Monday, November 13, 2017

PTSD Veterans in New York Getting Medical Marijuana

Veterans with PTSD can apply to use medical marijuana legally, Cuomo announces

PIX 11 News
Ashley Soley-Cerro
November 11, 2017

"I think that can help thousands of veterans. It's something that we've been talking about for a long time and I'm glad we're taking action today." Gov. Andrew Cuomo

NEW YORK — In an effort to help thousands of veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD will be added to the list of conditions covered for medical marijuana, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Veterans Day.
"Many of our veterans are suffering from PTSD and the medical community has determined that marijuana can be a helpful treatment," Cuomo said in a statement Saturday. "If there are veterans that are suffering and we can make a treatment available, we want to."
The governor plans to sign into law that marijuana will be legal if a doctor authorizes it, and finds a veteran suffers from PTSD, Cuomo said.

Shadows on The Wall

Shadows on The Wall
Combat PTSD Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 13, 2017

I was an Army brat before I became an Army wife. My Dad was a Korean War veteran and my Uncles fought in WWII. Three veterans I saw all the time but hardly paid attention to their stories. That is, what little they talked about what they did.

They'd sit around the kitchen table with cards, food and drinks, swapping the same old funny stories and laughing as if they heard it for the first time.

Sooner or later, one of my Uncles, a little more emotional than the others, would get quiet. Tears would well in his eyes and my Aunt would put her hand on his shoulder. He'd look gently at her tender smile. Then someone would crack another joke.

I read a confession from Pete Candler about how he wished he had the courage to ask his Dad about his service in Vietnam. Guilt set in because I didn't even have the interest to listen to what they did talk about.
The shadows of members of the U.S. Army appear on the wall of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., Nov. 10, 2014, on the eve of Veterans Day. (Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images)

**When I was a boy, Dad's Army service uniform hung in a closet in my brother's room, along with his combat boots and black felt cavalry hat with the captain's bars pinned on the front. I never touched the dress uniform, but I used the hat for dress-up and possibly for one of the "Son of Rambo" home videos my brother and I shot on the VHS handheld. Dad seemed indifferent to the existence of the mementos of his Army service. If he wasn't, he never said anything. But we didn't bother to find out, either, because the subject of Vietnam was a no-fly zone. Dad simply didn't talk about it, and he must have had his reasons.My father volunteered for a controversial war; he served a one-year tour because he chose to. Whenever I meet an Army solider or veteran, I tell them that my dad was a Huey helicopter pilot in the 1st Air Cavalry Division in Vietnam in 1966 and 1967. I watch as their jaws slacken and their eyebrows pinch slightly. They often say the same thing. Pete Candler, Washington Post
It wasn't until I became an Army veteran's wife that I took an interest in the living history I had in my own family.

Now I wonder how many other families are living with shadows on the Vietnam Wall? How many others didn't ask about what they would not talk about? How many others still don't want to know?

It happens all the time when a family has a veteran but while that fact is acknowledged on Memorial Day and Veterans Day, the topic is avoided the rest of the year.

It is not until their veteran is in some sort of crisis, they begin to pay attention. Sometimes it is medical, as with Agent Orange or other wounds caused by service. Sometimes, most of the time when these Vietnam veterans enter into retirement, it is PTSD no longer allowing the veterans to stuff the pain into the back of their minds.

Sure, most have uniforms in their closets, but they also have too many memories hanging to simply let it go. There is nothing simple about war and nothing simple about living as a veteran, or family member.

One truth stands out and that is the bond they share with the others who also helped create the history we mostly ignore.
**"Vietnam veterans personally re-entered society with honor and vibrancy. Vietnam veterans were given so little when they returned home, but they gave so much back. Vietnam War veterans became business people, nurses, entrepreneurs, civil rights leaders, doctors, inventors, politicians, government officials, teachers, parents and leading members in society. What is so remarkable is that as the country turned away from their military service, they turned toward the country in terms of what more they could provide to make the country better. The lesson for my generation of military veterans is clear, we can and need to do more to create an even better United States." Chad Storlie Herald Net


**"The missing link – veterans from earlier wars. There were no invitations to join the VFW or American Legion and a wall of indifference when I brought up the subject with members I knew. It was a quarter century before I was approached by either of those groups about joining. By then my own shell of indifference rejected those as insincere." Jim Brumm WRAL
**"I don't want to forget these guys," said Baffico, who served in the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne. "I can't explain why they got killed and I got to live, but I did. And I need to do something with that. That really is the essence of why I come here." Baffico wasn't alone. As he says, his wife Max "saved me." Paul Baffico ABC Chicago

**"What kind of group did I join? They're all hugging!" says Lopez, 76, of Naperville. "They said it's a habit. When they were in Vietnam, they would hug because they didn't know if they were going to see each other again. How do you live like that?"

Veterans such as Atkinson, who served in the Navy in Vietnam from 1968 to '69, say it's a matter of necessity.
Atkinson took medication for a time to stabilize his depression, and he wants people to know that's OK. He continues to meet with a counselor he found through the VA. But his most effective way of maintaining his mental health has been through the second brotherhood he's found. Bill Atkinson Daily Herald


Bar Donates Sales to Make Amends For Kicking Out Veteran with PTSD Service Dog

Even better update

Holiday Bar held training session for business owners to understand the law and what PTSD Service Dogs do!

UPDATE


Apology falls short for veteran kicked out of bar due to his service dog

MLive
Shandra Martinez
November 13, 2017

GRAND RAPIDS, MI -- A West Michigan veteran who was kicked out of a Grand Rapids bar over Veteran's Day weekend because he was accompanied by a service dog isn't happy with the bar's apology.
Jerome Smith with his service dog, JoJo, at the Grand Haven pier. (Courtesy | Jerome Smith)

It amounts to little more than than damage control, says Jerome Smith.

"The way I was treated was so disrespectful," said Smith, 35. "I want to give them a chance to grow and make this right."

Smith wants the Holiday Bar to sponsor a service dog through This Able Veteran, the same organization that gave him his service dog, JoJo, a German Shepherd mix, five years ago.
read more here

Veteran and service dog denied entry to local Grand Rapids bar
FOX 17 Michigan
November 12, 2017
"In light of all the pain this has caused we will be donating 100% of all of our sales today to the Grand Rapids Home for Veterans, we know this doesn’t change what happened, but maybe it will be a cause for reflection in our own hearts if nothing else."

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. -- A local veteran says he and his service dog were denied entry to a Grand Rapids bar just before Veterans Day.

Jeremy Smith, who served in Iraq, said he went out with other Marines on Friday for some food in downtown Grand Rapids before going to the Holiday Bar. Managers reportedly wouldn't allow him or his service dog, Jo-Jo, inside. Smith told FOX 17 he was upset over the incident and said it was a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Heroic Actions: TSA Agent Took Smoking Bag Away

This is a good story of a TSA Agent risking his life. He didn't know what was in the smoking bag. It didn't matter. He didn't want to take a chance with the lives of everyone else around him.
Smoking Camera Battery Sparks Scare at Orlando Airport, Canceling Flights
NBC News
by PHIL HELSEL
November 11, 2017

A lithium ion camera battery apparently caught fire and began smoking at Orlando International Airport on Friday, causing a panic that toppled stanchions, raised fears of a shooting and canceled around 24 flights, authorities said.

The airport said that a loud noise was reported at around 5 p.m. in front of a security checkpoint, and "In an abundance of caution, passengers inside the terminal were instructed to exit the building while Orlando Police and Orlando International Airport staff investigated.”

Greater Orlando International Aviation Authority CEO Phil Brown said in a letter posted online Saturday that the camera battery inside the bag apparently caught fire and began to smoke, the passenger dropped the bag and emergency responders moved it away from crowds.

"Others hearing the luggage being dropped, stanchions falling, and rapid movement mistook the sounds as gunfire and within seconds a spontaneous evacuation of the main terminal occurred," Brown said in the letter.
read more here

But the story got even better! 

TSA releases footage of agent, army veteran grabbing bag during security scare at OIA


He was in the Army for 20 years, then joined the TSA after 9-11. Rick Perez said "Somebody had to do it and it was me."

PTSD on Trial: Doctor Who Left Boating Victims

Medical board considers case of Poland doctor for leaving fatal crash scene

WFJM News
Mike Gauntner
November 13, 2017 
However, the defense argued that the court was duty-bound, and directed by law, to consider Dr. Yurich's military background and a diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -
The Poland doctor convicted of leaving the scene of a 2015 fatal boating crash on Berlin Reservoir faces possible disciplinary action from the State Medical Board of Ohio.
Dr. Joseph Yurich was sentenced to ten days in jail in July after being convicted of vehicular homicide and leaving the scene of an accident.

Yurich's speedboat hit a fishing boat around midnight on May 9, 2015, on Berlin Lake. The man in the fishing boat, Neal Cuppett of Akron, died. Another man in Cuppett's boat was injured.
The state medical board has notified Yurich it intends to determine if the doctor will face discipline because of his conviction on the charge of leaving the scene of an accident.
As part of the sentence handed down by Mahoning County Common Pleas Court Judge John Durkin, Yurich was also placed on house arrest for 90 days with electronic monitoring, given five years of probation, and was ordered to perform 200 hours of community service at the Rescue Mission of the Mahoning Valley, performing medical services for those that need it. read more here