they’ve always been his highest priority — and he has clearly brought that same sense of duty and commitment to the work of serving our veterans.
As he knows, it’s no small task. This department has more than a quarter of a million employees across America, and its services range from providing education and training benefits, health care and home loans, to tending those quiet places that remind us of the great debt we owe — and remind me of the heavy responsibility that I bear. It’s a commitment that lasts from the day our veterans retire that uniform to the day that they are put to rest — and that continues on for their families.
Without this commitment, I might not be here today. After all, my grandfather enlisted after Pearl Harbor and went on to march in Patton’s Army. My grandmother worked on a bomber assembly line while he was gone. My mother was born at Fort Leavenworth while he was away. When my grandfather returned, he went to college on the GI Bill; bought his first home with a loan from the FHA; moved his family west, all the way to Hawaii, where he and my grandmother helped to raise me.
And I think about my grandfather whenever I have the privilege of meeting the young men and women who serve in our military today. They are our best and brightest, and they’re our bravest — enlisting in a time of war; enduring tour after tour of duty; serving with honor under the most difficult circumstances; and making sacrifices that many of us cannot begin to imagine. The same can be said of their families. As my wife, Michelle, has seen firsthand during visits to military bases across this country, we don’t just deploy our troops in a time of war — we deploy their families, too.
So while the mission of this department is always vital, it is even more so during long and difficult conflicts like those that we’re engaged in today. Because when the guns finally fall silent and the cameras are turned off and our troops return home, they deserve the same commitment from their government as my grandparents received.
Last month, I announced my strategy for ending the war in Iraq. And I made it very clear that this strategy would not end with military plans and diplomatic agendas, but would endure through my commitment to upholding our sacred trust with every man and woman who has served this country. And the same holds true for our troops serving in Afghanistan.
The homecoming we face over the next year and a half will be the true test of this commitment: whether we will stand with our veterans as they face new challenges — physical, psychological and economic — here at home.
I intend to start that work by making good on my pledge to transform the Department of Veterans Affairs for the 21st century. That’s an effort that, under Secretary Shinseki’s leadership, all of you have already begun — conducting a thorough review of your operations all across this agency. And I intend to support this effort not just with words of encouragement, but with resources. That’s why the budget I sent to Congress increases funding for this department by $25 billion over the next five years.
With this budget, we don’t just fully fund our VA health care program — we expand it to serve an additional 500,000 veterans by 2013; to provide better health care in more places; and to dramatically improve services related to mental health and injuries like Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury. We also invest in the technology to cut red tape and ease the transition from active duty. And we provide new help for homeless veterans, because those heroes have a home — it’s the country they served, the United States of America. And until we reach a day when not a single veteran sleeps on our nation’s streets, our work remains unfinished. (Applause.)
Finally, in this new century, it’s time to heed the lesson of history, that our returning veterans can form the backbone of our middle class — by implementing a GI Bill for the 21st century. I know you’re working hard under a tough deadline, but I am confident that we will be ready for August 1st. And that’s how we’ll show our servicemen and women that when you come home to America, America will be here for you. That’s how we will ensure that those who have "borne the battle" — and their families — will have every chance to live out their dreams.
I’ve had the privilege of meeting so many of these heroes. Some of the most inspiring are those that I’ve met in places like Walter Reed — young men and women who’ve lost a limb or even their ability to take care of themselves, but who never lose the pride they feel for their country. And that is, after all, what led them to wear the uniform in the first place — their unwavering belief in the idea of America; that no matter where you come from, what you look like, who your parents are, this is a place where anything is possible, where anyone can make it, where we take care of each other and look out for each other — especially for those who’ve sacrificed so much for this country.
These are the ideals that generations of Americans have fought for and bled for and died for. These are the ideals at the core of your mission — a mission that dates back before our founding — one taken up by our first President years before he took office, back when he served as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army. Then-General Washington fought tirelessly to support the veterans of America’s Revolutionary War. Such support, he argued, should "never be considered as a pension or gratuity…" Rather, "…it was the price of their blood," and of our independence; "…it is, therefore," he said, "more than a common debt, it is a debt of honor…" A debt of honor.
Washington understood that caring for our veterans was more than just a way of thanking them for their service. He recognized the obligation is deeper than that — that when our fellow citizens commit themselves to shed blood for us, that binds our fates with theirs in a way that nothing else can. And in the end, caring for those who have given their fullest measure of devotion to us — and for their families — is a matter of honor — as a nation and as a people.
That’s a responsibility you hold, that’s the work that you do — repaying that debt of honor, a debt we can never fully discharge. And I know it’s not always easy. I know there’s much work ahead to transform this agency for the 21st century. But I have the fullest confidence that with Secretary Shinseki’s leadership, and with the hard work of the men and women of this department, we will fulfill our sacred trust and serve our returning heroes as well as they’ve served us.
Thank you. God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America. Thank you, everybody. (Applause.)
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Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=5346
Posted by Veterans Today on Mar 16 2009, With 0 Reads, Filed under Vet News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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President Obama states: “I intend to start that work by making good on my pledge to transform the Department of Veterans Affairs for the 21st century.”
In his recent “open letter to Veterans,” Secretary Shinseki stated: “I am fully committed to fulfilling President Obama’s vision for transforming our department so that it will be well-positioned to perform this duty even better during the 21st Century. Creating that vision for transforming the VA into a 21st Century organization requires a comprehensive review of our department. We approach that review understanding that Veterans are central to everything VA does.
Secretary Shinseki also stated: “We will fulfill President Lincoln’s charge “to care for “him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan . . .” by redesigning and reengineering ourselves for the future.”
Well, one of the last legislative acts that President Lincoln put forth before his assassination was the establishment of branch Homes for Disabled Soldiers. Twenty two years after his death, Congress passed an “act to provide for the location and erection of a branch home for disabled volunteer soldiers west of the Rocky Mountains.”
In Section 2 of the March 2, 1887 Congressional Act, it stipulated: “That all honorably discharged soldiers and sailors who served in the regular and volunteer forces of the United States, and who are disabled by disease, wounds, or otherwise, and who have no adequate means of support, and by reason of such disability are incapable of earning their living, shall be entitled to be admitted to said home for disabled volunteer soldiers, subject to like regulations as they are now admitted to existing branches of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.”
One year later on March 3, 1888 and in compliance with the Act, John P. Jones and Arcadia B. de Baker deeded 300 acres of pristine land in Los Angeles “to be permanently maintained as a National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.”
Today, there are 20,000 homeless Veterans in Los Angeles while this sacred land has been prostituted to the highest bidder and raped with no charge at all for a rent-free public park. This is absolutely shameless and President Obama can never honor President Lincoln and his “Old Soldiers Home” vision so long as the there is a single breach or violation of the Congressional Act of 1887 and the Deed of 1888.
There’s more than adequate money in the budget to take care of Veterans health care services without having to prostitute this sacred land to make up for a fabricated $5 million annual “budget shortfall.” This is insulting and disgraceful!
President Obama stated that there will be increased funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs “by $25 billion over the next five years.” As a result, there’s plenty of money for Secretary Shinseki to buy out these “enhanced sharing leases and agreements,” the same way the Treasury Department is paying off “CEO bonuses” at AIG and other banks and financial institutions that are contrary to the American way of doing business.
General Shinseki must also sever the over-imposing relationship that Sue Young, executive director of Veterans Park Conservancy, has with the VA. For the past 20 years Ms. Young has manipulated the VA and controlled Veterans sacred land as her own fiefdom. As a result, Ms. Young and her VPC members have seriously alienated the everyday Veterans beyond comprehension. This must cease!
So long as even one of these enhanced leases and/or sharing agreements continue in violation of the 1887 Act of Congress and the Deed of 1888 upholding it, President Obama can never stake any claim as living up to the Great Emancipator.
Only when President Obama steps forward and fully Liberates our Veterans and their National Home(s) from government and community tyranny, can he even suggest that his Administration is a model of President Lincoln.
Sometimes before you go forward, you have to go backward to understand what once worked. For over a century, Lincoln’s vision “worked.” Go back and honor the Congressional Act of 1887 and the Deed of 1888 and make it work in the 21st century.
Mr. President, do not let another day go by that allows for the dastardly abuse of this most honorable Act of Congress. Please bring an abrupt end to all those who have made a mockery of President Lincoln’s pledge by unlocking the front gate to the Veterans Home and bringing 20,000 homeless Veterans in Los Angeles “Home.”
Let America know that there’s a new Sheriff in town by evicting all those who are on these sacred grounds “illegally.”
Mr. President, tomorrow you will be in Los Angeles and will no doubt land Marine One at the Los Angeles National Veterans Home like your predecessors.
Make the very best of this trip by implementing real “change” and demand that the “asset management” bureaucrats at the West LA VA immediately start rescinding and canceling all enhanced leases and/or sharing agreements.
Mr. President, honor President Lincoln and all Veterans living and deceased by restoring the revered and historic legacy of this sacred national trust – “to be permanently maintained as a National Home for Disabled Veterans.”
RLR
Co-Director, We the Veterans
Director, We the Veterans
In today’s world of technology, communications systems are faster than a speeding bullet. Billions of pieces of data are searched with the click of a mouse, and presto-bingo your results are at your fingertips in 1.3 seconds.
Rotary phones, party lines, telegrams, manual typewriters and carbon paper were once our premiere means of communication, but are now considered fossils and are displayed in museums as relics of days gone by. Look how far we have come. There was no charge for friendly operator assistance, and today we have automated phone systems that prohibit human contact no matter how many times you press “0”. Must be one of the hidden costs of progress.
We have become an internet connected global community who rely on high-tech information sharing systems via you-tube, Yahoo news, text me, I-Pods, E-bay shopping, My Space, Google it, Face Book and Can you “Digg” it?
With all the advancements that have been made over the past couple of decades simplifying our lives yet challenging us to figure out how to communicate with these new gadgets, there are some who saw a way to make sure there would be NO sharing of information and created systems that were in a word, not “user” friendly and saw no need for tech support.
The VA took all this technology and built a fortress designed to pass as an actual “informational system” based off the model of a maze that really does not have an exit, and rather than write it in code, they wrote it in legalese just in case someone managed to penetrate the system. In all fairness, it is a government agency and “Top Secret” information needs to be protected from the masses – especially the veterans and their families. Totally understandable.
Did you know that the VA has a “Smart” phone and fax system? How clever is this? The minute you pick up the phone to dial the VA’s 800# the system recognizes the area code you are calling from, the first 3 prefixes of your phone number and routes your call to the nearest call center physically located to you. In the event that call center is extremely busy, (can’t imagine that) it will “smartly” route you the next closest call center and so on until your call goes into queue waiting for “assistance”.
Here is where it gets even better. The person that you finally connect with is on a time limit for how long they can stay on the phone with you. They don’t have time to listen to your hour long story that you have probably already told countless times, or how frustrated you are that you can’t get an answer, or the answer is completely different from the last one you got. Misinformation is an important component to this equation resulting in confusion, exasperation and giving up.
Every VSR (VA Service Rep) in all the 57 VA centers across the country are mandated to process 70+ calls a day. Otherwise they are penalized for under -performing. It is important to be able to justify the call volume and be able to say that the center is effectively handling and processing all inquiries. Don’t be confused that this has anything to do with actually helping 70+ veterans or family members. That is not the intent of the system. Remember it is about not sharing.
To take this to the next level, the person you are speaking with does not have an extension or direct number, so in the event you have to call back, and depending on where the “Smart” phone system directs your call this time, you get to start all over with someone who is way behind on their daily quota and tell your story to someone else. “If” they pull up your file and, depending on how good of notes were entered the last time you called, it can lead to a heated debate that you won’t win. Not that you aren’t smart enough to win, but the system was not designed for that outcome.
The VA implemented and paid for a “Mystery Caller” program in 2002 and again in 2004. The person performing the investigation made 1,089 calls to assess accuracy of information being given, professionalism, and courtesy.
As a standard the results when combined totaled 43% of answers given that were either mostly or completely wrong. That was after two years of the VA providing training to its employees.
The study actually showed that rather than improving over the dismal ratings of the ‘02 survey, in spite of the 2 years of additional training that ‘04’s survey ranked even lower in most categories. Sounds like a plan well executed.
Did you know that if you call the VA’s 800 number from a different state than where you filed for any benefit from the VA, that the call center you reach will tell you that they don’t have access to the file because you didn’t file in the state you are calling from? It’s a little confusing – read it again.
Remember we are in the technological age of information, so this response is an outright lie. The truth is that VSR will be in a lot of trouble for spending time on a call that is not being processed by their regional office. They can pull the file up, but they are not going to. They won’t offer to transfer you to the office where the file is being processed. They will say they don’t have that capability and cannot provide you with a direct number.
If you get lucky as I did while standing in the state of FL trying to call the VA regarding my mother’s application for Aid and Attendance, which I filed for in the state of Virginia where I live, you might get one of the brighter bulbs who suggested that since my cell phone was an (804) area code that I try calling the 800# from that phone. She informed me that calling from the line I was using was going to continually route me back to the Tampa Clearwater, FL VA office. Now all I had to do was try and figure out which cell tower in Tallahassee, FL was going to know that my mother had been transferred to Hospice, and that I needed the signal to be pinged to a cell tower in Virginia.
Given that you can’t physically go through a phone and smack somebody upside the head, I opted for another option. I relied on some dated technology and called 411 and said that I needed a non 800# for the VA office located on Franklin Street in Roanoke, VA to which she was able to provide the number that the VSR was unable to.
I immediately got through to someone to whom I explained the urgency and circumstances to. He took a deep breath, sighed, and gave me a phone number saying, “You did not get this number from me”, and hung up.
The gentleman who answered the phone of the number I was given was less than thrilled to hear from me, and I believe that the only thing he was focused on was trying to found out who the traitor was. I’m sure the security breach was noted.
This system was specifically designed to fail our veterans and does that on a daily basis.
Eric Shinseki has his work cut out for him.
In the meantime I will continue my efforts to honor our veterans and their familes at http://www.veteranaid.org