Category Archives: Veterans Benefits

Honoring Arizona's Indian Vietnam Veterans

To Arizona Vietnam Veterans, Indian Vietnam veterans, families & friends:

The Arizona Department of Veterans’ Services, the Arizona Military Museum, and the Heard Museum  is proud to host an event Honoring Arizona’s Indian Vietnam Veterans. 

DATE:  May 25, 2013   Sign in 6:30 pm for table seating. Program begins at 7:00pm 

LOCATION:  Heard Museum, 2301 North Central Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85004

SEATING: Limited to 250 and seating will be assigned to those who respond first

ATTIRE: Business/casual or Army Class A or service equivalent, military decorations

COST:  FREE

 

This event is for all who desire to honor Arizona’s Indian Vietnam veterans and is part of the 50th Commemoration of the Vietnam War activities whose first stated objective is:

To thank and honor veterans who served in the Vietnam War, including personnel who were held as prisoners of war or listed as missing in action, for their service and sacrifice on behalf of the United States and to thank and honor the families of these veterans.

The event includes a Color Guard, a Native American Drum Group, special blessings, short speeches, videos, TAPS, a special presentation to Arizona’s Indian Vietnam veteran warriors, and catered refreshments.

Native Americans have one of the highest records of service in the Vietnam War, per capita, of any ethnic group. A majority of these men enlisted, and a disproportionate number served in combat units—airmobile, infantry, armor, airborne, and artillery. Their distinctive cultural value of the proud warrior tradition compelled them to serve.

We look forward to seeing many Indian Vietnam veteran warriors, their families, and friends at this event. The Heard Museum’s Steele Auditorium can hold only 250 attendees, so mail your completed RSVP form back ASAP.  Your name must be on our list for you to attend.  If you have any questions call Joe at 520-868-6777.

 

Colonel Joey Strickland, USA (Ret.), Director         

                        Arizona Department of Veteran Services

                            

Colonel Joseph E. Abodeely, USA (Ret.)

                        Director, Arizona Military Museum

 

Marcus Monenerkit

                        Heard Museum

Vet to Vet

Okay, yeah a little trite for some…I don’t think I have ever posted a copy of one of these mega emailings, or any such thing, but this one has a bit of levity, and what the hey, its still the New Year. Be well Veterans of America!

 

Vet to Vet

 

When a Veteran leaves the ‘job’ and retires to a better life, many are jealous, some are pleased, and others, who may have already retired, wonder if he knows what he is leaving behind, because we already know.

1. We know, for example, that after a lifetime of camaraderie that few experience, it will remain as a longing for those past times.

2. We know in the Military life there is a fellowship which lasts long after the uniforms are hung up in the back of the closet.

3. We know even if he throws them away, they will be on him with every step and breath that remains in his life.     We also know how the very bearing of the man speaks of what he was and in his heart still is.

These are the burdens of the job.     You will still look at people suspiciously, still see what others do not see or choose to ignore and always will look at the rest of the Military world with a respect for what they do; only grown in a lifetime of knowing.

Never think for one moment you are escaping from that life.     You are only escaping the ‘job’ and merely being allowed to leave ‘active’ duty.

So what I wish for you is that whenever you ease into retirement, in your heart you never forget for one moment that you are still a member of the greatest fraternity the world has ever known.

NOW… Civilian Friends vs. Veteran Friends Comparisons:

CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Get upset if you’re too busy to talk to them for a week.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Are glad to see you after years, and will happily carry on the same conversation you were having the last time you met.
—————————————————-
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Have never seen you cry.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Have cried with you.
—————————————————
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Keep your stuff so long they forget it’s yours.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Borrow your stuff for a few days then give it back.
————————————————–
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Know a few things about you.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Could write a book with direct quotes from you.
—————————————————
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Will leave you behind if that’s what the crowd is doing.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Will stand by you no matter what the crowd does.
—————————————————
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Are for a while.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Are for life.
—————————————————
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Have shared a few experiences…
VETERAN FRIENDS: Have shared a lifetime of experiences no citizen could ever dream of…
—————————————————
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Will take your drink away when they think you’ve had enough.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Will look at you stumbling all over the place and say, ‘You better drink the rest of that before you spill it !!’     Then carry you home safely and put you to bed…
—————————————————–
CIVILIAN FRIENDS: Will ignore this.
VETERAN FRIENDS: Will forward this.
—————————————————-
A veteran  – –  whether active duty, retired, served one hitch, or reserve is someone who, at one point in their life  – –  wrote a blank check made payable to ‘The Government of the United States of America ‘ for an amount of ‘up to and including my life’.

From one Veteran to another, it’s an honor to be in your company.     Thank you for your service to our country and defending the freedoms we enjoy.

Life is neither a spectator sport, nor a dress rehearsal.

 

Warning Regarding "Veteran Affairs Services"

Good Morning Ladies and Gentlemen,

From the US Department of Veterans Affairs.
Please disseminate widely.

VA Warning: “Veterans Affairs Services”

Organization Not Affiliated, Getting Vet IDs.

The Office of the Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has
requested dissemination of the following :

An organization called Veterans Affairs Services (VAS) is providing benefit
and general information on VA and gathering personal information on veterans.
“This organization is not affiliated with VA in any way.

[The organization described itself at its web page at:
http://www.vaservices.or/g/us/index.html ]

VAS may be gaining access to military personnel through their close
resemblance to the VA name and seal. Our Legal Counsel has requested that we
coordinate with DoD to inform military installations, particularly
mobilization sites, of this group and their lack of affiliation or endorsement
by VA to provide any services. In addition, GC requests that if you have any
examples of VAS acts that violate chapter 59 of Title 38 United States Code,
such as VAS employees assisting veterans in the preparation and presentation
of claims for benefits, please pass any additional information to Mr.
Daugherty at the address below.

Michael G. Daugherty,
Staff Attorney,
Department of Veterans Affairs,
Office of General Counsel

Boost For Student Veterans

Sorry about the delay in posting this. I comb hundreds of articles to determine what is most useful for local veterans. VVA is always the most helpful. Us Vietnam Veterans of America are late bloomers ya know!

Senator Webb Introduces NDAA Amendments to Help Student  Vets

National Salute To Veterans

On November 27, Vietnam veteran Senator Jim Webb (D-VA) introduced two amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)  regarding the bipartisan “Military and Veterans Educational Reform Act of 2012″ (S.2179).

Summary of Amendment #2957 (both of these provisions are in the larger bill S.2179):

  • Requires that all programs receiving funding from Tuition Assistance and Post-9/11 GI Bill be “Title IV” eligible, which is already a requirement for schools receiving other types of federal funding. Title IV eligibility requires, among other things, accreditation by a Department of Education-approved accrediting agency; new schools to have an undergraduate withdrawal rate for all students of no more than 33%; and mandated reviews by the Department of Education if a school has high dropout or default rates, which could lead to sanctions or other penalties.
  • Requires the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to conduct a compliance review of an educational institution when certain quality measures are triggered.

Summary of Amendment #2958 (this is S. 2179; includes the two provisions in Amdt. #2957):

  • Requires that all programs receiving funding from Tuition Assistance and Post-9/11 GI Bill be “Title IV” eligible, which is already a requirement for schools receiving other types of federal funding. Title IV eligibility requires, among other things, accreditation by a Department of Education-approved accrediting agency; new schools to have an undergraduate withdrawal rate for all students of no more than 33%; and mandated reviews by the Department of Education if a school has high dropout or default rates, which could lead to sanctions or other penalties.
  • Expands the training responsibilities of the State Approving Agencies by requiring them to conduct outreach activities to veterans and members of the Armed Forces; to conduct audits of schools; and to report those findings to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
  • Requires the Secretary of Veterans Affairs and the Secretary of Defense to develop a centralized complaints process to report instances of misrepresentation, fraud, waste, and abuse, and other complaints against educational institutions.
  • Requires that all schools with 20 or more students enrolled in VA and/or DOD educational assistance programs provide support services to veterans and military students.
  • Requires the Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense, to the extent practicable, to provide one-on-one, in-person educational counseling to veterans and members of the Armed Forces participating in programs of educational assistance at or before the individual enrolls.
  • Requires the Secretary of Veterans Affairs and the Secretary of Defense to conduct a compliance review of an educational institution whenever certain quality measures are triggered.

Close Commissaries?

Ah yes, yet another clandestine plan to privatize the planet and promulgate crony capitalism. Sorry, but commissaries are about more than a head of lettuce. Does not seem that the cost of gas is factored in either. How little do you want to give the soldier that fights for those groceries?

 

http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2012/12/military-budget-cutting-plan-shut-down-commissaries-120312w/

Report blasts suggestion to close commissaries

By Rick Maze – Staff writer
Posted : Monday Dec 3, 2012 16:23:24 EST

A budget-cutting plan to shut down commissaries and instead pay an annual allowance to active-duty families for the projected increase in their grocery bill has drawn a sharp rebuttal from a research group affiliated with the military resale industry.

The Military Resale and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Center for Research, affiliated with the American Logistics Association, says in a report released Monday that the $400 allowance wouldn’t come close to making up for the higher grocery costs, especially for families.

“Patrons who consistently use their commissary, can save nearly $4,500 per year for an average family of four, over $2,800 for a couple, and more than $1,500 for a single service member,” the report says.

Getting rid of taxpayer-subsidized commissaries, with groceries available on base only at exchange stores, would save the government about $1.3 billion a year, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which has suggested this cost-cutting measure for years.

CBO has recommended cushioning families from what could be a 7 percent increase in grocery prices by providing a grocery allowance that would reduce total government savings to about $1 billion a year.

The proposed allowance would average $400 a year, but could be targeted to specific pay grades as a retention benefit or “to benefit junior enlisted members with large families,” CBO says in its March 2011 version of a report called Reducing the Deficit: Spending and Revenue Options.

Military retirees and their families would not receive the annual grocery allowance under CBO’s assumptions.

Because closing commissaries and consolidating grocery sales with exchanges takes time, CBO estimates the immediate savings would be just $200 million the first year but would reach $2.8 billion over five years and $9.1 billion over 10 years.

CBO’s suggestion to close commissaries has been included in many deficit reduction proposals, most recently by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. In his plan for cutting Pentagon waste, Coburn said closing the 175 stateside commissaries while keeping overseas stores makes sense to him.

“By getting the Department of Defense out of the grocery business here in the United States, Congress could increase military pay across the board and allow military members to shop at the stores of their choice,” Coburn’s report says.

But the resale research report notes that commissary patrons “save 32 percent at commissaries and 24 percent at exchanges, according to independent surveys and market basket analysis. This equates to $4.584 billion per year in savings.”

“This is a direct compensation benefit to the Department of Defense in that it extends the household budgets of military, personnel, families and retirees. If the benefit ceased to exist, military total compensation would drop correspondingly unless pay would be increased to provide the funds needed to shop at more expensive alternative sources,” the resale research center report says.

http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2012/12/military-budget-cutting-plan-shut-down-commissaries-120312w/?org=403&org=403&lvl=100&ite=5313&lea=1592&ctr=0&par=1

Arizona Small Business Development Center Veterans Conference

Mayor Rothschild welcomes veterans to the Arizona Small Business Development Center’s 3rd Annual Veterans Conference, where veterans learn what’s available to help them start or grow their own businesses.

Contact:

Lisa Markkula, Communications Director
Office of the Mayor
o: (520) 791-4201

TUCSON, AZ – December 5, 2012

Who: Mayor Jonathan Rothschild
Representative from SBDC
Former participant/veteran success story

What: Mayor Rothschild will welcome U.S. military veterans to the 3rd Annual Veterans Conference, put on by the Arizona Small Business Development Center. The Conference provides veterans with information on what’s available to help them start or grow their own businesses – from technical assistance to procurement to financing.

“It’s especially important we make veterans aware of all that’s available to help them succeed in business,” said Mayor Rothschild. “We owe our veterans so much and this is just one small way to repay that debt.”

Where: Tucson Police Department Westside Police Service Center, 1310 W. Miracle Mile, Tucson, AZ

When: Thursday, December 6, 2012; Mayor’s remarks at 9:30 a.m.; press conference follows at 9:45 a.m.

Half Of Ameican Veterans Not Aware of Benefits

The most striking aspect of this phenomena, is the number of men in their 80’s  for whom I help gain the benefits they earned and were promised upon enlistment. many of them do not distinguish between the disability process and basic VA Health care.  Many more are not aware of the non-service connected disability process. America works hard to keep its veterans healthy and out of hospitals.

Most Veterans Still Unaware of Benefits

Week of November 26, 2012

More than half of America’s veterans say they have little or no understanding of the benefits due them, despite efforts over recent years to match returning soldiers with the help and services they need. One major change came last week when a new law will mandate all departing servicemembers go through a series of detailed benefits sessions. For more information, read the full article on Military.com and visit the Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Services webpage at www.va.gov/landing2_vetsrv.htm.

Happy Thanksgiving American Veteran

When thinking of prayer, I am reminded of the advice of my  spiritual mentor, “keep your prayers simple,” she said. “Help me and Thank you.”   I have been helped by so many of my veteran pals I have lost count. Thank you. Thank you.

There are times I wish that Thanksgiving was like Chanukah, an 8 day festival of thankfulness. We could then allow the depth of the meaning of gratitude to be a true compass. On this day of  commemorating our appreciation of the gifts of family, total freedom of choice and our own talents, we could sally forth to make it part of our breakfast meal every day.

Possibly then E Pluribus Unum would return the lexicon of daily living.

Thank you American Veteran. Thank you!

Veterans Cost Of Living Increase To Start December 1,2012

 

http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2012/11/military-senate-passes-cola-bill-111312w/

After delay, Senate passes veterans’ COLA

 

By Rick Maze – Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Nov 13, 2012 15:49:40 EST

By voice vote and with no apologies for unnecessary hand-wringing, the Senate passed a bill that provides 4 million veterans and survivors a 1.7 percent cost-of-living increase effective Dec. 1.

The measure now goes to the White House for President Obama’s signature.

The bill providing the COLA, HR 4114, had been left at the side of the legislative road in September when Congress took a break for the elections because of a still unexplained objection to the measure, which simply provides the same increase in disability and survivor benefits that automatically would occur for Social Security recipients and military retirees.

When Congress failed to pass the COLA bill Sept. 22, there was pre-election squabbling over the risk that the bill might not pass in time for the increase to first appear in January paychecks, as is customary.

That talk was fueled by a statement from the Veterans Affairs Department that if Congress didn’t act by Nov. 13, VA might not have time to adjust its payroll mechanism. VA later revised the processing time, saying veterans would be paid as long as Congress acted by early December and as long as it was an across-the-board increase.

Congress has resisted making the veterans’ COLA automatic because passing the measure each year gives lawmakers a way to tout their support for veterans in their re-election campaigns.

A freshman lawmaker, Rep. Jon Runyan, R-N.J., House Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s disability assistance panel, has proposed legislation to make veterans’ compensation automatically increase at the same time as Social Security, without the need for congressional involvement. His proposal passed the veterans’ committee this year but has not passed the full House and seems unlikely to become law before the current session of Congress ends.