Monday, July 23, 2012

Political Shenanigans Target Veterans

Political Shenanigans Target Veterans in Texas and Florida
by Chaplain Kathie
Wounded Times Blog
July 23, 2012

When you hear a politician say they are taking care of your money, hold onto your wallet, because sooner or later they'll be behind your back taking what you have away.

Lately Republicans seem to only be talking about the deficit, which sounds like a good thing to focus on until you actually think about what they're talking about. When they say they don't want to pass the debt onto our kids and grandkids, you should be asking about the last ten years and worry about today because this is all a game. (Democrats do it too but not as much.)

Every state has their own VA Budget but it seems politicians like to forget that part so they can complain about the federal end as they lay off workers, lengthen the line of veterans waiting to get medical care and have their claims processed. Why? So they can go behind our backs, cut the state budget and point their fingers at Washington so we can blame them and re-elect the guys that actually did it just because they pretended to care.

Governor Signs 2011-2012 Veterans’ Affairs Budget
TALLAHASSEE – Gov. Rick Scott signed the 2011-12 state budget during ceremonies in The Villages May 26. The $69.1 billion budget includes more than $88.6 million for the Florida Department of Veterans’ Affairs (FDVA).
“Florida, with its more than 1.6 million veterans, has earned a reputation as one of the most veteran-friendly states in the nation,” said Steve Murray, FDVA Communications Director. “This was primarily a continuation budget aimed at providing a high level of service for our veterans, their families and survivors.”


Florida and Texas are about equal on how many veterans live in their states. This is what Florida did to them saving money.

$4.6 billion in federal stimulus money stays unspent in Florida
May 23, 2011
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
More than two years after the controversial federal-stimulus program began, Florida has yet to spend more than $4.6 billion of its stimulus money, even as the state starts seeing new layoffs of teachers and others paid with stimulus money the past two years.

Of $11 billion awarded to Florida for programs that were supposed to generate jobs, federal reports show that, as of March 31, 42 cents of every dollar still was unspent.


This is what Texas did.

In Texas, Republican Governor and Legislators
Slash Help for Veterans
Written by Jeremy Schwatrz Saturday, 26 March 2011
Texas Veterans Commission Faces 20% Budget Cut
State agency helps increasing numbers of veterans obtain needed VA disability benefits.
Austin, Texas
(Austin American-Statesman)

As it braces for an influx of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Texas Veterans Commission, with help from a variety of veterans groups, is trying to fend off a 20 percent cut to its budget.

Legislators, grappling with a projected $23 billion budget shortfall, are considering reducing the agency's budget by as much as $2.8 million over the next two years, a move that would mean cutting 22 of its 100 claims counselors as well as other administrative positions.

Agency officials say those counselors play vital roles in helping the state's 1.8 million veterans navigate the labyrinthine Department of Veterans Affairs claims system, helping them win disability benefits they might not otherwise be able to get.


This is part of what the VA budget for Texas looks like on paper but you'll never notice the suffering veterans unless you read what has been really happening.

Texas VA Budget
Ensure Veterans, Their Dependents and Survivors Receive All Due Benefits
Ensure Veterans Receive Claims, Employment, and Education Benefits
CLAIMS REPRESENTATION AND COUNSELING
2010 $4,758,062
2011 $4,578,375
2012 $4,682,813
VETERANS EMPLOYMENT SERVICES
2010 $9,349,238
2011 $8,967,666
2012 $8,846,814
VETERANS EDUCATION
2010 $1,061,007
2011 $1,029,761
2012 $1,066,610
VETERANS ASSISTANCE GRANTS
2010 $2,739,832
2011 $11,929,833
2012 $12,623,097
OUTREACH AND MARKETING
2010 $551,732
2011 $488,010
2012 $523,280
Transition Assistance Program
2008 $295,000
2009 $241,394
2010 $218,901
2011 $219,212
2012 $210,079
Local Vets Empl Rep Prog
2008 $6,316,000
2009 $6,272,178
2010 $5,321,832
2011 $4,868,296
2012 $5,290,809


And that all leads to this.

Recent cuts at hospital infuriate VA council
By Zeke MacCormack
July 22, 2012

KERRVILLE — Opponents of service reductions at the Department of Veterans Affairs' facility here say it's a hospital in name only following the most recent cuts dictated by agency officials in San Antonio.

“We have no hospital beds as of July 2. Basically, what we have now is a nursing home and six clinics,” said Walter Schellhase, president of the Hill Country Veterans Council, which was formed two decades ago to safeguard services at the facility.

Besides closing the 20-bed acute care unit at the Kerrville VA Medical Center this month, the urgent care clinic's hours went from around-the-clock to weekdays only and after-hours lab and X-ray services were eliminated, he said.

The changes were sought by Marie Weldon, director of the South Texas Veterans Health Care System, who declined to be interviewed but provided written answers to some questions.

A proposal by Weldon to replace acute care beds with a short-term stay-services unit still was awaiting action last week by Robert A. Petzel, VA undersecretary for health, said William McLemore, spokesman for the VA's Heart of Texas Network, which covers most of the state and oversees the South Texas system.

McLemore said he thought inpatient care services still were available in Kerrville, noting, “You cannot close beds or change that acute care service without the undersecretary's approval.”

But an admissions clerk there Friday corroborated Schellhase's report that the only remaining in-patient care is in the 154-bed nursing home. “We don't have inpatient medical care any more,” the clerk said.

Vesta Cowen, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 2281, also confirmed the acute care unit's closure, saying, “We have stopped admitting acutely ill patients, except to long-term care.”

Her union's members fear that cuts eventually will result in the facility, which treated about 11,000 veterans last year, being shuttered.
Read more


State veterans commission facing 20% budget cut
Agency helps increasing numbers of vets get needed disability benefits.
By Jeremy Schwartz
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Published: 7:08 p.m. Saturday, March 26, 2011

As it braces for an influx of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Texas Veterans Commission, with help from a variety of veterans groups, is trying to fend off a 20 percent cut to its budget.

Legislators, grappling with a projected

$23 billion budget shortfall, are considering reducing the agency's budget by as much as $2.8 million over the next two years, a move that would mean cutting 22 of its 100 claims counselors as well as other administrative positions.

Last week, the Texas House voted to restore $800,000 to the agency's claims program, which would reduce counselor losses from 22 to about 13, officials said. The House also voted to provide $159,000 for a new women's veterans coordinator position but maintained about $2 million in cuts to claims and other departments. The Senate is set to tackle the agency's budget soon, and agency officials are hoping to persuade senators to restore more than the House did.

read more here


Now that you've read this, you may find this very interesting that this happened.
Perry and the Stimulus: It's Complicated
by Ross Ramsey
August 17, 2011
Gov. Rick Perry speaks at the Iowa State Fair during a campaign stop on Aug. 14, 2011.

As Gov. Rick Perry has launched his presidential campaign, he’s turned to a talking point familiar to anyone who has heard him rail against the federal government over the last two years: the perfidy of the roughly $800 billion stimulus plan orchestrated by the Obama administration in 2009.

“Washington’s insatiable desire to spend our children’s inheritance on failed ‘stimulus’ plans and other misguided economic theories have given us record debt and left us with far too many unemployed,” Perry said in his announcement speech in South Carolina on Saturday.

In his 2010 book, Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America From Washington, Perry wrote this: "We are fed up with bailout after bailout and stimulus plan after stimulus plan, each one of which tosses principle out the window along with taxpayer money."

But the reality of Perry's relationship with fed-stim is complicated. Through the second quarter of this year, Texas has used $17.4 billion in federal stimulus money — including $8 billion of the one-time dollars to fund state expenses that recur over and over. In fact, Texas used the federal stimulus to balance its last two budgets.

It is true, as presidential candidate Perry says, that the state turned down some of the money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 because it had strings attached. Texas didn't apply for education grants that came with conditions, and the governor famously refused $556 million in federal stimulus funds for the state's unemployment insurance program, saying the conditions that came along with the cash would increase the long-term costs of the program.


All states do not treat this nation's veterans the same so how does your state stack up? Here's a list of states with the most veterans. Look up what your state budget has been and then compare them to other states.
In his budget proposal for fiscal year 2009, President George W. Bush requested $38.7 billion - or 86.5% of the total Veterans Affairs budget - for veteran medical care alone.

In the 2011 Costs of War report from Brown University, researchers projected that the cost of caring for veterans of the War on Terror would peak 30–40 years after the end of combat operations. They also predicted that medical and disability costs would ultimately total between $600 billion and $1 trillion for the hundreds of thousands treated by the Department of Veterans Affairs.




States with largest veterans populations
Published: July 17, 2012
LARGEST VETERAN POPULATIONS
1. California: 1,972,000
2. Texas: 1,694,000
3. Florida: 1,651,000
4. Pennsylvania: 964,000
5. New York: 950,000
6. Ohio: 890,000
7. Illinois: 783,000
8. Georgia: 774,000
9. North Carolina: 766,000
10. Michigan: 704,000
Source: U.S. Statistical Abstract, 2010 Census

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Rebel Rider Magazine 2nd anniversary

We drove out to Leesburg today to help Rebel Rider Magazine to celebrate 2 years of covering local motorcycle events.

Fort Lee Army Officer dies at shooting range

UPDATE Gun range owner says Army Reserve Officer prayed before pulling trigger

Shooting range victim identified as Fort Lee soldier
By: MARK BOWES
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Published: July 21, 2012

COLONIAL HEIGHTS, Va.

A customer of a Colonial Heights shooting range who died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound Wednesday has been identified as an Army officer stationed at Fort Lee.

Fort Lee officials said 2nd Lt. James R. Cho, 26, whose home of record was listed as LaGrange, Ill., was an Army Reserve officer who entered service in January 2011. He was attending the Quartermaster Basic Officer Leader Course and assigned to Bravo Company, 71st Transportation Battalion, U.S. Army Logistics University, since June.
read more here

Patriot Guard Riders and community show support and block hate group

'Red wall' of supporters comforts fallen soldier's family
By JANESE SILVEY
Published July 21, 2012
Thousands of people in red shirts joined members of the Patriot Guard yesterday to show their support for a local soldier killed in action.

The so-called human wall began as a way to shield Sterling Wyatt's family from negative messages. By the time the funeral started at 1 p.m., though, few in the crowd even realized that a small group tied to Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan., had been in the area.

Wyatt, 21, was killed by an improvised explosive device while serving in Afghanistan on July 11. Tori Smith, an acquaintance, heard about Westboro's plans to picket the funeral and organized what she thought would be a small gathering to show support for the Wyatt family.
read more here

Resilience training still stupid after all these years

When Col. Castro came out and said the troops should be treated as if this type of PTSD is the same as all others, I had some hope they would finally admit this is a failure but as with so many other things the military does, they are planning on doing more of it. Get ready for more military suicides and attempted suicides the DOD and the VA report. You still won't see all of them. If they are not in the DOD system or the VA's, no one is counting the but their own families.

Resilience programs expand; value debated
By Patricia Kime
Staff writer
Posted : Sunday Jul 22, 2012

“Resilience” has become the latest military buzzword as the services embrace new programs designed to toughen mind and body to ward off future mental health problems.

But the programs, built on the principles of positive psychology, are controversial, and some troops agree with critics who say the programs aren’t scientifically proven and actually could hinder natural coping techniques.
go here for more if you want to pay Army Times for it.

Extreme Makeover needs to make this right

Jubilee House struggles without VA money
Staff writer
By John Ramsey
Jul 21, 2012

Michelle Obama stepped off an oversized bus on Langdon Street last July and hugged a wide-eyed Barbara Marshall, then thanked her for helping the nation try to end homelessness.

With hundreds of people gathered along the street chanting the familiar "move that bus" refrain, the TV show "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" revealed Jubilee House, a 7,200-square-foot duplex built to shelter homeless women veterans.

It seemed no expense was spared on the house, from dazzling custom art to a soundproof playroom and a backyard greenhouse with a vacuum tube for shooting vegetables directly into one of the home's two kitchens.

But the day after the bus was moved, Jubilee House failed a Veterans Affairs safety inspection because it lacked automatic sprinklers, a controversial provision in nationally recommended standards.

The failed inspection meant Marshall could not receive up to $1,200 a month from the VA for every homeless veteran she took in, money similar organizations say they need to survive.

Jubilee House could still legally open. It met state and local building codes, which don't require indoor sprinklers for single-family homes and duplexes. But without the VA money, Marshall has struggled to keep the lights on during a tough first year with the new house.

The conversation boiled down to two main questions: Does Jubilee House need sprinklers to receive a VA contract? And was "Extreme Makeover" - which VA emails say was notified of the requirement before construction and after - going to install them?
read more here

Motorcycle ride raises awareness about homeless veterans

Motorcycle ride raises awareness about homeless veterans
By: Web Staff
7/21/2012
ALBANY, N.Y.

Motorcycles revved up in Schenectady to support those who serve our country. The fifth annual Homeless Veterans Awareness Day motorcycle run went from the Sawmill Tavern down State Street and Central Avenue, ending at the Albany Veterans House.

The event raises money for the Albany Housing Coalition's homeless veterans services program. Members of the New York "Nomads" Motorcycle Club said they want to do all they can to help out their fellow veterans.
read more here

Wounded Alabama soldier asked "Did I fight hard enough for you?"

"Did I fight hard enough for you?"
Last Update: 7/21

SARDIS, Ala. (WAAY) - "Did I fight hard enough for you?" These were the first words out of Private First Class Corey Garmon from his hospital bed in Maryland since a July 10 IED explosion in Kandahar left him fighting for his life.

This was not the only good news Saturday morning. Nearly 700 miles away, family, friends and hundreds of community members showed up for a roadblock fundraiser in his hometown of Sardis.
read more here

Richard's Coffee Shop and Museum welcomes all veterans

This was in my email this morning so I am not sure who took these pictures. They are wonderful!
Richard's Coffee Shop, Mooresville, NC. TAKE THE TIME TO LOOK THRU ALL OF THIS..... I WAS IMPRESSED.... GOD BLESS AMERICA











Disabled American Veterans taking care of all generations

Disabled American Veterans taking care of all generations
by Chaplain Kathie
Wounded Times Blog
July 22, 2012

Yesterday morning I went to the Orlando VA Community Living Center for a BBQ with the DAV.
The Orlando DAV and Auxiliary usually goes out there once a month to play Bingo with the veterans, so I know them pretty well. While the food was cooking, we had tables set up to play some card games with them. I don't know enough about card games but I figured 21 wouldn't be that hard. Wow was I wrong! Thankfully I was rescued and was sent to deal Crazy 8's. That was fun! We laughed more than anything else.

That's one of the great things about belonging to the Orlando DAV Chapter 16. We don't stop helping but we also enjoy the company of our veterans. All our veterans need to be taken care of and not forgotten just because another generation arrives. The older veterans are always willing to make room for them but they don't want to be pushed out of the way. At my table there were Korean War Veterans, Vietnam veterans and a younger veteran. They teased each other but above that, they cheered for each other! That is the way it should be with every group popping up across the country.

Chapter 16 handed out certificates of appreciation to 43 members because in 11 months these volunteers gave 15,341 hours of our time out of love.


I never understand why all of these new groups are showing up wanting to reinvent the wheel. Seems to me they are falling down since intentions are wonderful but clearly they do not know what they are doing.

We see it all the time on Facebook and all over the web, new groups claiming to have the answers but they cannot answer simple questions they just didn't take the time to learn about.

In a nut shell, I am very disappointed in these new groups. Well, most of them. If they were worth a dime or ten minutes of your time, I wouldn't have to do what I do. There are so many my head spins when they email me "look at me" so I can help promote them. I stop what I'm doing, go to the link and while it all looks good, I begin to notice things that should be there. I make a list, email them back with the questions like, "What is your background?" "Who is your expert or do you just let people say what they want?" Most of the time it's about 10 questions. 90% of these new groups never email back with the answers. The few trying to answer the questions usually do not have all their "ducks in a row" and are missing key components.

The Disabled American Veterans takes care of all generations of disabled veterans.


The 1.2 million-member Disabled American Veterans (DAV) is a non-profit 501(c)(4) charity dedicated to building better lives for America’s disabled veterans and their families.

The DAV was founded in 1920 by disabled veterans returning from World War I to represent their unique interests. In 1932, the DAV was congressionally chartered as the official voice of the nation’s wartime disabled veterans.

With our brave Americans leaving the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, the DAV’s services and advocacy are as relevant and critical today as in any time in our nation’s history.

Annually, the DAV represents more than 200,000 veterans and their dependents with claims for benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense.

The DAV’s Voluntary Services Program operates a comprehensive network of volunteers who provide veterans free rides to and from VA medical facilities and improve care and morale for sick and disabled veterans.

The DAV’s 1.2 million members provide grassroots advocacy and services in communities nationwide. From educating lawmakers and the public about important issues to supporting services and legislation to help disabled veterans — the DAV is there to promote its message of hope to all who have served and sacrificed.


DAV MISSION STATEMENT
We are dedicated to one single purpose: empowering veterans to lead high-quality lives with respect and dignity. We accomplish this by making sure veterans and their families can access the full range of benefits available to them; fighting for the interests of America’s injured heroes on Capitol Hill; and educating the public about the great sacrifices and needs of veterans transitioning back to civilian life. This mission is carried forward by:
★ Providing free, professional assistance to veterans and their families in obtaining benefits and services earned through military service and provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs and other agencies of government;

★ Providing outreach concerning its program services to the American people generally, and to disabled veterans and their families specifically;

★ Representing the interests of disabled veterans, their families, their widowed spouses and their orphans before Congress, the White House and the Judicial Branch, as well as state and local government;

★ Extending the DAV’s mission of hope into the communities where these veterans and their families live through a network of state-level Departments and local Chapters; and

★ Providing a structure through which disabled veterans can express their compassion for their fellow veterans through a variety of volunteer programs.



While it is wonderful for people to want to do something to help, they should find out what is already being done by people with the experience do actually do it instead of just claiming they do.

Now you know I'm deeply connected to the DAV because my husband and I are very active in it as life members but you also have to understand my Dad was a disabled Korean War veteran, so pretty much I grew up knowing about them and how much they help. When you have an organization like this working so hard all these years, it is very puzzling why all of these other groups are popping up all over the place when the DAV has been there and done that all these years.

Then again, I am not just a life member but Florida's Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary Member of the Year. I am only one of the many doing as much as possible to help our veterans.