Thursday, July 29, 2010

Returning veterans deserve better



There are a lot of articles I read over the course of the day. Sometimes they get me angry and sometimes they offer hope. Most of the time, they remind me of what we went through when no one was talking about PTSD and reporters considered any reports about the fate of our veterans to be nothing more than "sour grapes" as they proceeded to hang up the phone.

When I married my husband in 1984, I knew Vietnam had taken hold of him but at the time no one was warning PTSD would get worse without treatment. We just assumed it was as bad as it would ever be. Now we know a lot more. You have to understand that it was not until the late 70's the term Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was being used by the mental health community and not until the 80's the VA used it. There really wasn't much known back then.

Nine years later, I felt as if I had entered into a world I had not known existed. A world where veterans are denied the medical care they needed to heal from combat. My Dad was 100% disabled Korean War vet. He was well taken care of so I assumed all veterans needing care got it. I realized how wrong I was when my husband's PTSD got worse. I was finally able to convince him to go to the VA for help but it was a six year battle to have his claim approved and his care covered by the VA. It was six years of hell trying to keep him alive, going for help at the same time I had to fight the VA because he had given up.

What was the problem? A wrong number typed in on a Bronze Star Award. The doctors tested him, diagnosed him with PTSD tied to Vietnam, just as a civilian doctor had done in 1990. None of that mattered because of the error on the award. We had all the documentation and since I knew first hand how veterans were treated, what they went through when claims were denied, I contacted a lot of local reporters but was told it was nothing more than "sour grapes" because his claim was denied. Had they bothered to even take a look at the documentation we had, they would know it was the truth and if it happened to my husband, it was happening to a lot of veterans, but they didn't bother. Long story short, I ended up talking to a General and he has his assistant track down the facts to have the award corrected. The VA soon after approved his claim.

Reading the following I can tell you that things have not changed that much when it comes to filling out claims and having the paperwork to back up the claim. What I find very hopeful in all of this is the fact so many reporters are willing to look at the facts and understand there is a problem in this country when disabled veterans are left to fend for themselves. After reading this I am very sad because of the memories it stirred up because I know when we read about claims denied, care delayed or another veteran falling thru the cracks, there are far too many more we will never hear about.

We can all agree they deserve the best care possible but no one can agree on how we get there from here. At least we're closer than ever before so take some comfort in that and keep fighting to make sure our veterans are all taken care of.




Editorial: Returning veterans deserve better
GateHouse News Service
Posted Jul 28, 2010 @ 12:56 PM
The story of Marine Staff Sgt. Curtis Long, who survived a bomb blast while serving in western Iraq in 2007, should remind us all of the toll the concurrent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are taking on our servicemen and women.

Long, 26, was riding in a mine-resistant truck when a 300-pound bomb went off, sending the truck flying 30 feet into the air. The blast knocked Long unconscious for five minutes.

After he returned from Iraq, Long was angry, emotionally distant from his family and numb, according to his wife, Ginny. He has since begun treatment for severe post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

Long is far from alone in being treated for post-traumatic stress disorder. According to the Veterans Administration, more than 400,000 veterans are receiving benefits for the disorder, including 19,000 women. The Houston Chronicle reports that 20 percent of the 2 million soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001 suffer from PTSD.

On July 13, the VA changes its rules and no longer required documented proof of events that might have caused the disorder and is encouraging veterans who had been denied benefits to apply again. Before that time, the VA made these men and women jump through hoops while seeking help. In one case, recounted in the Washington Post, the PTSD claim of an Air Force veteran was denied because of a spelling mistake on his forms.
click link for more

National Guardsman foreclosured on while in Iraq gets home back

Frisco soldier who lost home to foreclosure while in Iraq gets it back

07:21 AM CDT on Thursday, July 29, 2010
By VALERIE WIGGLESWORTH and ERINN CONNOR / The Dallas Morning News

The Frisco soldier and his family who lost their home to foreclosure while he was serving in Iraq will get the house back.

Army National Guard Capt. Michael Clauer and his wife, May, lost their $315,000 southwest Frisco home in May 2008 after falling behind on Heritage Lakes Homeowners Association dues.


The Clauers sued the association and subsequent buyers in federal court. A court-ordered settlement conference led to an agreement this week that gives the house back to the Clauers.
read more here
Frisco soldier who lost home to foreclosure

Leaked military documents show search for soldier missing since 2009

Documents detail search for captive Idaho soldier
(AP)

BOISE, Idaho — Leaked military documents on the war in Afghanistan appear to provide details of the U.S. Army's search for an Idaho soldier captured last year by the Taliban.

Bowe Bergdahl, from Hailey, has been a captive since June 30, 2009.
read more here
Documents detail search for captive Idaho soldier

Undercover drug operation leaves one officer dead and two wounded

Phoenix shootout leaves 1 officer, 2 suspects dead
A shooting during an undercover drug operation in Phoenix has left three people dead, including one police officer and two suspects, authorities said.

The Associated Press

PHOENIX
A shooting during an undercover drug operation in Phoenix has left three people dead, including one police officer and two suspects, authorities said.

Two other officers were wounded in the gunbattle Wednesday night, with one in critical condition at a Phoenix hospital and the other in stable condition.
read more here
Phoenix shootout leaves 1 officer 2 suspects dead

Off-duty Marine accused of throwing kitten at wall

I removed his name for one simple reason. There has to be a back story on this and my hunch is, he very well could be dealing with PTSD, or at the very least, anger issues associated with combat. You can't just assume a Marine willing to die for this country, would suddenly find it ok to hurt a kitten. If I find a back story on this, I'll post it as soon as I do.

Off-duty Marine accused of throwing kitten at wall
July 28, 2010 4:28 pm
A Marine sergeant is set to be arraigned Thursday in San Diego County Superior Court on a felony charge of animal abuse for allegedly hurling a kitten at a wall, authorities said.

(the Marine) 27, is assigned to administrative duties at the Marine Corps' San Diego boot camp. The kitten was badly injured, but survived after extensive medical treatment, officials said.
read more here
Off-duty Marine accused of throwing kitten at wall

Family of victims sues over Marine jet crash in SD

Family of victims sues over Marine jet crash in SD
(AP)

SAN DIEGO — The family of four people killed in the crash of a Marine Corps jet in a San Diego County neighborhood two years ago sued the federal government and Boeing Wednesday.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court by Dong Yun Yoon, whose wife, two daughters and mother-in-law were killed in the December 2008 crash that incinerated two homes and damaged others in University City.

The suit accuses the military and Boeing, the aircraft's maker, of negligence and seeks unspecified damages.

The military disciplined 13 members of the Marines and Navy after the crash, which was blamed on mechanical problems and a string of bad decisions that led the pilot to bypass a potentially safe landing at Naval Air Station North Island in Coronado.

The suit claims the F-18 Hornet had "a history of warnings and system failures" related to its fuel system and never should have been cleared for takeoff.
read more here
Family of victims sues over Marine jet crash in SD

Wounded Marine from Cottonwood honored by Congress

Wounded Marine from Cottonwood honored by Congress

By KLEW Web Staff Story Published: Jul 28, 2010 at 10:46 PM PDT

Story Updated: Jul 28, 2010 at 10:46 PM PDT

WASHINGTON D.C. - A severely wounded Marine from Cottonwood received a standing ovation on the floor of the House of Representatives Monday.


23-year-old Lance Corporal Randal Wright was in D.C. receiving treatment at Walter Reed Hospital for injuries suffered from an IED blast in Afghanistan. He lost both legs and a hand.
read more here
Wounded Marine from Cottonwood honored by Congress

For a video of this go here
Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Idaho Soldier Gets Standing Ovation in Congress

Editors note

This link has errors in the story.
Lance Corporal Randal Wright is listed as "Lt. Cpl." and it says he lost his arm instead of his hand.

Lt. Cpl. Randal Wright is receiving treatment at Walter Reed Hospital for injuries suffered due to an IED blast in Afghanistan where he lost both legs and an arm.

The video is very good anyway.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Fort Bragg has almost 2,000 surviving spouses, parents and children

Bragg: More being done to aid spouses of fallen

The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jul 28, 2010 15:54:15 EDT

Fort Bragg has almost 2,000 surviving spouses, parents and children in its database, and formed Fort Bragg Survivor Outreach Services to help widows find a community where they feel comfortable.



FORT BRAGG, N.C. — The Army has drastically increased its outreach and support for surviving spouses since the start of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the post commander said.

Lt. Gen. Frank Helmick, commander of the 18th Airborne Corps and Fort Bragg, told reporters Wednesday that he still remembers the first time he served as a casualty assistance officer in 1994. One of his men was killed in a training accident in Italy, and officials didn’t know how long the surviving spouse’s benefits would last or how long they could stay in military housing.

That has changed with the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Since 2001, the military has drastically increased benefits and allow widows to keep military housing for one year and health care for three years. They also receive almost $500,000 in benefits.
read more here
More being done to aid spouses of fallen

Wonder if any of these families went through this kind of "help" when they needed it?

Fallen soldiers' families ripped off by Prudential Financial?
VCS in the News: Fallen Soldiers' Families Denied Cash as Insurance Companies ProfitWritten by David EvansWednesday, 28 July 2010 09:52Top VA Officials Unaware of Scam; VCS Blasts "Secret Profits" for Prudential and MetLife

Searching for answers in death of Spc. Jonathan Hughey

Searching for answers after a soldier's suicide
By Megan McCloskey
Stars and Stripes
Published: July 27, 2010


PHOENIX — On the first day of 2010, Jeanette Baker sat down at the kitchen table to eat a late breakfast of takeout from Filiberto’s Mexican restaurant. Her family, sleepy and still recovering from New Year’s Eve festivities, recounted the highlights of what she missed after she went to bed.

Jeanette assumed her youngest, 23-year-old Spc. Jonathan Hughey, who was home on leave from Fort Hood, Texas, was at his girlfriend’s house. Why else wouldn’t he be bouncing around the kitchen? He was always the first one awake.

Oh, he’s here, her daughter said, describing how Jonathan’s boisterous teasing of his girlfriend had driven her home in a huff.

“That little butthead,” Jeanette said. “I’m going to go in there and tell him off.”

She walked back to Jonathan’s room, the same bedroom he had as a child, opening the door as she knocked. The light was on, and Jonathan was lying on the floor on his back, the way he slept when he got home from basic training.

She sighed and shook her head at what looked like spilled Kool-Aid on the floor.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

Jonathan didn’t move.


On the first day of 2010, Gen. Robert Cone, the commander of Fort Hood, paused to reflect on the base’s recent dip in suicides, wondering what he and his senior leaders were doing right. The numbers showed real progress: After 14 suicides in 2008 and 10 through August 2009, in the last four months of the year there had been only one.

Then word came that Spc. Jonathan Hughey had shot himself in the head.

read more here

Searching for answers after a soldier suicide

Viet Nam Warbird gets new life from Lakeside company

Viet Nam Warbird gets new life from Lakeside company
By: Mike Leiby, The Independent
07/27/2010


SHOW LOW - A lot of Viet Nam veterans will never forget the pounding, deep, "thwop, thwop, thwop" of a Huey's blades overhead or the fact that for some of them it was the sound of salvation, the sound that let them know help was on the way in what was at times their darkest hour.

That memory lives on in Larry Clark and his part of the two-year restoration of the now one and only operational U.S. Navy Seawolves Huey which actually served with both the U.S. Navy and Army in Viet Nam, as did Clark in the Army when he was 20 years old. He is also a member of The Viet Nam Helicopter Pilots Association.
read more here
Viet Nam Warbird gets new life from Lakeside company


Not all Vietnam Veterans ended up with PTSD, but many, far too many did. When they came home, there was nothing for them. We talk about helping the veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, some even talk about taking care of the Gulf War veterans. While all of them do deserve to be taken care of, for the Vietnam Vets, the help they waited for, fought for to make sure all generations were taken care of, still has not shown up for them.