Category Archives: Veterans Benefits

Parade To Welcome Home Iraq/Afghan Veterans/ March 31st,2012

And to think that there was a controversy about having these parades across the nation. God forbid we would stop for a moment and think about war and its human toll. One might even think that Presidential Campaigns are of more importance. They would be if all that campaign money were turned over the VA to care for these men and women.

I hope this parade draws record crowds.

I know Abel Moreno and the founders of Vets4Vets. I had the honor to be a participant in six of their Retreat/Workshops around the southwest.

I sing songs of praise for their tenacity in caring for the men and women of war.

See the link below for more detail.

http://ondemand.azpm.org/videoshorts/watch/2012/3/26/165-new-parade-aims-to-welcome-local-veterans-home/

Transcendental Meditation As Good As Happy Hour

 

I have been a mediator since 1972. I paid a rip snortin’ $75 for the course. I was one of the smartest things I did fresh out of Vietnam. It helped immensely with concentration in my early college years. Little did I know then what the symptoms of combat were and how they permeated my daily living, including happy hours! I cannot imagine what condition my psyche would have been were it not for the calming of the then unknown hyper-vigilance and emotional roller coaster that runs 24-7. TM in many ways was a salvation as it was preventive medicine for aspects of my then personality that could have been a major obstacle to all achievements and relationships.

I still meditate daily for the past 40 years, and I highly recommend this program for returning veterans.

The Gala is helping support scholarships for those veterans of war.

 

 

 

 

 

 

You are Invited OPERATION WARRIOR WELLNESS 2012 GALA  Honoring San Diego’s Heroes Military • Veterans First-Responders Overcoming Post Traumatic Stress

 

 

 

 

Major General  James L. WilliamsMajor General
James L. Williams,
USMC (Ret)

Recently retired as
the Commanding
General of the 4th
Marine Division, the
largest infantry
division in the U.S.
military
Marine CorpsBase Camp Pendleton Pacific ViewsEvent Center,Main Gate  Saturday,April 21, 2012 Cocktails 5:30 pmto 6:30 pm Dinner and Entertainment6:30 pm to 10 pm Bill WaltonBill Walton
National Basketball
Association
Hall of Fame
Colonel Brian M.  Rees, M.D., M.PH.Colonel Brian M.
Rees, M.D., M.PH.

Medical Corps,
US Army Reserve;
Completed four tours
in Iraq and
Afghanistan
Stephen CollinsStephen Collins
Star of 7th Heaven;
TV, Broadway and
Film actor
Daniel RodriguezDaniel Rodriguez
America’s Tenor
Information Denise Anderson Consulting LLC • 702.467.8408 Denise@DeniseAndersonConsulting.com registration operationwarriorwellness-camppendleton.eventbrite.com sponsor David Lynch Foundation Operation Warrior Wellness www.OperationWarriorWellness.org

Copyright 2012, David Lynch Foundation. All rights reserved.

Update for VA Recognition for Agent Orange Exposure of C-123 Veterans

Our March 8 Meeting with VA Officials & Sen. Hart’s staff:

—more from notes about Thursday’s meeting—

But first, unending thanks to Dr. Jeanne Stellman who joined us for the meeting in Washington DC. A powerful voice from a gracious lady and esteemed supporter of veterans’ issues!
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-6PL1k-QMNVI/T1uuNE0_7eI/AAAAAAAAEHc/oQju-kAdNo0/s1600/burr.jpg
Senator Burr of North Carolina, ranking member Senate
Veterans Committee

We flew to DC to have our meeting with VA’s Health Benefits Administration in the Hart Senate Office Building, hosted by Sen. Burr’s staff, with the following results:
1. the C-123 aircrew/maintainers dioxin exposure issue will bereferred to the Institute of Medicine for a special report,hopefully ready by the end of 2012. VA will prepare a Statement of Work (SOW) without outside input, but IOM will conduct public meetings soliciting comment
2. VA reassured C-123 veterans our herbicide exposure poses no risk to health
3. VA stated no medical care will be allowed even on a presumptive eligibility basis for AO-presumtive illnesses (unless the veteran is otherwise eligible)
4. benefits claims now in for C-123 aircrews and maintainers will most likely be denied
5. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry letter of 26 Jan 2012 hasno particular relevance to benefits eligibility of veterans as it was provided outside the realm of the VA itself; apparently, “its the VA’s ball”
6. VA defends their apparent “not enough dioxin to harm” newly created threshold, never before established by any US government agency
7. VA didn’t realize only about 1500 aircrew and maintenance personnel are involved in this issue, expecting the numbers to be higher
8. VA defended their earlier challenges to and dismissal of the 1979 Conway survey of Patches and the 1994 Weisman/Porter survey of Patches, saying use of standard swipe protocol resulted in inaccurate findings and thus no veterans were affected by either inhalation, ingestion or dermal routes of exposure

9. other than the suggested IOM referral, not a single suggestion was made by the VA, whose duty it is to assist veterans in presenting their claims, to help us present our claims; we were struck by the fact not a single note was taken by them of points we felt important to bring to the discussion
10. one VA official likened our exposure during 1972-1982 to her traveling as a 1976 passenger in Army trucks which had been used earlier in Vietnam
11. VA agreed it will be appropriate for IOM to form a retrospective view of Patches prior to the 1979 Conway report, as dioxin contamination levels are likely to be higher in the earlier years
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-buF87R-yOdo/T1vC4rf0o3I/AAAAAAAAEHs/5r_SFpRdU7k/s1600/74th+girls.jpeg
74AES Flight Nurses: “not enough
dioxin” to hurt them or their
children–VA

12. VA likened the requirement for employees at Davis-Monthan AFB to wear HAZMAT protection around the quarantined C-123K fleet to the “hysteria” of recent civilian water contamination

13. the expected USAF School of Aerospace Medicine report wasn’t presented, and apparently isn’t quite ready for either discussion or presentation – aircrews certainly hope that USAFSAM will take a hard stand confirming our exposure, and that at the very least since they cannot direct VA to provide care, USAF should declare that the aircraft were unsafe to fly during the years we had them, and would certainly constitute an unsafe to fly designation today

In an outside, casual conversation, our suggestion that our benefits applications are being stalled to prevent appeals progressing to the more public forum offered by BVA and other courts was not challenged… the VA official simply smiled. The oldest claim we can identify among our veterans is one year old, other than those denied years earlier by BVA due to veterans’ inability to identify specific tail numbers of AO-spray aircraft and inability to prove lingering contamination. Note: both such proofs released by the USAF via FOIA in May 2011, but not available to the veterans before their claims were denied in 2007. It is to be expected that claims henceforth will continue to be denied, but with newer reasons created to cite as justification as the old ones are now invalid.
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-B59B6x2AKeA/T1uuP7IuixI/AAAAAAAAEHk/lDpAAyTIlnU/s1600/200px-AmerLegion_color_Emblem.jpg
Our thanks to leadership of the American Legion, which hosted us on Wednesday in preparation for the VA meeting. American Legion is solidly behind us and will be presenting a resolution to their Spring conference. Also, thanks to Dr. Jeanne Stellman of Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, and Dr. Fred Berman of Oregon Health Sciences University who presented expert support during Thursday’s conference. Both experts generously contributed their time and expertise to supporting our presentation.

   I have deemed it important to post these correspondences in their entirety, so as to surface any layered truth and to identify members of the Armed Forces that may have been exposed to Agent Orange by way of association with the C-123 craft. Should you not want to respond at this site, you may email me at “micpatrickbrewer@gmail.com” Or leave a message at 520-540-7000.
Note: we’re looking for names and email addresses of Ranch Hand aircrews and maintainers to help
Columbia University with an article.
    Wes Carter


"Gung Ho" Who Said It First?

Gung HO is derived from the name of a Chinese industrial  co-operative, “Gingye Hezuoshe.” The two  characters  forming the words meaning, “work and “together.”

This term was adopted by Marine Major Evans Carlson who explained, ” I was trying to build up the same working spirit I had seen in China where all  the soldiers dedicated themselves to the one idea and worked together to put that  idea over. It means work together–working in harmony.  Carlson became Commander of the famed 2nd Marine Raider Batallion and from there the term Gung Ho spread throughout the Corps where it became an expression for strong Marine espirit de corps, zealousnous and eagerness to work together. Enthusiastic and dedicated Marines were called, “Gung Ho.”

So with that as a premise, does it follow that the Congress and the Senate should complete Marine Boot Camp prior to taking the Oath of Office!

Source material from a fellow Marine Retired Sgt Major Robin Jackson.

Letter To Director of Veterans Administration Regarding Agent Orange

 As is frequently said in my coterie of combat veteran friends, “Agent Orange,the gift that keeps on giving.”
I will remind the reader, that one of the more elevated functions of blogging is to solicit more truth from a broader base than might be afforded in the dailies. If retired Major Wesley Clark, is on his game, than one could say that this topic is not much different than what the Marines have been dealing with at Camp Lejune with toxic water supplies. Truth is the last casualty of war.

 

2349 Nut Tree Lane
McMinnville Oregon 97128
February 27 2012

The Honorable Eric K. Shinseki
Secretary of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20420

Dear Secretary Shinseki:

I chair our small group of veterans who flew and maintained the Fairchild C-123K “Provider” for ten years following the Vietnam War. These aircraft remained poisoned from the war, with dioxin intense enough to be labeled by Air Force scientists as “heavily contaminated” and “a danger to public health.”

When we asked the Air Force and VA to investigate, we were instead given two press releases explaining that, while the aircraft “may” have been contaminated, there wasn’t enough TCDD left to likely cause long-term health problems for our veterans.

VA’s position was quickly challenged, in particular by the Toxicology Department of Oregon Health Sciences University and the School of Public Health at Columbia. Further, on 26 January 2011, the deputy director of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry stated that our veterans were most likely exposed, and over a long time, and at a level about 200 times more likely to cause cancer. He also said our exposure was probably even more intense in the decade we flew, which was as much as 22 years before that first scientific testing.

General, any observer would conclude that the VA’s threshold of probably has been well-met in our case. Our aircrews, maintenance personnel, flight nurses and medics have been exposed to dioxin, our parent service has confirmed this contamination and its danger, and the federal agency responsible for reaching the definitive conclusion about that has voiced their finding quite clearly. Any benefit of the doubt must rest in our favor, but there is little doubt about this issue.

We must ask that the Department withdraw its statements concerning the lack of TCDD contamination and the unlikelihood of personnel exposure. Outside scientists have called the VA’s preparation of their C-123 position “unscientific.” Some of the authors cited have specifically asked that their works have no relation to aircrew exposure. Several of the authors cited insist aircrews have been exposed, and yet the inference of the VA reports is that the sum of evidence available speaks against a reasonable possibility of aircrew exposure.

That simply is not so. Yet, these statements discourage veterans from considering Agent Orange claims. The statements discourage VSOs from working on our claims, regardless of our proven legitimate eligibility for claiming TCDD exposure.

Benefit of the doubt is supposed to fall on the veteran’s side. We have exceeded the threshold of any reasonable benefit of the doubt, and indeed quite the opposite – there is very little doubt that we weren’t exposed.

As we understand it, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs can designate our aircraft (since destroyed by the USAF because of their contamination) as Agent Orange exposure sites. Please do so. If instead, some other action on your part leads to our veterans receiving medical care for their Agent Orange-presumptive illnesses, please bring us relief via that path instead.

As volunteer aircrews we willingly flew these older airplanes and accepted the extra hazards of flight inherent in them. The Army really needed these aircraft and their unique short-field capabilities, as we proved in several REFORGER exercises. Nobody knew about the contamination during the years we flew but certainly everyone knows now! Our duty was to fly, and now the VA’s duty is to address our medical concerns resulting from exposure to dioxin.

We’d be grateful for an opportunity to discuss this with you or a representative, but we’d be better served by your executive action in designating our old airplanes as Agent Orange hotspots so that we can proceed with fair evaluation of our claims.

And our claim, sir, is “Boots on the Airplane.”

Sincerely,

For the C-123 Veterans:

 

Wesley T. Carter, Major, USAF Retired
Chair

 


    Wes Carter

Welcome Home Parade for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of War

Support the troops in Welcome Home parade March 31 Tucson, Ariz., February 27, 2012 — Arizonans from all walks of life will cheer the troops and wave American flags at a long overdue parade to welcome home returning servicemen and women from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The Saturday parade on March 31 begins at 10:30 a.m. in downtown Tucson. Parade viewers are encouraged to bring small American flags to wave. The parade salutes veterans and active-duty personnel in the U.S. armed services who fought in the Operation Iraqi Freedom or Operation Enduring Freedom–Afghanistan wars. All other veterans are invited to participate. The parade’s organizer, Alan Toppel, said, “Our valiant warriors need to be honored for their service to our country and the brave sacrifices they have made for the cause of freedom.” The City of Tucson Veterans’ Affairs Committee unanimously endorsed the parade. Committee Chair Vern Pall said, “This will be a memorable parade and a proud day for our community. The Committee appreciates the chance to say welcome home and thank you to these troops.” The parade will progress north on Stone Avenue from Pennington Street, move west on Franklin Street, then turn south on Main Avenue, east on Alameda Street, south on Church Avenue, and then head east on Pennington. The parade will end where it began at Stone and Pennington. The parade organizing committee welcomes parade entries, sponsorships, volunteers, and donations. Forms are available on the Facebook page at http://tinyurl.com/TWHVP. For more information, please contact Alan Toppel at (520) 495-7064 or email tucsonswelcomehome@gmail.com.

Veterans Affairs Budget Request 2013

Department of Veterans Affairs outlines FY2013 funding request
 

VA Department of Veterans Affairs
Office of Public Affairs
Media Relations
Washington, DC 20420
(202) 461-7600
www.va.gov
News Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

VA Budget Request Tops $140 Billion for Veterans Programs

WASHINGTON — With more than 1 million active-duty personnel scheduled to join the ranks of America’s 22 million Veterans during the next five years, the President has proposed a $140.3 billion budget for the Department of Veterans Affairs for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.
“As our newest Veterans return home, we must give them the care, the benefits, the job opportunities and the respect they have earned, while honoring our commitments to Veterans of previous eras,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki.
Shinseki said the budget proposal, which must be approved by Congress, would fund services for newly discharged Veterans, continue the drive to end homelessness among Veterans, improve access to benefits and services, reduce the disability claims backlog, improve the Department’s collaboration with the Defense Department and strengthen its information-technology program that is vital for delivering services to Veterans.
“As we turn the page on a decade of war, we are poised at an historic moment for our Nation’s armed forces,” Shinseki said. “The President has charged VA to keep faith with those who served when they rejoin civilian life.”
The budget request includes $64 billion in discretionary funds, mostly for medical care, and $76 billion for mandatory funds, mostly for disability compensation and pensions.
If approved by Congress, the new spending levels would support a health care system with 8.8 million enrollees and growing benefits programs serving nearly 12 million Servicemembers, Veterans, family members and survivors, including the eighth largest life insurance program in the nation; education benefits for more than 1 million Americans; home loan guarantees for more than 1.5 million Veterans and survivors; plus the largest national cemetery system in the country.

Here are highlights from the President’s 2013 budget request for VA.

Medical Care

The President’s proposed budget seeks $52.7 billion for medical care, a 4.1 percent increase over the $50.6 billion approved by Congress for the current fiscal year, and a net increase of $165 million above the advance appropriations level already enacted for FY 2013.
For the next fiscal year, VA estimates 6.33 million patients will use VA for health care. About 610,000 of those patients will be Veterans of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. The budget request also would provide:
* $403 million for the gender-specific health care needs of women Veterans, improving their access to services and treatment facilities;
* $6.2 billion for mental health, a 5.3 percent increase in funding over the current level, making possible increased outreach and screenings, expansion of innovative technologies for self-assessment and symptom management of post-traumatic stress disorder, and enhancements to programs that reduce the stigmas of mental health;
* $7.2 billion for long-term care, meeting VA’s commitment to provide long-term care in the least restrictive and most clinically appropriate settings, such as non-institutional programs that serve a daily population of about 120,000 people;
* $583 million in direct appropriations for medical research, which receives another $1.3 billion from other sources, with emphasis on research for traumatic brain injury, suicide prevention, PTSD and genomic medicine;
* $792 million to support the activation of health care facilities, including new hospitals in New Orleans, Las Vegas, Denver and Orlando, Fla.
Funding in VA’s major construction account of $396.6 million is provided to continue construction of new medical facilities at Seattle, Dallas, St. Louis and Palo Alto, Calif.
Since enactment of the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act in 2009, VA includes an advance appropriations request for medical care in the Budget submission. Included in today’s spending request is $54.5 billion for FY 2014, which begins Oct. 1, 2013. This request for advance appropriations will support nearly 6.38 million unique patients and fulfill our commitment to Veterans to provide timely and accessible high-quality medical services. The Administration will review the initial advance appropriations request in the FY 2014 budget cycle.

Veterans Job Corps

The 2013 budget proposes $1 billion over five years for a Veterans Job Corps, a new effort to leverage skills Veterans developed in military service for a range of jobs protecting and rebuilding America’s public lands. The initiative would put up to 20,000 Veterans to work on projects to restore America’s lands and resources.

Disability Pay, Pensions

In the next fiscal year, VA projects it will receive about 1,250,000 claims for Veterans disability benefits. This is a 4 percent increase from the 1.2 million projected for this fiscal year.
Shinseki noted that today’s claims from Veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, on average, total 8.5 disabilities per Veteran, a rate nearly double that for claims by Veterans of earlier eras and a substantial increase in the workload for VA employees who administer the benefits system.
By 2013, the budget projects no more than 40 percent of compensation and pension claims will be more than 125 days old, a significant cut from the 60 percent of claims exceeding that mark this year. Other improvements funded by the new budget include:
* A new case-management operating model that moves less complicated claims more quickly through the system;
* Additional eBenefits self-service features that allow registered Servicemembers, Veterans and their families to apply for benefits and manage certain aspects of their benefits accounts online;
* Publicly available electronic medical questionnaires that allow private physicians to provide VA with exactly the information needed for Veterans claims for disability compensation; and
* National implementation of a system for processing disability claims that will have all of VA’s regional offices, working in a digital, near-paperless environment by the end of 2013.

Veterans Homelessness

The proposed VA budget for fiscal year 2013 contains nearly $1.4 billion for programs that prevent or treat homelessness among Veterans. This is an increase of 33 percent, or $333 million, over the 2012 level, continuing the Department’s steady progress toward ending Veteran homelessness by 2015.
In the past year, the number of Veterans homeless on a given night has declined from 76,300 in 2010 to about 67,500 in 2011. By emphasizing rescue and prevention, the budget request envisions driving down the numbers to 35,000 by the end of fiscal year 2013. Some specific efforts funded in the new budget are:

* $21 million to provide 200 coordinators who will help homeless Veterans with disability claims, housing problems, job and vocational opportunities, and problems with the courts;

* $300 million to provide grants and technical assistance to community non-profits to maintain Veterans and their families in their current housing or to get them rapidly into housing;
* Provide grants and per diem payments to community-based organizations offering transitional housing to 32,000 homeless Veterans; and
* Build upon the recent success of a VA hiring fair in Washington, D.C., which drew about 4,000 Veterans and has led to about 500 hiring offers to date.

Education Program

The Post-9/11 GI Bill will help pay the educational expenses of more than 606,000 Servicemembers, Veterans, family members and survivors during the next fiscal year. Over the past two years, VA has successfully deployed a new IT system to support processing of Post-9/11 GI Bill education claims, and has seen a dramatic improvement in the timeliness and accuracy of its processing program during the same period.
A separate funding increase of nearly $9 million would expand the “VetSuccess on Campus” program from 28 campuses to 80, serving approximately 80,000 Veterans. The program provides outreach and supportive services during their transition from the military to college.

Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment

The budget request for 2013 would provide $233 million, a 14 percent increase over 2012, to administer VA’s vocational rehabilitation and employment program. The increase is focused on expanding services to wounded, ill and injured Servicemembers to ease their transition to the civilian sector. Program participants are expected to increase from 108,000 in 2011 to 130,000 next fiscal year.

National Cemeteries

Fiscal year 2013 will see $258 million for operation and maintenance of VA’s system of 131 national cemeteries if the budget proposal is accepted. The budget supports the initial implementation of a new policy to establish a national cemetery presence in eight rural areas.
Funding in VA’s Minor Construction budget request would finance $58 million for land acquisition, gravesite expansion and columbaria projects. Also included in the budget request is funding for online mapping of gravesite locations from the IT account.
With a funding request of $46 million, VA will continue its partnership with the states by funding the construction, expansion and improvement of state Veterans cemeteries, while continuing its support to Veterans cemeteries on tribal lands.

Information Technology

The 2013 budget proposal includes $3.3 billion for information technology, a $216 million increase over the current budget. VA operates one of the largest consolidated IT organizations in the world, supporting over 300,000 VA employees and about 10 million Veterans and family members who use VA programs. About 80 percent of the IT budget supports the direct delivery of health care and benefits to Veterans and their families.
The Department will build upon its unparalleled success rate of 89 percent on-time delivery of IT milestones by continued improvements in support of access to health care, ending Veterans homelessness and improved benefits delivery. VA will implement the integrated Electronic Health Record with Department of Defense, easing the transition from active status to the VA health care system by upgrading electronic health records for all Veterans to a single, common platform.
IT funding will enable VBA’s transformation to a digital and near paperless environment using the Veterans Benefits Management System, decreasing claims processing times by 50 percent, while VA’s telehealth programs will take advantage of new IT technologies, increasing VA’s ability to provide health care to Veterans in remote locations.
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Benefits For Veterans Exposed To Radiation

The National Association of Atomic War Veterans is on the prowl for approximately 195,000 veterans who were exposed to atomic atmospheric tests between 1945-1962. They are also looking for those who were part of the occupation forces at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

If these individuals have experienced any one of 21 different cancers that are directly linked to radiation exposure they may be entitled to a one time compensation of $75,000 from the United States Government, in accordance with the 1990 Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, or a monthy stipend up to $2673.oo a month from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Since 1990 very few have applied for this benefit that is also extended to widows and their children if the veteran died with the proper diagnosis and service connection.

The applicants need medical records and the location of the exposure.  The application will be reviewed and verified by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.

I am sure the reader here is stunned that this reminder memorandum is being sent around the nation years after most of  these men and women have passed on.

Did anyone actually think the government responds in a timely fashion?

I knew a fine gentlemen, who resided in Nogales,Arizona, that was at ground zero at Hiroshima in Grave Identification. No question about his exposure. His name was Joel. He was 86 year old. I helped him with his claim. He could not collect it because he was a dual citizen of the U.S. and Mexico.

Another local man named Jim, was exposed while attending ABC School, (Atomic Biological Chemical Warfare), in 1962. He has enumerable rare cancers. He has been fighting for his claim for 21 years.

Give the Government credit. They learned how to speed up the research for the modern day veterans. It only took them 30 years to recognize Agent Orange exposure.

 

Review Of Veterans Affairs Budget 2013

Believe it or not the input from the Veterans across America is important to this committee. It is my belief that the Director, former General Erik Shinseki is doing a stellar job under the most difficult national financial travail the VA has ever seen.
Feedback is the breakfast of champions. Tell us what you would like changed or improved about the Veterans Administration and I will be happy to forward it to the listening people.
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 14, 2012
CONTACT: Amy Mitchell (202) 225-3527

***** MEDIA ADVISORY *****

Committee to Review 2013 VA Budget

WASHINGTON, D.C.—On Wednesday, February 15, 2012, at 10:30 A.M., in Room 334 of the Cannon House Office Building, the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs will hold a hearing to review the 2013 VA Budget.

WHO: House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs

WHAT: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Request for FY2013
WHEN: 10:30 A.M., Wednesday, February 15, 2012, Room 334, Cannon House Office Building

WITNESS LIST

Panel 1
The Honorable Eric K. Shinseki, Secretary
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Accompanied by:
The Honorable Robert A. Petzel, M.D., Under Secretary for Health
Veterans Health Administration

Ms. Allison A. Hickey, Under Secretary for Benefits
Veterans Benefits Administration

Mr. Steve L. Muro, Under Secretary for Memorial Affairs
National Cemetery Administration

The Honorable Roger W. Baker, Assistant Secretary for Information and Technology
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Mr. W. Todd Grams, Executive In Charge, Office Of Management & Chief Financial Officer
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Panel 2
Mr. Carl Blake, National Legislative Director
Paralyzed Veterans of America

Mr. Raymond C. Kelley, Director, National Legislative Service
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States

Mr. Joseph A. Violante, National Legislative Director
Disabled American Veterans

Ms. Diane Zumatto, National Legislative Director
AMVETS

Mr. Timothy M. Tetz, Director, National Legislative Commission
The American Legion

For more news from the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, please visit:
 
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Vietnam War History Some May Have Missed


OUR GENERATION
There; but for the grace of GOD:
A little history most people will never know.
Interesting Veterans Statistics off the Vietnam Memorial Wall

“Carved on these walls is the story of America , of a continuing quest to preserve both Democracy and decency, and to protect a national treasure that we call the American dream.” ~President George Bush

SOMETHING to think about – Most of the surviving Parents are now Deceased.

There are 58,267 names now listed on that polished black wall, including those added in 2010.

The names are arranged in the order in which they were taken from us by date and within each date the names are alphabetized. It is hard to believe it is 36 years since the last casualties.

Beginning at the apex on panel 1E and going out to the end of the East wall, appearing to recede into the earth (numbered 70E – May 25, 1968), then resuming at the end of the West wall, as the wall emerges from the earth (numbered 70W – continuing May 25, 1968) and ending with a date in 1975. Thus the war’s beginning and end meet. The war is complete, coming full circle, yet broken by the earth that bounds the angle’s open side and contained within the earth itself.

The first known casualty was Richard B. Fitzgibbon, of North Weymouth , Mass. Listed by the U.S. Department of Defense as having been killed on June 8, 1956. His name is listed on the Wall with that of his son, Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Richard B. Fitzgibbon III, who was killed on Sept. 7, 1965.

There are three sets of fathers and sons on the Wall.

39,996 on the Wall were just 22 or younger.
8,283 were just 19 years old.
The largest age group, 33,103 were 18 years old.
12 soldiers on the Wall were 17 years old.
5 soldiers on the Wall were 16 years old.
One soldier, PFC Dan Bullock was 15 years old.
997 soldiers were killed on their first day in Vietnam .
1,448 soldiers were killed on their last day in Vietnam .
31 sets of brothers are on the Wall.
Thirty one sets of parents lost two of their sons.
54 soldiers on the Wall attended Thomas Edison High School in Philadelphia . I wonder why so many from one school.
8 Women are on the Wall. Nursing the wounded.
244 soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor during the Vietnam War; 153 of them are on the Wall.
Beallsville , Ohio with a population of 475 lost 6 of her sons.
West Virginia had the highest casualty rate per capita in the nation. There are 711 West Virginians on the Wall.
The Marines of Morenci – They led some of the scrappiest high school football and basketball teams that the little Arizona copper town of Morenci (pop. 5,058) had ever known and cheered. They enjoyed roaring beer busts. In quieter moments, they rode horses along the Coronado Trail, stalked deer in the Apache National Forest . And in the patriotic camaraderie typical of Morenci’s mining families, the nine graduates of Morenci High enlisted as a group in the Marine Corps. Their service began on Independence Day, 1966. Only 3 returned home.
The Buddies of Midvale – LeRoy Tafoya, Jimmy Martinez, Tom Gonzales were all boyhood friends and lived on three consecutive streets in Midvale, Utah on Fifth, Sixth and Seventh avenues. They lived only a few yards apart. They played ball at the adjacent sandlot ball field. And they all went to Vietnam . In a span of 16 dark days in late 1967, all three would be killed. LeRoy was killed on Wednesday, Nov. 22, the fourth anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Jimmy died less than 24 hours later on Thanksgiving Day. Tom was shot dead assaulting the enemy on Dec. 7, Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.
The most casualty deaths for a single day was on January 31, 1968 ~ 245 deaths. TET!
The most casualty deaths for a single month was May 1968 – 2,415 casualties were incurred.

For most Americans who read this they will only see the numbers that the Vietnam War created. To those of us who survived the war, and to the families of those who did not, we see the faces, we feel the pain that these numbers created. We are, until we too pass away, haunted with these numbers, because they were our friends, fathers, husbands, wives, sons and daughters. There are no noble wars, just noble warriors.