Top 10 Veterans News from Around the Country 1-29-10
Find out What’s Inside Today’s Local News for Veterans
- Committee: DOD Should Offer Care To Vets Exposed To Contaminated Water.
- VA Researcher Authors Study On Drinking Among Older Adults.
- US Army Leaders Instructed To Step Up Suicide Prevention Efforts.
- Bill Would Expand Grant Programs For Homeless Vets.
- Vets Hope To Rid Vietnam Of Unexploded Ordnance.
- Bond Hearing Delayed So Veteran Can Get PTSD Treatment.
- Insanity Plea Postpones Iraq Vet’s Trial.
- Several Prominent World War II Vets Pass Away.
- VA IG Criticizes Anchorage Office.
- Judge Approves Debt Case Agreement Between US Government, Vets.
1. Committee: DOD Should Offer Care To Vets Exposed To Contaminated Water. McClatchy (1/29, Barrett) reports that legislation passed by the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee on “Thursday would require the Department of Defense to offer health care to spouses, children and other family members who were exposed to contaminated water…in the 1970s and ’80s” at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. McClatchy also notes that a competing bill, which would have made the Veterans Affairs Department responsible for such care, failed to pass the committee Thursday.
The AP (1/28) publishes a similar story, while the Marine Corps Times (1/29, Maze, 32K) says the bill that passed the committee on Thursday makes the DOD “responsible for health care because” the VA and “several major veterans’ organizations worried that a flood of new patients could overwhelm” the VA. The Times notes that in a Jan. 26 letter to the committee, VA Secretary Eric Shinseki “said…that up to 500,000 people who lived at Camp Lejeune from 1957 to 1987 could apply for health benefits, and that estimate ‘could be conservative.’ Caring for them would cost about $4.2 billion over 10 years, he said.”
The Jacksonville (NC) Daily News (1/29, Hodge) reports, “Staff from Burr’s office said the senator would continue to actively pursue avenues to get veterans and their families healthcare through the VA.” Next week, meanwhile, a “bill that parallels the one killed” by the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Thursday “will be introduced in the House.” The House will named after Janey Ensminger, the daughter of “Jacksonville resident and former Marine” Jerry Ensminger, who believes Janey’s death from Leukemia at the age of nine was caused by exposure to toxic water at Camp Lejeune.
2. VA Researcher Authors Study On Drinking Among Older Adults. Medical News Today (1/28) reported, “New research on drinking among older adults has found that older adults who have more money, engage in more social activities, and whose friends approve more of drinking are more likely to engage in excessive or high-risk drinking.” Rudolf H. Moos, “senior research career scientist for the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System in Palo Alto, California,” authored the study, which “will be published in the April 2010 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.”
3. US Army Leaders Instructed To Step Up Suicide Prevention Efforts. USA Today (1/29, Zoroya, 2.11M) reports, “Alarmed by the suicides of eight soldiers in the year’s first eight days, the Army’s No. 2 general told commanders to have face-to-face contact with GIs to remind them ‘each one is valued by our Army,’ according” to a “Jan. 8 memorandum provided to USA TODAY. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the Army’s vice chief of staff, reinforced that message last week, telling leaders in a videoconference they must pay extra attention to soldiers who are moving from one installation to another and may need more help, says Col. Chris Philbrick, head of the Army’s suicide task force.” USA Today says Chiarelli’s “message illustrates the continuing challenge the service faces despite an anti-suicide campaign that started last year.”
4. Bill Would Expand Grant Programs For Homeless Vets. The Helena (MT) Independent Record (1/29, Doran, 14K) reports, “The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee on Thursday passed” S.127, “a bill that…could create job opportunities and better housing for homeless veterans, particularly women and veterans with families.” The bill “would expand the Veterans Affairs grant program that pays up to 65 percent of the construction costs associated with building, expanding or modernizing veterans supportive housing, and would create a new grant program in the Labor Department for the reintegration of homeless women veterans and homeless veterans with children into the labor force.” The Record adds, “With two amendments” by US Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT), “these services would be delivered to the struggling veterans in Montana and across rural America.” The KULR-TV Billings, MT (1/28, Grigg) website noted that Tester “said he doesn’t want to see veterans in rural America fall through the cracks.”
5. Vets Hope To Rid Vietnam Of Unexploded Ordnance. The Arlington (VA) Connection (1/29, Georgelas) notes that earlier this month, Barry McCaffrey, a retired general, “led a 40-person delegation of Vietnam veterans and their families on a humanitarian tour of Vietnam.” The “largest single focus of McCaffrey’s tour was to promote the work of Project RENEW, which aims to rid Vietnam of the 350,000 metric tons of unexploded ordnance.” The US government “recently awarded the project a $1 million grant, which McCaffrey hopes represents the beginning of regular funding for an effort which helps move Vietnam from its past.”
Vietnam Vet Interviewed By Volunteers Conducting Homeless Count. The Naples (FL) Daily News (1/29, Freeman) reports, “Thursday was the first day of the Collier County Hunger and Homeless Coalition’s annual ‘point in time’ homeless count,” which involves volunteers “going to soup kitchens, homeless shelters and labor pools to interview people who are homeless and at risk of being homeless.” One of those interviewed Thursday was 64-year-old Vietnam vet Thomas Brady, who “sleeps in his car and goes to the Veterans Administration clinic when he needs a doctor.”
6. Bond Hearing Delayed So Veteran Can Get PTSD Treatment. On its website, WGXA-TV Macon, GA (1/28, Smith) reported, “A bond hearing” for a veteran “accused of molesting two young girls” has been “delayed so the suspect can get treatment” for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) at a Veterans Affairs hospital.
7. Insanity Plea Postpones Iraq Vet’s Trial. The Madison-based Wisconsin State Journal (1/29, Treleven, 103K) reports, “A trial set to begin next month” for Iraq veteran Perry E. Lucas, who is “charged with shooting one man to death and wounding another,” was postponed Thursday after Lucas’ attorney entered an insanity plea for his client. The attorney did so “after reviewing a Veterans Administration medical report and discovering that it gave rise to the possibility that Lucas was not in control of his actions on the night of the shooting.”
8. Several Prominent World War II Vets Pass Away. The AP (1/29) reports, “Retired Air Force Lt. Colonel Lee A. Archer, a Tuskegee Airman considered to be the only black ace pilot who also broke racial barriers as an executive” at General Foods Corp., “died Wednesday in New York City. He was 90.” The AP adds, “The Tuskegee Airmen were America’s first black fighter pilot group in World War II.”
In an obituary, the Washington Post (1/29, Bernstein, 684K) notes the recent death of 91-year-old Frank G. MacMurray, “founding partner of Foxhall Internists, which became one of Washington’s most prominent medical practices.” MacMurray “served in the Army Air Forces during World War II. After the war, he completed…his residency at the Veterans Administration’s Mount Alto Hospital in Washington.”
The Chicago Tribune (1/29, McClellan, 534K) reports 102-year-old Luis Leal, “an internationally recognized scholar of Mexican, Chicano and Latin American literature who was one of the founders of the field of Chicano literary studies, has died.” Leal “was drafted into the Army during World War II and served in the Pacific.”
9. VA IG Criticizes Anchorage Office. The Anchorage Daily News (1/29, Shinohara) reports Federal inspectors from the Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General “have given the Anchorage Veterans Administration Regional Office a poor review for its handling of Alaska veterans’ disability claims, citing lack of quality control and a 29 percent error rate that in some cases resulted in veterans being underpaid, facing unnecessary delays in obtaining benefits, or being initially denied services they might be entitled to.”
10. Judge Approves Debt Case Agreement Between US Government, Vets. The Wall Street Journal (1/29, Schultz, 2.08M) reports a Federal judge gave preliminary approval Thursday to a settlement agreement that calls for the US government to repay $7.4 million to veterans whose tax refunds and benefits were improperly withheld. The case is one of the first class actions to challenge debt-collection practices by the US government.
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Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=12642
Posted by Veterans Today on Jan 29 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Top 10. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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It is alarming to NOT read something in this “Top 10 List”.
Veteranstoday has failed to realize, after the hundreds of articles contributed over the last few years, that LAND-GRAB of Veteran patient land by non-Veteran, non-profit and for-profit entities should rank in the top 3.
President Obama, VA Secretary Shinseki, all of the “Hill” and, subsequently, much of the public that has been dooped talks “Sacred Trust” today, but they have done absolutely nothing to expose this one issue that typifies its meaning the best.
There are several unique VA Health Care facilities across the nation, the “HOME” at VA, WLA, California, is one of them. These are unique because they were given, no one paid for them, for the specific purpose of healing and housing military Veteran patients. The March 2, 1887, Act of Congress that established the idea for the Pacific Branch of the Old Soldiers “HOME” in Los Angeles used terms like “….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”.
The Grant Deed of March 3, 1888, states, “to be permanently maintained as a National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.” You can’t make it any clearer than this as to who is supposed to enjoy this land. Sadly, today, the exclusive community of Brentwood, Los Angeles, has a rent-free 16 acre PUBLIC PARK lease in hand, endorsed by Senator Feinstein and Congressman Waxman and facilitated by L.A. County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavaky. Go figure.
This lease is only the tip of an iceberg that makes up many leases that violate the terms, conditions, spirit and intent of the Act and the Deed. This PUBLIC PARK lease is what made 80+ year old Veterans take to the gates of this facility and rally against “Land-grab” every Sunday for, now, over a year.
When asked about her endorsement of that PUBLIC PARK, Senator Feinstein turned to her staff person and stated that she was “embarrassed”. On two ocassions Congressman Waxman stated “where do you draw the line?”, and, “..if theres a little green space in it, I don’t mind”. His L.A. County Supervisor henchman (thinks he’s next in line for the Congressman’s seat) asked me directly, “..what are you going to do with THOSE 16 acres?” Neither of these elected representatives has, or can afford to have, a clue as to the definition of “Sacred Trust” because if they went against the desire of their major contributors (Brentwood) they would lose votes. Follow the money.
READERS OF VETERANSTODAY, Veterans did not make up the specific words of the Act and the Deed. Veteran advocates did not place them into law or legal document. This was the formal written expression of the SACRED TRUST that existed then, WHAT CAUSED THIS SOCIETY TO ABANDON THAT SENTIMENT, to marginalize it? Apathy? Self content? Belief that a network of “good old boys” would protect it?
All of the hollow statements made by Senator Feinstein, Congressman Waxman, local politicians and, worst of all, the “Carpet Bag” bureaucrats, especially the Asset Manager at VA, WLA, a man who acts more like a real estate broker instead of being the responsible steward of the gift-land, do not mean anything to Veteran advocates who know the years of dark history and dirty secrets behind this.
The PRESIDENT and the VA SECRETARY had better READ THIS and start to INVESTIGATE, walk the talk of the 1800’s, because Veteran advocates, by God, are already raising holy hell about the this sharade and will take no prisoners.
COINCIDENTLY, 2 weeks ago, the Department Commander of one of the biggest VSO’s in California stepped up and, in an impromptu meeting, did the right thing. He questioned the WLA Asset Manager about Land-grab. Meanwhile, within this time frame, one of the non-Veteran leasees, an entertainment group that controls the only theaters and the “Grand Lawn” on the facility, is rumored to have filed a $240M law suit against the VA for not delivering on the lease (Veteran advocates pat yourselves on the back).
Readers stay tuned for news about all non-Veteran leasees at this facility jumping on that lawsuit bandwagon. Then, the VA will have to “negotiate” away Veteran funds and resources, intended for the “Sacred Trust”, and, you guessed it, Veteran patients, today’s and tomorrow’s, will become the collateral in this battle.
At the end of the day, all of the “10 MOST IMPORTANT VETERAN ISSUES” that are listed here can’t amount to much if you don’t SAVE THE LAND resources to adequately provide the quality service that will address ALL of the ailments of ALL of the Veteran patients. Veteran patients live longer today, are more homeless today, have gender specific challenges within the system today, have wounds that are signature to their campaign today and are best treated when their conditions become chronic. This boondoggle is run by a system that continually pats itself on the back while having (a) the sorry history of back-log claims, (b) lip service to VSO’s and exclusion to Veteran advocate concerns, (c) no wellness program that keeps healthy Veterans healthy longer, and, (d) service that best serves the chronic, near dead, Veteran patient, apparently because we provide good test for student doctors. For those of us who remember Senator Alan Cranston, he had it right. We must demand expansion the spirit of the Cranston Act to protect every “HOME” across the nation, not just from commercialism, which is where Feinstein and Waxman hang their hats, but from the manipulative non-Veteran non-profits. If they are not stopped this year, if they are allowed to get away with this at the “biggest and the busiest”, they will be in your back yard before you know it and you won’t be able to do squat about it.
By the way, that Asset Manager told the Department Commander that things will change to what it was intended to be, just give him “two months”. Yeah, Right! He should have said “two weeks”!
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