Thursday, April 9, 2015

Veterans Feel Like They Are Just Numbers

'We're just numbers,' local veteran contends 
Observer
Alyssa Choiniere
Digital News
April 9, 2015
“The easiest way for them to deal with us is for us to just kill ourselves because we're just numbers.”
Retired Marine Cpl. Christopher Morris didn't know where else to go, so he stayed there, in his Morgantown apartment, wishing heavy metal would drown out his racing mind, wishing his eyes would stop darting up to the bullet hole in the ceiling, wishing his thoughts would stop drifting toward the New River Gorge Bridge.

Morris knew he didn't want to go out like his roommate who left the bullet hole behind after his suicide. But he was running out of options.

After months of trying to get the care he needed from the Department of Veterans Affairs for post-traumatic stress disorder and chronic injuries caused by a bomb blast, he was close to giving up.

“They're trying to get things, on the outside, to look better,” he said. “The easiest way for them to deal with us is for us to just kill ourselves because we're just numbers.”

On March 30, veteran Michelle Langhorst, 31, of Plum, shot herself in the head at the H.J. Heinz Campus of the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Aspinwall, according to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner's office.
read more here

Veterans Still Waiting Too Long for Care, Decades After Congress Promised

How many times does it have to be said that members of Congress keep making promises to fix the VA? They've been doing in since 1946 when the first House Veterans Affairs Committee took their seats and have been sitting on them ever since in more ways than the most obvious.
The veterans service organizations that make up the Independent Budget-AMVETS, Disabled American Veterans (DAV), Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA) and the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)-last month told Congress that for FY 2003 it recommends a medical care appropriation of $24.4 billion, an increase of $3.1 billion over this year's level.
Veterans have been hearing it for years, and years, and then more years. At the same time they have been encouraged to go to the VA and file claims, the other part of the VA was not anywhere close to being able to meet the increased demand. So year after year Congress held hearings and then dropped the ball when it was in their hands to actually do the right thing.

Look what all the promises made ended up being, then remember many members of congress want the VA to be turned over to for profit operations. How can they do it? Destroy the VA first. We noticed!
Veterans still waiting for care at VA hospitals
Associated Press
John Boyle and David B. Caruso
April 9, 2015

FAYETTEVILLE – A year after Americans recoiled at new revelations that sick veterans were getting sicker while languishing on waiting lists — and months after the Department of Veterans Affairs instituted major reforms — government data show the number of patients facing long waits at VA facilities has not dropped at all.

No one expected that the VA mess could be fixed overnight. But the Associated Press has found that since the summer, the number of medical appointments delayed 30 to 90 days has largely stayed flat. The number of appointments that take longer than 90 days to complete has nearly doubled.

Nearly 894,000 appointments completed at VA medical facilities from Aug. 1 to Feb. 28 failed to meet the health system's timeliness goal, which calls for patients to be seen within 30 days.
The Associated Press figures show that from September 2014-February 2015, the Charles George VA had a monthly average of 23,544 completed visits, with 1.96 percent of those delayed at least 31 days. During that time, the local VA had a total of 97 cases delayed by more than 90 days, an average of 16 a month.
South fares poorly
Of the 75 clinics and hospitals with the highest percentage of patients waiting more than 30 days for care, 12 are in Tennessee or Kentucky, 11 are in eastern North Carolina and the Hampton Roads area of Virginia, 11 are in Georgia or southern Alabama and six are in north Florida.

Seven more were clustered in the region between Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Those 47 clinics and hospitals represent just a fraction of the more than 1,000 VA facilities nationwide, but they were responsible for more than one in five of the appointments that took longer than 60 days to complete.
read more here

West Virginia
Clarksburg VA
Over the six-month period, nearly 13,000 of 456,800 medical appointments at VA facilities in West Virginia failed to meet the health system’s timeliness goal, which calls for patients to be seen within 30 days, according to government data reviewed by the Associated Press. The numbers include four VA medical centers and 10 outpatient centers.

About 5,700 out of 80,300 appointments, or 7.1 percent, were delayed more than 30 days at the Clarksburg VA hospital. VA medical centers in Huntington and Beckley were close to the national average. The VA hospital in Martinsburg excelled, with fewer than 1 percent of appointments delayed more than 30 days.

At the Clarksburg VA, 657 appointments stretched longer than 90 days. Only one other medical center had a higher percentage of such waits.
Maryland
Overall, veterans in Maryland faced delays of at least 31 days in obtaining 7,205 appointments at VA medical centers, according to the data, which was compiled by the Associated Press. Austin Robinson, an Army veteran, said Wednesday that he has waited as long as three months to get an appointment at the Glen Burnie clinic on Landmark Drive. Sometimes, doctors tell him to call a hotline or go to an emergency room if problems persist, and he doesn't like that. "I don't understand why it takes so long," he said as he left the clinic. "The care is pretty good. It's just getting inside to get it done. Anything can happen in three months."
Washington DC
Over 6 months at the Washington hospital, nearly 4,800 patients had to wait more than 30 days for an appointment, 700 had to wait more than 60 days and 94 had to wait more than 90 days.


Mississippi
The VA hospital in Biloxi has failed to meet goals of seeing patients within 30 days, an analysis of data provided by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs reveals.

Between September and February, 4.25 percent of patients seen -- more than 5,500 people -- had waited at least a month for care and 273 people had waited at least 90 days, according to the numbers obtained by The Associated Press.

The Biloxi hospital is not the VA system's worst offender. At the Hopkinsville VA Clinic in Kentucky, which saw 5,377 patients during that time to Biloxi's 131,219, almost 20 percent of patients waited at least a month.

Florida
Statewide, though, veterans don‘t fare as well. Florida veterans still experience some of the longest wait times in the country, with the state placing 11th for the most wait times surpassing one month and fifth for delays longer than three months, according to VA data from September to February analyzed by the Associated Press.

Ohio
In Ohio, about 4 percent of patients wait more than the 30-day limit, including those who wait up to 60 days, 90 days or even longer.

Among the worst offenders includes a clinic in Portsmouth, ranked 74th out of 940 clinics in the United States, with more than 11 percent of patients experiencing a delay of 31 days or more waiting for care.

And one more reason to not use the term PTS instead of PTSD. It actually stands for something else.
But Jones said it’s a good thing they did move because that’s when doctors discovered he had post-traumatic syringomyelia, or PTS, a rare spinal cord disease that causes the development of a cyst filled with fluid after severe spinal cord injury.

PTS can manifest for years after a traumatic injury, especially if left untreated. Potentially devastating, it can cause loss of function, chronic pain, respiratory failure and in extreme cases, death. Extremely rare, not many doctors are familiar with the disease and there are few treatment options.

Colorado
The clinic moved into a new 76,000-square-foot building in Colorado Springs in August, but its on-time performance has gotten worse. In September, nearly 8 percent of appointments were past the 30-day target. It rose to 11.6 percent in February.

The VA estimates that more than 82,000 veterans live in El Paso County, by far the most of any county in the state. Arapahoe County is second with nearly 45,000.

Vietnam Veteran Built Missile In Backyard

A missile in his backyard: Vietnam veteran in Medford builds replica of MIM-23 Hawk 
Veteran will showcase replica of MIM-23 Hawk in Pear Blossom Parade
Mail Tribune
By Nick Morgan
Posted Apr. 8, 2015


"Homeland Security knows about it," Bloom said.
Ron Bloom of Medford will premiere his replica Hawk missile at the Pear Blossom Parade Saturday.
Mail Tribune / Jamie Lusch
When Ron Bloom of Medford approached fellow members of Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association about premiering his replica missile at the Pear Blossom Parade, they had a difficult time wrapping their minds around just what Bloom had built.

"It's much bigger than we thought," said Mike Halverson, the Oregon state representative of CVMA, as he stared up at the replica Vietnam-era MIM-23 Hawk missile in Bloom's backyard, along with about 10 local members.

Halverson rode his motorcycle from Marion to see the replica in person.

"It's built to scale — 16 feet, 8 inches long," Bloom said. "Young or old, they love to look at it."
read more here

Forget Dolphins, Veterans Swim with Navy SEALs

Navy SEALS help veterans and have an island renamed 
SEAL event will be part of Spring Fling
Charlotte Observer
BY LISA DAIDONE CORRESPONDENT
04/09/2015
Retired Navy SEALs Rich Graham, lback left, Rusch, in front and Troy Pusateri, right, participate in the 2014 LKN Navy SEAL Swim. TIM DOYLE COURTESY SEAL SWIM CHARITIES


The best part of Spring Fling, which will be held April 18 at LangTree Lake Norman, won’t be the exhibits from nurseries, landscapers, outdoor-specialty stores and outdoor-themed organizations.

Nor will it be the music, food, beverages or nature crafts.

The best part of the Lake Norman Wildlife Conservationists Spring Fling in Mooresville will be a dedication ceremony. LKN SEAL Swim charities, which holds the annual SEAL Swim, will rename a Lake Norman island, currently called Whale Island, as Navy SEAL Island, said Chris Durant, of the charity group.

Eventually, the group will hold a dedication ceremony on the island and a plant a Navy SEAL flag there.

The dedication is a result of the LKN SEAL Swim, created three years ago to raise awareness and funds to help veterans suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Combat Related Stress.

Three former Navy SEALs – Rich Graham, Shannon Rusch and Troy Pusateri – swim 13.6 miles, beginning at McCray Creek access in Mooresville and ending at the Rusty Rudder in Cornelius with a huge party. The swim this year will be held July 24.
read more here

Sunny 105.9 Paco Lopez Remembers Veterans Everyday!

I listen to Sunny 105.9 FM everyday and one of my favorite things happens during the Paco Lopez show. He plays a song , usually the Eagles Hotel California, and dedicates it to the veterans at the VA everyday. He always makes me smile when he does it because I know how much it means to them to be remembered. It means even more because it comes from one of their own. Paco was a Marine. Or should I say is a Marine? Considering the saying goes, "Once A Marine, Always A Marine."
Noah Galloway: A Real American Hero (And Great Dancer Too)
Sunny 105.9
April 9, 2015

I spent four years in the United States Marine Corps, serving my country. Though I never saw any battlefield action, I recognized that I could have been called onto the battlefield at any time. I intentionally, and quite voluntarily, enlisted during a very tense period in history. It was when the Ayatollah Khomeini had taken 52 hostages and held them for 444 days.

During boot camp, our drill instructors came in on several occasions and told us to pack our gear because we were going to Iran. We believed them, and so we did…only to be told 30 minutes later that our orders had been cancelled. Our hearts were pounding while we stood there on “line” waiting for our next command from our leaders. Later we learned those were only head games they played with us.

All the more reason, that as a Marine vet, I can appreciate what Noah Galloway did, and even more impressively, what he continues to do to amaze us.
read more here


I asked Paco to give a bit of his background so that veterans would know why they matter so much to him. This is what he wrote back.
"I went to Paris Island in Dec of 1979 and served for 4 years at EdCtrCo, H and S Bn, MCDEC, Quantico, Va. Also, I was on the Quantico Ceremonial Squad and did many burials, grand openings, special events, and presented colors for MCDEC.

Meritoriously promoted to PFC by recruiting two into service after boot camp as a recruiters asst while awaiting my due date in MOS school. Meritoriously promoted to LCpl by graduating 1st in my class at MOS school. Meritoriously promoted to Cpl by 9 months for performance. I was an SRB Chief when I left. Rifle Expert 2nd award, 1st class PFT, 3rd class swim qual. EAS'd as an E-5/Sgt. in 1984."

IAVA Paul Rieckhoff Among Others Removed for New York Mayor's Veterans Council

Mayor to present veteran board appointments, amid harsh criticism
Capital New York.com
By Gloria Pazmino
Apr. 9, 2015

“It’s become clear to the community that the mayor is not serious about veterans' issues,”
Rieckhoff told Capital.

Mayor Bill de Blasio will announce today a new set of appointees to the Veteran Advisory Board, finally replacing many of the members whose terms had expired.

The appointments have angered representatives of the city’s veterans, who say that de Blasio has failed to act quickly on a crisis.

The board, established in 1987, serves as a liaison between veterans and the Mayor’s Office of Veterans’ Affairs and helps guide policy and connect the veterans to resources in the city. The mayor is responsible for appointing six members; the speaker and Council appoint five.

The mayor’s slow pace of appointments led to questions about whether the board was serving its purpose in the early months of his administration. Gotham Gazette reported last year on some of the holdover members’ murky attendance record at meetings and frustration among city veterans who did not feel they had a direct connection to the board.
All board members who were appointed by former mayor Michael Bloomberg have been removed, including Paul Rieckhoff, the founder and C.E.O. of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America—the country’s first organization specifically for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, which boasts over 200,000 members and is headquartered in the city.

Rieckhoff told Capital the members were only told about their removal a day in advance and said he questioned the qualifications of the new members. He also criticized Loree Sutton, commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Veterans’ Affairs, for her slow pace of action so far.
read more here

August 18, 2014
IAVA CEO and Founder Paul Rieckhoff issued the following statement:
“IAVA congratulates General Sutton on this well deserved honor to head Veterans Affairs for the city of New York,” said IAVA CEO and Founder Paul Rieckhoff. “New York is home to one of the largest communities of veterans, who face the same issues as veterans across the country, including homelessness, unemployment, suicide, waiting on disability benefits, and more. General Sutton knows the problems veterans face and is uniquely positioned to help solve them. As a New York based organization, IAVA looks forward to continuing our work with General Sutton as she continues to improve the lives of veterans.”

From NPR in 2010
Pentagon Shifts Its Story About Departure of Leader of Brain Injury Center
Two days later, we got a message from Sutton's boss, Charles Rice, the assistant secretary of defense for health affairs. A Pentagon spokeswoman, Eileen Lainez, said that Haight "misspoke." Sutton stepped down after Rice decided "that a change in leadership was necessary to continue moving the organization forward," Lainez said.

The Pentagon has pledged in recent days to improve its care for soldiers with mild traumatic brain injury — and one place that might need some attention is communications at the top.

Earlier this month, we reported that the military was routinely failing to diagnose such injuries, which are the most common head wounds sustained by soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. We also found that soldiers had trouble getting adequate treatment at one of America's largest military bases, Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas.

Female Veterans Not Getting Proper Help For PTSD

Feds: Female Veterans Battling to Get PTSD Treatment
Officials say cases are often linked to sexual trauma
KRGV News
Apr 08, 2015

WESLACO - Female veterans suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder may not be getting the help they need, according to federal investigators.

Investigators looked at the Veterans Benefits Administration, which is within the Department of Veterans Affairs.

One of the administration's jobs is to help female vets who suffered sexual trauma while in the military and who may now suffer from PTSD as a result.

Investigators found that there's much more work to be done.

Serving in the military is one of the toughest, most dangerous jobs in the world. Still, the real war sometimes is at home.

It's estimated that 20 percent of female veterans returning home after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from PTSD. That's about 56,000 women.
read more here

Female Veterans Torment Focus After Suicide

Recent Pittsburgh suicide brings to light issues tormenting female veterans 
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By Sean D. Hamill
April 9, 2015
“A lot of times in life, a person just needs someone to listen to them,”

The suicide of a Plum veteran last week in the parking lot at the Pittsburgh Veterans Affairs’ H.J. Heinz facility in O’Hara was tragic because she was a young woman who seemed to have much to look forward to.

Former Army Staff Sgt. Michelle R. Langhorst, 31, served nine years in the Army, mostly as a member of the military police, before an honorable discharge in 2012. She had graduated from Point Park University last year and recently got a job as a security supervisor at UPMC Shadyside.

“She was moving forward. She had everything going for her,” said Natalie Guiler, who taught Ms. Langhorst last year in a tutorial class at Point Park. “I am devastated about Michelle’s death.”

But Ms. Langhorst’s death stood out for two main reasons: she was female and she had been receiving behavioral health treatment at the VA for at least a couple of years.

Both categories put her in a distinct minority among the painfully large number of veterans — about 22 a day, nationally, according to one study that estimated the figure based on data from 21 states — who kill themselves.
“What we try to do is give people hope,” said Veronica Lucious, who has been a suicide prevention case worker for the Pittsburgh VA since 2009.

She spends most of her day on the phone, checking in with veterans who have been flagged either by their doctor, family or friends, as being at-risk.

“A lot of times in life, a person just needs someone to listen to them,” she said.
read more here

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Iraq Veteran Survived 2 Tours, Killed By Co-worder

Family mourns local Army veteran shot to death in Alvin 
KHOU 11 News
Grace White
April 8, 2015

HOUSTON - After two tours in Iraq, Jacob Cadriel's family thought he would finally be safe at home.

Instead, investigators say, he was shot to death at work by a disgruntled employee. Steven Young, 28, is in the Brazoria County Jail charged with murder.

"He was doing the American dream, going to work, providing for his family," said Antonio Cadriel, the victim's brother. Jacob Cadriel survived two tours with the U.S. Army in Iraq. "He was blown up, he's watched friends die," said Antonio Cadriel.

His family never imagined they'd lose him so close to home. "He got this job and he really really loved it," Antonio Cadriel said. read more here

Camp Pendleton Marine to Receive Navy Cross

Gunnery sergeant to receive Navy Cross for Afghanistan valor
The Associated Press
Published: April 8, 2015
Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Brian C. Jacklin U.S. MARINE CORPS
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — The Marine Corps said Tuesday that a gunnery sergeant will receive the service's second-highest award for enduring heavy assault in Afghanistan while his team leader and another Marine were ushered to safety after being shot and seriously wounded. Brian C. Jacklin, 32, will be awarded the Navy Cross on Thursday at Camp Pendleton, becoming the eighth person in the Marine Special Operations Command to receive the honor since the unit was formed in 2006.

The Los Angeles native was second in command of a team that came under attack in the Upper Gereshk Valley of Helmand province in 2012.

After his team leader and another Marine suffered life-threatening injuries, he established communications with a nearby unit.

"Without hesitation, Jacklin seized control of the situation and orchestrated a counterattack," the Marines said. "He courageously led his team out of their compound and through open terrain in order to secure a landing zone. Jacklin remained in the open, raining M203 grenades on the enemy and directing the fires of his team, until the aircraft could land and evacuate the wounded."
Also Thursday, Maj. Gen. Joseph Osterman, commander of the Marine Special Operations Command, will award the Bronze Star with combat distinguishing device to Gunnery Sgt. William C. Simpson IV,

Staff Sgt. Christopher Buckminster, Staff Sgt. Hafeez B. Hussein, Sgt. William P. Hall and Sgt. David E. Harris, all critical-skills operators. The Marine Corps said they "boldly displayed their courage and gallantry during the same engagement as Jacklin."
read more here

Soldier Killed In Afghanistan Green on Blue Attack

U.S. service member killed in Afghanistan, official says
CNN
By Jamie Crawford and Jason Hanna
April 8, 2015

A U.S. Army soldier was killed Wednesday in an attack in eastern Afghanistan by an Afghan National Army gunman, a U.S. military official told CNN, shortly after an American official met with a provincial governor.

A U.S. defense official didn't provide details about the attack in the city of Jalalabad. But an Afghan police chief told CNN that an Afghan National Army soldier shot at U.S. soldiers at a provincial governor's compound in Jalalabad on Wednesday.

The Afghan soldier opened fire on the U.S. troops as they were leaving a meeting at the compound, said Fazal Ahmad Shirzad, police chief of Nangarhar province.

An Afghan soldier was killed and another was injured in a subsequent exchange of gunfire, Shirzad said. It wasn't immediately clear whether the assailant was among them.
read more here

Australia Victoria Cross Vietnam Hero Offers Mirror Image To US Treatment of Veterans

What happens to veterans in the US is not much different from what it happening in the UK, Canada and Australia. We managed to send men and women to fight battles but are AWOL on what they need in return afterwards.

We have problems with broken safety nets unable to find a way to make sure troops are not discharged into the abyss waking up suddenly on their own, fighting alone.

We have Medal of Honor recipients talking about their struggles with PTSD and then have to hear from military brass that PTSD is a weakness topped off with the lack of intestinal fortitude as General Ray Odierno said in 2013 interview with the Huffington post.
"Some of it is just personal make-up. Intestinal fortitude. Mental toughness that ensures that people are able to deal with stressful situations."

What we have also seen is this attitude has also been carried on into Warrior Transition Units as reported by NBC and Dallas Morning News out of Texas.

"New Army records uncovered by NBC 5 Investigates show injured soldiers have filed more than 1,100 complaints about mistreatment, abuse and lack of care from their commanders at more than two dozen Warrior Transition Units (WTUs) nationwide, many of those in Texas."

"New Records Show Injured Soldiers Describe Mistreatment Nationwide From Commanders at Army Warrior Transition Units (WTUs)

North Carolina’s Fort Bragg records the most complaints, Texas not far behind"


For all the talk from leaders in the military and congress, this attitude lives on, no matter how much they deny it.

We can just accept what they say or we can actually pay attention to this detestable disgrace.

You'd think that since the US has been the leader in PTSD research we would have been way ahead of other nations. But we aren't. We're far from it. The only difference is, we just have more suffering and more suicides because we sent more men and women to fight in our name.

Defence, Veterans Affairs may contribute to post-traumatic stress suicides says VC recipient
The Age National
David Ellery
April 8, 2015
Former Chief of Army and Soldier On board chairman, Professor Peter Leahy, is concerned psychologically injured soldiers are being dismissed without an adequate safety net
Rob Pickersgill and Keith Payne VC at the launch of the Soldier On, Hand Up program. Photo: Jay Cronan

Defence may be contributing to suicides by war veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder by discharging them before their Department of Veterans' Affairs cases are settled, according to Australia's oldest living Victoria Cross recipient, Keith Payne VC.

Mr Payne, a Vietnam War hero who has fought his own battle against PTSD, wants all service personnel with cases before DVA kept on strength until their matters have been resolved.

The 81-year-old Soldier On ambassador was at Crace for the launch of the service charity's Hand Up program by Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

Robert Pickersgill, a graduate of the Hand Up pilot program who spent 23 years in uniform and served in Rwanda, East Timor and Iraq, agreed.

"Soldier On is taking up the slack," he said. "It shouldn't need to be here but I am very grateful it is."
It is believed almost 200 Afghanistan war veterans have taken their own lives. Another 2600 have been confirmed as suffering PTSD.
read more here

So we all send them, then betray them, refusing to make sure they have what they need from us in return. Are you ok with that?

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Warrior Transition Unit Soldiers Filed Over 1,000 Complaints


Can't help it. WTU Turned Into WTF!
New Records Show Injured Soldiers Describe Mistreatment Nationwide From Commanders at Army Warrior Transition Units 
(WTUs) North Carolina’s Fort Bragg records the most complaints, Texas not far behind
NBC
By Scott Friedman
Apr 7, 2015

New Army records uncovered by NBC 5 Investigates show injured soldiers have filed more than 1,100 complaints about mistreatment, abuse and lack of care from their commanders at more than two dozen Warrior Transition Units (WTUs) nationwide, many of those in Texas.

Those are just complaints made over five years to the U.S. Army ombudsman program, one of many places soldiers can complain.

Last fall, NBC 5 Investigates and The Dallas Morning News first revealed hundreds of complaints from ill and injured active duty soldiers in Texas.

Those Texas soldiers said WTU commanders harassed, belittled them and ordered them to do things that made their conditions worse at three Army posts in Texas: Fort Hood, Fort Bliss and Fort Sam Houston.

Now the new records, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, show the WTU at Fort Hood had the second highest number of complaints about WTU commanders with more than 140 over five years. The WTU at Fort Bragg in North Carolina had the most complaints in the nation, more than 160.

In all, seven WTU’s had at least 71 complaints about leadership over five years, including Fort Bliss. That’s the post where the Army Col. Chris Toner, commander of the U.S. Army’s Warrior Transition Command has previously said there were serious problems, “beyond a shadow of a doubt.”
read more here

Veterans Beg Congress Stop Hand Me Down Suffering

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
April 7, 2015

In 1970 the Guess Who recorded Don't Give Me No Hand Me Down World, but considering what has been happening to veterans, that is exactly what Congress kept giving them. Hand me down suffering because it has all been going on for far too long.

Great article on the New York Times about a Vietnam veteran filing a class action lawsuit over claims. The trouble is, it isn't new for any of our veterans.

This is part of the problem veterans have faced for decades!
“Justice delayed for these veterans is justice denied, unconscionably and unacceptably,” Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, the ranking Democrat on the Veterans Affairs Committee, said in an interview Monday.
Blumenthal said he hears it all the time yet when you actually know what has been happening, how long it has been going on, then you'd know this is yet one more politician not being fact checked on anything. The rest of the article is below but here's some things that were left out of it.

VBA's pending compensation and claims backlog stood at 816,211 as of January 2008, up 188,781 since 2004, said Kerry Baker, associate legislative director of the Disabled Veterans of America, during a Wednesday hearing of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense.
This was reported on Air Force Times GAO faults training for VA claims processors, By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer, Posted : Wednesday May 28, 2008
From September 2007 to May 2008, GAO looked at four VBA regional offices, in Atlanta; Baltimore; Milwaukee; and Portland, Ore.

VA officials said it takes at least two years to properly train disability claims employees, and they must complete 80 hours of training a year. New employees have three weeks of intense classroom training before they begin several months of on-the-job training at their home offices.

Report: 8,763 vets died waiting for benefits reported by William McMichael for Army Times on July 15, 2008 but as this shows, it was worse because of who else was waiting for, and being denied, what other politicians promised when they said they'd take care of our disabled veterans.

It’s estimated there are 600,000 to 800,000 unresolved claims and appeals with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, according to veterans’ advocates.

“We have claims that have been pending for a decade, two decades and some that date back more than 50 years. We have appeals from World War II,” said David E. Autry, a spokesman for the Disabled American Veterans in Washington D.C., which represents veterans and advocates and helps them obtain their benefits.

But it was even worse considering they found many unopened claims.
VA officials acknowledge further credibility problems based on a new report of a previously undisclosed 2007 incident in which workers at a Detroit regional office turned in 16,000 pieces of unprocessed mail and 717 documents turned up in New York in December during amnesty periods in which workers were promised no one would be penalized.

“Veterans have lost trust in VA,” Michael Walcoff, VA’s under secretary for benefits, said at a hearing Tuesday. “That loss of trust is understandable, and winning back that trust will not be easy.”

And after more hearings, promises, pointing finger by members of congress, this was the result of all of that a year later.
The VA's claims backlog, which includes all benefits claims and all appeals at the Veterans Benefits Administration and the Board of Veterans Appeals at VA, was 803,000 on Jan. 5, 2009. The backlog hit 915,000 on May 4, 2009, a staggering 14 percent increase in four months.

There have been too many Congressional hearings without members of congress actually listening to what veterans and families have been going through. Far too many suffering for far too long. In the 90's it took 6 years for my husband's claim to finally be approved.

Maybe now someone will finally ask members of Congress why they are still trying to kill the VA instead of fixing it? But based on the article, it doesn't look as if reporters even fact check what they write so unlikely that will ever happen.
Vietnam Veteran Files Class-Action Lawsuit Over Delayed Appeals on Disability Benefits
New York Times
By DAVE PHILIPPS
APRIL 6, 2015

A Vietnam veteran who has waited years for disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs for claims of post-traumatic stress disorder and exposure to toxic chemicals filed a class-action lawsuit on Monday, seeking to force the department to expedite a growing backlog of benefits claims appeals, including his own.

The case is the first class action filed in the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. The lead plaintiff is Conley Monk Jr., a Marine Corps veteran in Connecticut who said he came under fire in Vietnam in 1969 and 1970 and was exposed to Agent Orange, an herbicide used in the war. After receiving diagnoses in 2011 of PTSD and diabetes, which is sometimes associated with exposure to Agent Orange, Mr. Monk applied for disability compensation from the V.A. and was denied. He appealed in 2013.

Now, 20 months later, the department has yet to respond to the appeal, said the veteran, who recently had a stroke and is living in subsidized housing.

“It’s frustrating to be stuck in limbo,” Mr. Monk, 66, said in a phone interview on Monday. “It’s been hard to make ends meet. And we Vietnam veterans are getting older. We can’t wait forever.”

The backlog of benefits claims at the V.A. started rising sharply in 2009, driven by a growing number of claims by Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and expanded eligibility for Vietnam veterans with diabetes and PTSD. The backlog peaked in 2013 with more than 600,000 claims.

Determined to clear the backlog, the Obama administration focused staff members on new claims. Since then the number has declined nearly 70 percent. But the number of appeals — claims resubmitted because veterans say they were improperly handled by the V.A. — has risen 17 percent to an all-time high of nearly 300,000, according to the V.A., and the time it takes to reach a decision has grown.
read more here

Experts Say Majority of PTSD Veterans Not Dangerous

Experts say most PTSD patients are not violent
The Post and Courier
Lauren Sausser
Apr 6 2015

Experts believe nearly 10 percent of adults in the United States — many of them rape victims and combat veterans — cope with post-traumatic stress disorder at some point in their lives.

Millions suffer silently and never receive professional help for their mental disorder, but very few ever resort to violence.

“The vast majority of people with PTSD, whether it’s combat-related or not, are not violent,” said Dean Kilpatrick, director of the National Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center at the Medical University of South Carolina.

“Just like the vast majority of people with mental illness are not violent. Now, there are a subset of people who are.”

It is not clear if PTSD played any part in the tragedy that claimed Lynn Michelle Harrison’s life last week.

Witnesses say the 57-year-old was shot and killed at a Summerville intersection on Thursday by Jimi Redman Jr. He was dressed in military camouflage at the time of the attack.
Redman’s brother said last week that he served in Iraq and Afghanistan with the 82nd Airborne Division and that he has tried to seek treatment through the Department of Veterans Affairs for seven years but has been unable to access services.
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