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Sad State Of Affairs

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  • Sad State Of Affairs

    Why isn't this all over the media? We feed on the war and the politics for and against, but what about our political pawns the soldiers that put on the line so we can sit at our computers and offer our opinions like they might make the world a better place. I was at the VA in West Haven two weeks ago and it was like high school for the handicapped. The system is bulging at the seams and we need to fund the post war budget now. We owe it to our vets and there family's. The cost of this war will be paid in more than lives, and our debt to these brave men and women should never be forgotten.

    Insult to Injury
    New data reveal an alarming trend: Vets' disabilities are being downgraded
    By Linda Robinson
    Posted 4/8/07
    In the middle of a battle in Fallujah in April 2004, an M80 grenade landed a foot away from Fred Ball. The blast threw the 26-year-old Marine sergeant 10 feet into the air and sent a piece of hot shrapnel into his right temple. Once his wound was patched up, Ball insisted on rejoining his men. For the next three months, he continued to go on raids, then returned to Camp Pendleton, Calif.

    But Ball was not all right. Military doctors concluded that Ball was suffering from a traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), chronic headaches, and balance problems. Ball, who had a 3.5 grade-point average in high school, was found to have a sixth-grade-level learning capability. In January of last year, the Marine Corps found him unfit for duty but not disabled enough to receive full permanent disability retirement benefits and discharged him.

    Ball's situation has taken a dire turn for the worse. The tremors that he experienced after the blast are back, he can hardly walk, and he has trouble using a pencil or a fork. Ball's case is being handled by the Department of Veterans Affairs-he receives $337 a month-but while his case is under appeal, he receives no medical care. He works 16-hour shifts at a packing-crate plant near his home in East Wenatchee, Wash., but he has gone into debt to cover his $1,600 monthly mortgage and support his wife and 2-month-old son. "Life is coming down around me," Ball says. Trained to be strong and self-sufficient, Ball now speaks in tones of audible pain.

    Fred Ball's story is just one of a shocking number of cases where the U.S. military appears to have dispensed low disability ratings to wounded service members with serious injuries and thus avoided paying them full military disabled retirement benefits. While most recent attention has been paid to substandard conditions and outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the first stop for many wounded soldiers stateside, veterans' advocates say that a more grievous problem is an arbitrary and dysfunctional disability ratings process that is short-changing the nation's newest crop of veterans. The trouble has existed for years, but now that the country is at war, tens of thousands of Americans are being caught up in it.

    Now an extensive investigation by U.S. News and a new Army inspector general's report reveal that the system is beset by ambiguity and riddled with discrepancies. Indeed, Department of Defense data examined by U.S. News and military experts show that the vast majority-nearly 93 percent-of disabled troops are receiving low ratings, and more have been graded similarly in recent years. What's more, ground troops, who suffer the most combat injuries from the ubiquitous roadside bombs, have received the lowest ratings.

    One counselor who has helped wounded soldiers navigate the process for over a decade believes that as many as half of them may have received ratings that are too low. Ron Smith, deputy general counsel for the Disabled American Veterans, says: "If it is even 10 percent, it is unconscionable." The DAV is chartered by Congress to represent service members as they go through the evaluation process. Its national service officers are based at each rating location, and there is a countrywide network of counselors. Smith says he recently asked the staff to cull those cases that appeared to have been incorrectly rated. Within six hours, he says, they had forwarded him 30 cases. "So far," Smith says, "the review supports the conclusion that a significant number of soldiers are being fairly dramatically underrated by the U.S. Army."

  • #2
    Yeah "we have to support the fighting men and women" but as soon as they can't fight anymore ...............

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Mike Brewer
      I know many vets who fall into this unfortunate category, including myself. There's no excused for it. It sucks. Guys give their knees, backs, eyes, ears, and sometimes even their minds in service, and the next thing you know, they have to take a pay cut as if it just wasn't enough.

      We need some truly supportive representatives in Washington to address the issue with more than lip service.
      It is as if they blame guys like you for the inability to do active duty as if it wasn't caused by the active duty itself

      How about the widows of fallen soldiers, do these get any money and is it sufficient ( somehow I doubt it)

      I'm not sure if a representative would be enough, a presidential candidate would be a better shot ( provided you can get him in the Whitehouse)

      BTW recently there was a docu on the telly overhere showing the circumstances in the hospitals "caring" for the Vets, man, 3rd world country situations of which the US as a modern rich country should be very ashamed

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      • #4
        This AP story just off Yahoo:


        By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer 50 minutes ago

        WASHINGTON - Congressional leaders on Thursday demanded that the Veterans Affairs secretary explain hefty bonuses for senior department officials involved in crafting a budget that came up $1 billion short and jeopardized veterans' health care.
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        Rep. Harry Mitchell (news, bio, voting record), chairman of the House Veterans' Affairs subcommittee on oversight, said he would hold hearings to investigate after The Associated Press reported that budget officials at the Veterans Affairs Department received bonuses ranging up to $33,000.

        Sen. Daniel Akaka (news, bio, voting record), who heads the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, said the payments pointed to an improper "entitlement for the most centrally placed or well-connected staff." He has sent a letter to VA chief Jim Nicholson asking what the department plans to do to eliminate any bonuses based on favoritism.

        "These reports point to an apparent gross injustice at the VA that we have a responsibility to investigate," said Mitchell, D-Ariz. "No government official should ever be rewarded for misleading taxpayers, and the VA should not be handing out the most lucrative bonuses in government as veterans are waiting months and months to see a doctor."


        If 'supporting our troops' is more than a decorative bumper sticker to you, then look up your representatives here:



        And send them an angry note.

        Comment


        • #5
          Here is an article from CQ weekly If the link doesn't work I got it off the DAV web site. I really feel sorry for these kids, I spent thirteen mos. in an Air Force hospital and still had a four year fight for my benefits.

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