Thursday, July 29, 2010.

Top 10 Veterans News From Around the Country

February 11, 2010 posted by Bob Higgins · 3 Comments 

Find out What’s Inside Today’s Local News for Veterans

  1. Murtha To Be Buried Near His Home.
  2. Rieckhoff: VA’s Disability System Needs To Be Reformed.
  3. Surviving Spouses Continue To Try To End “Widows’ Tax.”
  4. VA Sets “Strict Guidelines” For Veterans Contracting Program.
  5. Wilson Remembered For Work In Afghanistan, Efforts To Help Vets.
  6. Vietnam Veterans Moving Wall Headed To Batavia VA This Summer.
  7. Artwork Part Of National Salute To Hospitalized Veterans Week In Indiana.
  8. Authors Tout Importance Of Anxiety Disorder Study Co-Funded By VAPAHCS.
  9. Committee Recommends Restoring Funding Cuts For Veterans Services In Kansas.
  10. Proposed Legislation In California Focuses On Court Trials For Mentally Ill Veterans.

1.      Surviving Spouses Continue To Try To End “Widows’ Tax.” The AP (2/11, Hefling) reports, “For a decade, war widows in matching yellow suit jackets and hats quietly and persistently have knocked on Capitol Hill doors seeking an end to the ‘widows’ tax,’” a “law that won’t allow surviving spouses to receive the retirement pay due them when their spouse died from a cause related to military service, and at the same time collect the full annuity – essentially an insurance policy most of their spouses opted to buy.” But even though there have been “pledges of help from scores of federal officials – including President Barack Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – their long quest remains unfulfilled.” Vivianne Wersel, chairwoman of the Government Relations Committee at Gold Star Wives of America, “said her group is pleased that so far this year they have enlisted more than 300 co-sponsors for their legislation in the House and more than 50 in the Senate, but they are still not confident that means Congress will pass it.”

2.      Artwork Part Of National Salute To Hospitalized Veterans Week In Indiana. In continuing coverage, the Fort Wayne (IN) Daily News (2/11) reports, “It’s been said a picture is worth a thousand words. If that’s so, then thousands of unspoken words will be contributing to the comfort of patients” this week at the Veterans Affairs hospitals in Fort Wayne and Marion, where artwork by faculty, students, and alumni from Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne will be displayed. After noting that one of the students “has often expressed to her colleagues at IPFW how well her family has been cared” for by the VA since her husband died while serving in Afghanistan, the Daily News says the artwork project “is part of the National Salute to Hospitalized Veterans Week activities.”

3. Wilson Remembered For Work In Afghanistan, Efforts To Help Vets. The AP (2/11, Stengle) reports 76-year-old Charlie Wilson, the “former congressman from Texas whose funding of Afghanistan’s resistance to the Soviet Union was chronicled in the movie and book ‘Charlie Wilson’s War,’ died Wednesday.” After noting that Memorial Medical Center-Lufkin spokeswoman Yana Ogletree said the preliminary cause of death was cardiopulmonary arrest, the AP says US Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) “called Wilson ‘a lifetime public servant with a fiery passion for the people of east Texas, our men and women in uniform, our veterans and our freedoms.’”
The Washington Post (2/11, Langer, Shapiro, 684K) points out that Wilson was a Navy veteran, as does the CNN (2/11) website. USA Today (2/11, Kiely, 2.11M), meanwhile, says in Wilson’s “view, his biggest achievements as a member of Congress were local,” including the “creation of a veterans hospital in Lufkin,” a point that was also made in a story aired by Fox News Channel’s Special Report (2/10, 6:10 p.m. ET), and by reports in McClatchy (2/11, Batheja), as well as the websites for KLTV-TV Tyler, TX (2/10, Hemness) and KTRE-TV Lufkin, TX (2/10). KTRE, which also noted that the “Lufkin VA clinic was renamed after Wilson in 2005,” quoted Dr. Anthony Zollo, the clinic’s director, who said in a press release that VA “is a richer organization because of…Wilson.” The Houston Chronicle (2/11, 427K) runs the same quote.

4.      Murtha To Be Buried Near His Home. In continuing coverage, The Hill (2/11, Tiron, 21K) reports 77-year-old US Rep. John Murtha (D-PA) “will be buried in his district” Tuesday, “not far from his home in Johnstown, Pa.” Murtha, the “first Vietnam War veteran to be elected to Congress,” had been “eligible for burial” at Arlington National Cemetery but his family decided against that, according to Matthew Mazonkey, the lawmaker’s spokesman.

5.      Vietnam Veterans Moving Wall Headed To Batavia VA This Summer. The Batavia (NY) Daily News (2/10, Baker, 13K) reports, “Those who served and are serving the nation will be honored in a special way this summer” at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Batavia. Plans are “‘under way for bringing the Vietnam Veterans Moving Wall to the Batavia VA grounds June 24-28,’ said Royce Calhoun, assistant medical center director, VA Western New York Healthcare System.” The wall is a “half-sized replica of the actual Vietnam War Memorial Wall” in Washington, DC.

6.      VA Sets “Strict Guidelines” For Veterans Contracting Program. In continuing coverage, Government Executive (2/10, Brodsky) reports, “The Veterans Affairs Department has set strict guidelines for bidding on contracts set-aside for veteran-owned small businesses. Entrepreneurs will be allowed only one company at a time in the contracting program and must work full time in the business, according to a final rule published on Monday in the Federal Register.” Government Executive adds that while the “rule is final, VA is accepting comments on the owner-involvement change through March 10.” A similar story appeared as the last item in the “Federal Eye” blog for the Washington Post (2/10, O’Keefe, 684K).

7.      Committee Recommends Restoring Funding Cuts For Veterans Services In Kansas. The Marysville (KS) Advocate (2/10, Ranney) reported, “Budget cuts have taken a toll” on services provided to veterans in Kansas, as was told to the state’s House Social Services Budget Committee on Monday. The committee “later voted to recommend that the full House Budget Committee restore the funding cuts.”

8.      Proposed Legislation In California Focuses On Court Trials For Mentally Ill Veterans. The Los Altos (CA) Town Crier (2/10, Burr) noted that “Los Altos resident Duncan MacVicar, a veteran,” has written “legislation to facilitate military veterans’ receiving a proper trial in…cases” involving mentally ill veterans. Current law in California “authorizes judges to sentence mentally ill veterans to a treatment process instead of jail if found guilty of a crime, but only in the case of misdemeanors. MacVicar’s proposed amendments, currently under discussion in the state Senate,” would, among other things, “permit a veteran to submit a psychiatrist’s formal evaluation to prove his or her mental condition(s).”

9.      Rieckhoff: VA’s Disability System Needs To Be Reformed. In an op-ed for Minnesota Public Radio (2/10) Paul Rieckhoff, the executive director and founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, said “nearly 425,000…injured veterans” are “stuck waiting” for their disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs. And “just recently,” according to Rieckhoff, “we heard from VA Secretary Eric Shinseki that the wait time is likely to rise until 2013.” Rieckhoff argues that “we need all Americans” to “support our veterans fighting for disability reform” at the VA, as his organization will do this week during its “annual Storm the Hill campaign.”

10.    Authors Tout Importance Of Anxiety Disorder Study Co-Funded By VAPAHCS. Science Daily (2/11) reports, “People with generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD, have abnormalities in the way their brain unconsciously controls emotions. That’s the conclusion of a new Stanford University School of Medicine study, and the study authors say the findings could open up new avenues for treatments and change our understanding of how emotion is regulated in everyday life.” The study, “published online in this month’s American Journal of Psychiatry,” was funded by the National Institutes of Health “and the residency-research program of the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System.”

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Comments

3 Responses to “Top 10 Veterans News From Around the Country”
  1. Good article, thanks!

  2. Craig&Crystal says:

    Your top 10 hit home for my family, specially the Court System for mentally ill Veterans. Mental Illness manifests itself in many ways. Here is one example of a previously law abiding system and a Federal Judge, Federal Prosecutor, and the reckless police work leading to a 46 months stay for a “sex offense”…bit is it really? When cops cruise adult chat-rooms initiating contact, and in the case of mentally ill people…entrap…..

    I am writing on behalf of my Husband, an honorably discharged Vet who served with distinction for over 25 years, before he fell ill to his undiagnosed Bipolar Disorder, Adjustment Disorder, OCD, and severe Depression and anxiety. He has a host of service connected physical issues as well, which according to his Dr, contributed to his implosion. He is currently considered disabled by the VA due to his service connected disabilities.

    The Dr who wrote his pre-sentencing report emphatically stated, after extensive testing, that this was a one time crime. He did not fit any of the of the categories for predators, the police hounded him, during hours of conversations until his poor impulse control and lack of decision making were enough to make him submit. They initiated and entrapped him.

    The poor representation of his attorney was emphasized by his opening statement “judge, your probably going to laugh at what we are going to propose”. In addition to his failure to emphasize the actions were a direct result of his service connected disabilities (Bipolar NOS, GAD, Severe Depression).

    46 months in a Federal Prison, given his host of physical and mental issues, all documented by the VA, seems cruel and unusual.

    Please read the whole e-mail if you can as I do not know where to turn. If you are unable to help, could you please refer us to someone that may be able to?

    This is a matter in which my husband of 9 years, who after serving in the Recruiting command, for 14 years (high stress) who is a great father and husband, with no criminal history, committed a “sex offense”. He had what is called a manic episode after being under tremendous stress, and being awake for 3 days. From what I have read, this type of behavior, or many types of weird behavior, are often a result of an undiagnosed or diagnosed mental health issue?

    He was caught up in an internet sting. He after repeated requests to meet, over hours of chatting in an ADULT chat-room, despite repeated requests from police to send graphic pictures (he did not) drove to meet a well developed (they sent a picture) but never stopped, never exited his car, and was leaving when arrested. Subsequently he was jailed, and due to a well publicized rift with state prosecutors, his charge went Federal.

    We also believe they used his position in the Military (he was AGR in the recruiting command with the Utah Army National Guard) for publicity. Sir, i Have known this man for over 10 years and have seen the slow course to implosion.

    He denied his depression and began to self medicate (drinking). His family and close friends saw a huge change in him. He was depressed, anxious, irritable, had huge mood swings, and could not turn his mind off and could not sleep for days. If we would have recognized the symptoms of the Bipolar Disorder, we would have intervened. He was getting promoted to E-8 and refused to seek mental health help for fear his career would be over, which ultimately it was anyway.

    He of course, has been disgraced, lost his career, retirement, home (bankruptcy) reputation, and most of his friends. The local media (Utah) is extremely biased, and loves a juicy story about “supposed” threat to the children. He in fact recruited for 14 years in and around high school students, coached at the middle school level, and substituted at the elementary, middle, and high school levels for years without one single mention of impropriety.

    What happened to due process? When a man who is supposedly “innocent until proven guilty” has his face and name splashed across the news and internet for days…how could he expect to receive a fair and unbiased trial? The police, despite him being innocent until proven guilty, and fabricating and coercing answers from him, despite his repeatedly telling them he was up for 3 days, under a tremendous amount of stress, coerced answers, lead him into answers, and publicly humiliated him, all before he was found guilty of anything.

    As a side note, there have been numerous educators, and Police Officers that have actually had sex with minors, yet received far, far less punishment. What happened to fair and equal punishment? This was part of an internet sting. He did break the law, but as his Psychologists mentioned in his official evaluations, given his poor judgment and lack of impulse control during a manic episode, he succumbed to repeated requests by the officers to meet. He did not however, despite repeated requests by the officers, posing as a minor, send any pictures of himself or his genitals. There was nothing in the police transcripts to indicate he was masturbating. In addition his computers were seized, but later returned as there was no evidentiary value on them.

    He has been evaluated extensively and has taken a detailed sex inventory with no remarkable results. The psychologist stated that he shows no signs of the several pedophile tendencies. The evaluation essentially states that due to his long lasting,extremely high-level of occupational, marital, physical stresses, he imploded.

    Yet another reason I am writing you in particular is that, unfortunately after the fact, was diagnosed with the following severe mental Illnesses: Chronic Adjustment Disorder Bipolar NOS Chronic Pain Disorder with both a general medical condition and phsyclogical factors GAD He has also been diagnosed with several severe physical issues as well.

    I was amazed when the Federal Judge, during his sentencing actually asked “how could being Bipolar make you commit a crime”? I am shocked, that Federal Judge, with all the evaluations in front of him, outlining his severe mental and physical issues, could ask such a question? Even without the evaluations, just being in that position for 15 plus years would surely mean he has come across such a disorder before? The Judge, sentenced him to 46 months. This is insane? A crime with no victim? 46 months? And we wonder, if a recent supreme court decision concerning VET’s may help?

    http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-10537.pdf

    This is clearly yet another case of the continuing criminalization of mentally ill Veterans if I have ever heard of one????

  3. The War Widows
    Wheat Ridge Colorado
    mmurphy@veteranschamberofcommerce.org

    What an example of John l4:12 “Because you believe in Me greater works will you do than I for I go to My Father” healingg the Hebrews 6:6 “We crucify Christ afresh and put Christ to an open shame”;i.e., the Demons of War being exposed finally in such depth
    Chaplain Mary Murphy

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