Salpointe High School Honors Veterans

Salpointe Catholic High School
Home of the Lancers

Please join us for our annual Veteran’s Day Mass
in honor of all Veteran’s and those Salpointe alumni who died in active military service.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009
7:15 a.m.
Salpointe Chapel (campus map)
1545 E Copper St
Tucson, AZ

Reception to follow in the Carmelite Conference Room.
Please share this invitation with family members and friends.

The Gregory W. Stewart – Vietnam 1968 Memorial Plaque
Remembering Salpointe’s Alumni Who Died In Active Military Service
Frederick X. Bir ’56 – California 1964
Joseph P. Moclair, Jr. ’60 – Connecticut 1963
James R. Cronin ’65 – Vietnam 1967
John J. Roberts ’65 – Vietnam 1967
John A. Delozier ’66 – Vietnam 1968
Timothy M. Harrington ’66 – Vietnam 1968
John E. Malone ’62 – Vietnam 1968
William J. Whitehead ’58 – Vietnam 1968
Paul Bourret ’63 – Spain 1970
William A. Pahissa ’65 – Vietnam 1970
Hugh J. Shevlin ’67 – Vietnam 1970
Michael J. Paulsen ’68 – Vietnam 1970
Timothy E. Sullivan ’68 – Vietnam 1970
James L. Feeney ’64 – Sea of Japan 1974
Peter M. Brady ’70 – North Carolina 1979
David A. Barba ’75 – Arizona 1981
Alfred M. Espinoza ’84 – Philippines 1988
John W. McClure ’70 – Texas 1995
Gilbert Munoz ’93 – North Carolina 2005
Rest In Peace, Lancers

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Nam Jam Reminder

The 22nd annual Nam Jam is tomorrow Saturday Nov.7th at Kennedy Park. Starts at 9am and runs until 7pm. The event is free. The parking is free. Beer sales start at noon. The participating Bands are: The Rowdies/ Angel Perez Band/ Blue Horse Blues/ Sarge Lintecum/ Dirtnap/ Bobby Soto &Los Recuerdos/ and Steel Ribbon closing out with their traditional Santana set. Steel Ribbon is lead by one of VVA’s first presidents and retired KOVA photographer Jim Randall.

Nam Jam has become a signature event for southern Arizona veterans and many of our guests who travel to just spend the day in fellowship with their comrades.

As one of the early organizers and a Past President of VVA I can testify to the importance of our coming together as a family of common experiences. My adult children and my wife will also acknowledge how meaningful it has been for them to congregate with other children and spouses of Vietnam Vets.

While it is rumored that Nam Jam may be seeing its days, I for one think it should continue in some form as there remains to be quiet healing that occurs in silent ways at this event.

The Vietnam War altered this nation with an indelible ink. Our generation of men and women warriors continue to bring insights to the new the soldier, sailor and Marine combatant.That link is too important to not keep alive. In fact it is a linkage that gives the young troops meaning, even when it is absent. We know that path.

I would like to see a segue of Nam Jam into Sand Jam. The OEF/OIF Vets can take this 22 year tradition of gathering in solidarity and call it their own, and us Grampas can help them pour the beer!

Nam Jam is a trademarked name. Meaning this is one of a kind in Tucson.

For two decades Nam Jam proceeds have helped the homeless, families, dependents, widows and orphans of Veterans. They have worked diligently to educate the public about the truth of Agent Orange,(which still has untold effects) and the status of POW/MIA’s, a problem that has yet to be abated.

So, what do the readers of Veteran Veritas think about launching SAND JAM to join forces with Iraq and Afghan Veterans to keep the event alive and well for the next generation of veterans? Please comment. Mike

Wounded Troops Face Too Much Bureaucracy

How do you support our troops?
How do you support our troops?
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Monday that troops injured in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan continue to face too many bureaucratic hurdles. Paperwork alone for them can be “frustrating, adversarial, and unnecessarily complex,” Gates said. Gates spoke at a mental health summit with Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki. By appearing publicly together, they sought to reinforce their commitment to tackling veterans’ health issues and the stigma associated with seeking mental health care. Among U.S. troops who have fought in the recent wars, Gates says brain injuries and mental health ailments are “widespread, entrenched and insidious.”

This is the way we support our troops? By causing frustration and adversity? The stigma associated with mental health issues exists not only among active duty military, but perhaps even more importantly, it exists in a very big way in the public. Yes, it’s difficult to understand the issues of combat veterans, but we MUST understand them, for the sake of those who put their lives on the line for our country, and for the hope of a future without war.

Support our troops by educating yourself about post traumatic stress.

HONOR OUR VETERANS WITH BOY SCOUT TROOP 747

Since I was 7 years old in Dixon, Illinios I have honored and participated in Veterans Day events with my family and friends. This one is special as a couple of Scouts in this Troop are my grandsons. So the tradition marches on. God Bless the USA Veteran. We sleep well at night knowing you are on duty.

HONOR OUR VETERANS

WHEN: Thursday, November 12th

TIME: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

WHERE: Corpus Christi Catholic Church
300 N. Tanque Verde Loop Road
(east of Houghton/north of Broadway)

All Veterans and families are welcome for this special recognition of those who have served our country. The Veterans will be introduced, can share stories from their time in the service, and answer questions from the scouts. Everyone can bring pictures and items for display on the Memory Tables. There will be a flag retirement ceremony and refreshments to complete the evening. The public is invited to this 5th annual event.

HISTORY OF THE EVENT
In 2005, our Boy Scout Troop decided to do something for Veterans Day as we were meeting the day before the official holiday. We had a handful of Veterans attend, including several of our own registered adult leaders. The Scouts demonstrated proper dismantlement of the American flag during readings about the meaning of the flag along with information on flag protocol.

After the Veterans introduced themselves, the boys had a chance to ask questions and listen to their stories. It was the quietest, most attentive Troop meeting we ever had. Afterward, during refreshments, the scouts continued conversations with the Vets until the evening was over.

We decided to do it again the following year and added a flag retirement outdoors during which the Veterans each laid a piece of material in the ceremonial fire while naming a fellow serviceman they were remembering and honoring. The boys and families were very moved by this and requested that we include flag retirement every year.

We now do our opening flag ceremony and go right to the introductions to give our guests more time to share about themselves and their experiences.

In 2008 we had 14 veterans in attendance. From WW2 to a young man currently serving in the Air Force, the scouts were treated to a broad spectrum of military stories. We added a Memorial Table where families could display photos and artifacts of their loved ones’ military career, along with mementos the veterans brought with them such as uniforms, medals and dog tags. The flag retirement ceremony brought many to tears with the heartfelt remembrances of fallen comrades and family members.

Each year, we are privileged to honor our Veterans and the living history that our youth get to experience, along with the warm sense of community, truly embodies the Scout Spirit.

Our Scouts and their families consistently say that it is one of their favorite Troop events; the solemnness, respect and reverence displayed by the scouts during the evening certainly confirms it.

Dana Coyle
T747 Committee Chair
296-6167
danersaz@yahoo.com

—— End of Forwarded Message

Ready Fire Aim Health Care Proposal

Okay, ready yourselves fellow veterans. I am going to suggest a three-pointer from, “downtown,” as the basketball sportscasters tag a long shot.

Did you know that Lyndon Johnson modeled our Medicare system of care and delivery after the Canadian model? They actually helped us set up the whole program in 1965. And now we buy are drugs in bulk and at a discount from them. I guess this is how we returned the favor.
The primary distinction is that they and most all of the “emerging democracies” that we are defending around the world all provide universal coverage and they sure do not call it socialism. Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, Australia, all use private hospitals– not the goofy,near socialist, non-profits that we prop up. Even the new Czech Republic, that we vehemently defend, offers free health care to all. Anyone want to guess who is paying for health care in Iraq?

Did you know that many of the pharmaceutical remedies that the Veterans Health Care system prescribes, come from Canada?

Wall Street Journal, in 2002, published a comparison of the cost of drugs that the VA pays compared to Medicare and the balance of the ungodly profitable private health care delivery entities. The gap makes one gasp. One example tells all, as so many were similar.

One year supply of Prozac:( you know, the drug we now prescribe for troops before they go into combat). is about $140.oo for the VA. It is approximately $390.oo for the rest of the loyalists to the current usurious system.

So, why not just bring in Canada as a permanent trade partner, like China, cheap clothes, cheap electronic, cheap drugs, all the same eh?

And here is the 3-pointer. With a permanent pact for drugs at a discount from Canada, we can by-pass the American Pharmaceutical Dynasty, and provide free health care to ALL veterans and their families. I mean All veterans who serve at least 3 years.

This would account for millions of citizens and their families, and save more millions by not using Medicare. It would fly right over bi-partisan poppycock that is going to be with us through Christmas and beyond. What veteran is going to turn down free health care because of political ideology? And can you imagine the impact on the recruiting efforts that are going to be a real uphill battle in the next year or two?

In lieu of the platitudinous, “support the troops” bumper stickers, we could offer our men and women, who put themselves in harms way, something tangible and lasting. Our allies do. And the nations we defend do. Why not the U.S of A that declares itself to be constitutionally formed for equality?

With the Veterans Administration being the current gold standard for electronic medical records, they are prepared to fill this task. Cripes, they could even sell their software, like Windows 7, to all the others who have done little since 1965, save, bilk the system.

Health care for all veterans and their families would add a whole new dimension to the Hippocratic Oath of, “Do no harm.” Not to mention the expanded meaning of “Semper Fidelis.”

Obama To Sign Very Necessary VA Budget Bill

Signing of the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act by the President

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 20, 2009

President Obama to Sign Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act into Law

WASHINGTON – On Thursday, October 22, at 2:15 pm EST, the President will sign into law the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act, which guarantees a timely and predictable flow of funding for Department of Veterans Affairs medical care. He will deliver brief remarks and be joined by Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki, Members of Congress, and leaders from various Veterans Service Organizations in the East Room Ceremony.

WHAT: President Obama Signs Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act into Law

WHERE: White House East Room

WHEN: Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 2:15 PM EST
Pre-set: 1:15 PM at the North Doors of the Palm Room
Final Gather: 1:45 PM at the North Doors of the Palm Room

God Bless
Jose M. Garcia
National Executive Director
Catholic War Veterans,USA
josegarcia4@sbcglobal.net
Better to understand a little than to misunderstand a lot.
In God We Trust

State of The VA Address Compliments of Catholic War Veterans

You all remember General Shinseki right? The one who said we need more troops in Iraq and Afghan to do the job right. Think he was a prophet? He lost his job with GW over his honest assesment. As the saying goes,”the first casualty of War is the truth”

Shinseki Delivers “State of VA” Message to Congress

WASHINGTON – Today, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki delivered his “State of VA” testimony to Congress. Here is Secretary Shinseki’s written statement.

the Honorable Eric K. Shinseki,

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

written Statement before

the HOUSE COMMITTEE on Veterans Affairs

october 14, 2009

Chairman Filner, Ranking Member Buyer, Distinguished Members of the Committee:

Thank you for this opportunity to report on the state of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). We appreciate the long-standing support of this committee and its unwavering commitment to Veterans – demonstrated, yet again, through your support of advanced appropriations legislation for VA. Let me also express my thanks to the Committee and the President for a remarkable 2010 Budget that provides an extraordinary opportunity to begin transforming the Department. We deeply appreciate your confidence and the confidence of the President in building on the 2008 and 2009 Congressional enhancements to VA’s budgets in those years. We are determined to provide a return on those investments.

I would also like to acknowledge the presence of representatives from a number of our Veterans’ Service Organizations. They are our partners in assuring that we have met our obligation to the men and women who have safeguarded our way of life. We always welcome their advice on how we might do things better.

Mr. Chairman, this past February, you held a similar hearing on the state of the Department, which allowed me to benefit from the insights and advice of Members of this Committee early in my tenure as Secretary. In turn, I was also able to offer early assessments of VA’s mission and some principles that I felt might help me quickly communicate my intent and direction for the Department. I have learned a lot in the last 8 ½ months from some truly impressive people at VA; from Veterans, individually and collectively; from the VSOs; from Members of this and other Committees, and from a host of other key stakeholders, who share both the Department’s interests and my personal passion for making VA the provider of choice in the years ahead. My current vectors for this Department remain guided by those principles that I mentioned in testimony in February. As I continue working to craft a shared Vision for the Department, one that will be enduring, we remain guided by our determination to be People-Centric – Veterans and the workforce count in this Department, Results-driven – we will not be graded on our promises, but by our accomplishments, and Forward-looking – we strive to be the model for governance in the 21st Century.

This testimony comprises a nine-month progress report on the state of our Department.

We have been busy putting into place the foundation for our pursuit of the President’s two goals for this Department: transform VA into a 21st Century organization, and ensure that we provide timely access to benefits and high quality care to our Veterans over their lifetimes, from the day they first take their oaths of allegiance until the day they are laid to rest.

Every day 298,000 people come to work to serve Veterans. Some do it through direct contact with Veteran clients; others do so indirectly. But, we all share one mission – to care for our Nation’s Veterans, wherever they live, by providing them the highest quality benefits and services possible. We work each and every day to do this faster, better, and more equitably for as many of our Nation’s 23.4 million Veterans who choose us as their provider of services and benefits. Today, that number is roughly 7.8 million Veterans.

Veterans put themselves at risk to assure our safety as a people and the preservation of our way of life. Not all of them are combat Veterans, but all of them were prepared to be. VA’s mission is to care for those who need us because of the physical and mental hardships they endured on our behalf, the cruel misfortunes that often accompany difficult operational missions, and the reality of what risk taking really means to people in the operational environment.

The health care, services, and benefits we provide are in great demand – a demand which grows each year. More than four million new Veterans have been added to our health care rolls since 2001. Some of our youngest Veterans are dealing with the effects of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and other polytrauma injuries. We will provide them the care they deserve, even as we continue to improve the quality of care we deliver to Veterans of all previous generations – World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Desert Storm, and a host of smaller operational deployments. The President’s decision to relax income thresholds established in 2003, which froze Priority Group 8 enrollments, has enabled many more Veterans to access the excellent health care available through our Veterans Health Administration (VHA). It has increased VA’s workload, but we are prepared to accommodate up to 500,000 enrollees, who are being phased in over the next four years. While the Post 9-11 GI Bill offers serving military and our newest Veterans expanded educational opportunities, it has challenged the Veterans Benefits Administration’s (VBA’s) paper-bound processes. We are moving aggressively to transform VBA from paper to electrons, even as the entire organization picks up the pace of producing more, better, and faster decisions both in disability claims and educational benefits. Finally, the honor of providing final resting places for our Veterans remains a source of immense professional pride for the National Cemeteries Administration (NCA), and indeed the rest of VA. NCA consistently meets the demographic standards associated with Veteran burials and exceeds expectations with regard to care and compassion for heroes’ families. NCA interred approximately 107,000 Veterans in the past year in our 130 national cemeteries. Five new national cemeteries have been opened, and sixteen cemetery projects have been funded for expansion in the past year to address our requirements in this area.

Our Veterans have earned and deserve our respect and appreciation for their sacrifices and the sacrifices of their families. We at VA are privileged to have the mission of demonstrating the thanks of a grateful Nation. We are obliged to fulfill these responsibilities quickly, fully, and fairly – especially given the current economic climate. All of us, at VA, accept these increases to an already demanding workload, and we will meet our responsibilities at a high standard. Doing so will offer VA as a genuine provider of choice for those Veterans who, today, choose to go elsewhere for insurance, health care, education loans, home loans, and counseling. To achieve this kind of standing with Veterans, we must make entitlements much easier to understand and then far more simple to access.

Each day, dedicated, compassionate professionals at VA do the extraordinary to meet the needs of Veterans across a broad spectrum of programs and services.

Among them:

· VA is second only to the Department of Education in providing educational benefits of $9 billion annually.

· VA is the Nation’s eighth largest life insurance enterprise with $1.1 trillion in coverage, 7.2 million clients, and a 96 percent customer satisfaction rating.

· VA guarantees nearly 1.3 million individual home loans with an unpaid balance of $175 billion. Our VA foreclosure rate is the lowest among all categories of mortgage loans.

· VA is the largest, integrated health care provider in the country, with 7.9 million Veterans enrolled in our medical services system.

· VA developed and distributed enterprise-wide, VistA, the most comprehensive electronic health record (EHR) in the country, linking our 153 medical centers to their 774 Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs), 232 Veterans Centers, as well as outreach and mobile clinics.

· VA received an “Among the Best” ranking for its mail order pharmaceutical program, ranking with Kaiser Permanente Pharmacy and Prescriptions Solutions, in a J.D. Power and Associates survey of 12,000 pharmacy customers.

· A VA employee, Dr. Janet Kemp, received the “2009 Federal Employee of the Year” award from the Partnership for Public Service three weeks ago. Under Dr. Kemp’s leadership, VA created the Veterans National Suicide Prevention Hotline to help Veterans in crisis. The Hotline has received over 185,000 calls – an average of 375 per day – and interrupted over 5,200 potential suicides.

· VA has staffed a Survivors’ Assistance Office to advocate for Veteran and service member families. As the “Voice of Survivors,” its purpose is to create and modify programs and services to better serve survivors.

· VA’s OIT (Office of Information Technology) office and VBA collaborated with the White House to create a program soliciting original ideas from VA employees and participating VSOs, ranging from improving process cycle times for benefits to increasing Veteran-satisfaction with the claims process. Close to 4,000 process-improvement ideas have been received.

· VA operates the country’s largest national cemetery system with 130 cemeteries.

· VA senior executives are accountable and responsible when these systems succeed and when they fall short. As of September 2009, VA maintained one of the lowest executive to employee ratios (approximately 312 career executives to approximately 298,400 employees). I have seen their dedication to serving Veterans.

I am proud of our people and our accomplishments, but there have been challenges, missed opportunities, and gaps in providing the quality of care and services Veterans expect and deserve. We will continue to look for and find our failures and disappointments; we will be open and candid with Veterans, the Congress, and other stakeholders when we fall short; and we will correct those problems, take the right lessons from them, and improve the process to achieve the best outcomes. In recent months, we have discussed with the Committee lapses in quality control and safety regarding endoscopes and other reusable equipment, erroneous notifications of ALS diagnoses, and expensive IT initiatives that were not meeting program thresholds.

Near term challenges have been riveting. Since enactment, the new Post 9/11 GI Bill has been our top priority for successful implementation by August 3, 2009. These completely new benefits, requiring tools different from the ones available to us, resulted in massive Information Technology (IT) planning efforts on short timelines. Delays and setbacks required VA to exercise emergency procedures two weeks ago to issue checks to Veterans to cover their expenses early in program execution. Uncertainty and great stress caused by these delays were addressed through these emergency procedures, which remain in effect. We will mature our information technology tools to assure timely delivery of checks in the future.

We must work short-term and long-term strategies to reduce the backlog of disability claims, even as they increase in number and complexity. In July, we closed out a VA-record 92,000 claims in a single month – and received another 91,200 new ones. We are consolidating and investing in those IT solutions integral to our ability to perform our mission while looking hard at those that have not met program expectations – behind schedule or over budget. In July, we paused 45 IT projects, which failed to meet these parameters. These projects are under review to determine whether they will be resumed or terminated. We know this is of intense concern and interest to Members of this Committee, and we appreciate your continued support and insights.

In working these near-term demands, we are simultaneously addressing, in 2010 and the years beyond, improvements to programs and new initiatives critical to Veterans – reducing homelessness, enhancing rural health care, better serving our growing population of women Veterans, and refreshing tired, and in a number of cases unsafe, infrastructure.

To embrace these priorities, we have put in place a strategic management process to focus our stated goals and sharpen accountability. We are close to releasing a Department of Veterans Affairs Strategic Plan, in which I look forward to outlining for you the strategic goals that will drive our decisions over the next five years, and potentially longer.

I’ve now engaged in eight months of study, collaboration, and review of as many aspects of VA’s operations with as many of our clients, employees, and stakeholders, as the Deputy Secretary and I could manage. I’ve visited VA facilities – large and small, urban and rural, complex and simple – all across the country. I’ve spoken with leaders, staffs, and Veterans. I also invited each of our 21 Veterans Integrated System Network (VISNs) directors to share with me, in dedicated 4-hour briefings, their requirements; their priorities; their measurements for performance, quality, and safety; and their need for resources – people, money, and time. I’ve also received multiple briefings from VBA leadership on the extent and complexity of the benefits we provide to Veterans. This has been time well-invested – invaluable.

The Veterans I’ve met in my travels have been uplifting. Many struggle with conditions inevitable with old age; others live with uncertain consequences from exposures to environmental threats and chemicals; still others have recently returned from Afghanistan and Iraq bearing the fresh wounds of war—visible and invisible.

Out of my discussions with Veterans, three concerns keep coming through—access, the backlog, and homeless Veterans.

Access: Of the 23.4 million Veterans in this country, roughly eight million are enrolled in VA for health care. 5.5 million unique beneficiaries have used our medical facilities. We want to ensure that any Veteran who can benefit from VA services knows the range of services available to them. VA will continue reaching out to all Veterans to explain our benefits, services, and the quality of our health care system. A major initiative which will expand access is the President’s decision to relax the income thresholds established in 2003, which prohibited new Priority Group 8 enrollments. We expect up to half-million new Priority Group 8 enrollees in the next four years.

Another initiative to expand and improve access is the evolution of our health care delivery system. About a decade ago, VA decided to move toward the system of care being provided in the private sector by turning its focus to outpatient care and prevention. As a result, VA’s 153 medical centers are the flagships of our Nation-wide integrated health care enterprise, and the Department also provides care through a system of 774 Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs), 232 Vet Centers, outreach and mobile clinics, and when necessary, contracted specialized health care locally. This fundamental change in delivery of care, means organizing our services to meet the needs of the Veteran rather than the needs of the staff – Veteran-centric care.

Our next major leap in health care delivery will be to connect flagship medical centers to distant community-based outpatient clinics and their even more distant mobile counterparts via an information technology backbone that places specialized health care professionals in direct contact with patients via telehealth and telemedicine connections. Today, we are even connecting medical centers to the homes of the chronically ill to provide better monitoring and the prevention of avoidable, acute, episodes. This means that Veterans drive less to receive routine health care and actually have better day-to-day access. It also means higher quality and more convenient care, especially for Veterans challenged by long distances; and, prevention will mean healthier lives.

While this new, evolving VA model of health care is less about facilities and more about the patient, it is also more economically efficient and a better use of available resources. Health Care Centers that provide outpatient care, including surgery and advanced diagnostic testing, have lower construction costs compared to traditional hospitals. They better serve communities, and are more cost effective, than small, traditional hospitals with low numbers of Veterans receiving inpatient care. To provide emergency and inpatient care when needed, VA forms alliances and relationships with local civilian facilities for that care. Outreach clinics also allow us to provide health care services in communities with smaller numbers of Veterans. These part time clinics are situated in leased space, and provide in-person care closer to the Veterans’ homes.

Critical to improving Veterans’ access to health care is our campaign to inform and educate them about how VA delivers care. Using social media web sites, including MyHealtheVet and Second Life, we are making contact with Veterans, including our OEF/OIF veterans, who did not respond to traditional outreach – lectures, pamphlets, and telephone calls.

All of these initiatives to improve access are conducted with assessments of patient privacy issues. Privacy is important for all Veterans, but we especially want women Veterans to know that the VA will provide their care in a safe, secure and private environment that is designed to meet their needs. While approximately 8 percent of Veterans are women, only about 5.5 percent of VA patients are women. My intent is to create an environment of care that will attract more of them to the VA as their first choice for care.

The disability claims backlog: Reduction of the time it takes for a Veteran to have a claim fairly adjudicated is a central goal for VA. The total number of claims in our inventory today is around 400,000, and backlogged claims that have been in the system for longer than 125 days total roughly 149,000 cases. Regardless of how we parse the numbers, there is a backlog; it is too big, and Veterans are waiting too long for decisions.

In April, President Obama charged Defense Secretary Gates and me with building a fully interoperable electronic records system that will provide each member of our armed forces a Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record (VLER) that will track them from the day they put on the uniform, through their time as Veterans, until the day they are laid to rest.

VA is a recognized leader in the development and use of electronic health records. So is the Department of Defense. Our work with DoD is already having an impact on the way we are able to provide quality health care to our Veterans. To date, VA has received from DoD two and one-half million deployment-related health assessments on more than one million individuals, and we are able to share between Departments critical health information on more than three million patients. Although our work is far from finished, our achievements here will go beyond Veterans and our Service Members to help the Nation as a whole, as have many of VA’s historic medical innovations.

We are working with the President’s Chief Performance Officer, Chief Technology Officer, and Chief Information Officer, to harness the powers of innovation and technology. In collaboration with our own IT leadership, we intend to revolutionize our claims process – faster processing, higher quality decisions, no lost records, fewer errors. I am personally committed to reducing the processing times of disability claims. We have work to do here. But we understand what must be done, and we are putting the right people to work on it.

Homelessness: Veterans lead the Nation in homelessness, depression, substance abuse, and suicides. We now estimate that 131,000 Veterans live on the streets of this wealthiest and most powerful Nation in the world, down from 195,000 six years ago. Some of those homeless are here in Washington, D.C. – men and women, young and old, fully functioning and disabled, from every war generation, even the current operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. We will invest $3.2 billion next year to prevent and reduce homelessness among Veterans—$2.7 billion on medical services and $500 million on specific homeless housing programs. With 85 percent of homelessness funding going to health care, it means that homelessness is a significant health care issue, heavily burdened with depression and substance abuse. We think we have the right partners, the right plans, and the right programs in place on safe housing. We’ll monitor and adjust the balance as required to continue increasing our gains in eliminating Veteran homelessness. We are moving in the right direction to remove this blot on our consciences, but we have more work to do.

Effectively addressing homelessness requires breaking the downward spiral that leads Veterans into homelessness. We must continue to improve treatment for substance abuse, depression, TBI and PTSD; better educational and vocational options, much better employment opportunities; and more opportunities for safe and hospitable housing. Early intervention and prevention of homelessness among Veterans is critical. We have to do it all; we can’t afford any missed opportunities.

The psychological consequences of combat affect every generation of Veterans. VA now employs 18,000 mental health professionals to address their mental health needs. We know if we diagnose and treat, people usually get better. If we don’t, they won’t – and sometimes their problems become debilitating. We understand the stigma issue, but we are not going to be dissuaded. We are not giving up on any of our Veterans with mental health challenges, and definitely not the homeless.

We have approximately 500 partners in nearly every major town and city across the country helping us get homeless Veterans off the streets. With 20,000 HUD-VASH vouchers from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and our $500 million to invest in 2010 to cover safe housing and rehabilitation for Veterans we have been able to coax off the streets, we are going to continue reducing the number of homeless Veterans next year, and each year thereafter, for the next five years.

I know that this committee and the President are committed to helping VA end homelessness among Veterans. We are going to do everything we can to end homelessness among Veterans over the next five years. No one, who has served this Nation, as we have, should ever find themselves living without care – and without hope. I know that there are never any absolutes in life, but unless we set an ambitious target, we would not be giving this our very best efforts in education, jobs, mental health, substance abuse, and housing.

Education: The President kicked off our post 9/11 new GI Bill program on 3 August, 2009. 267,000 Veterans have applied and been found eligible to participate in this benefits program this year, and we project that as many as 150,000 more may apply next year. The first time we did this, in 1944 during World War II, our country ended up being richer by 450,000 trained engineers, 240,000 accountants, 238,000 teachers, 91,000 scientists, 67,000 doctors, 22,000 dentists, and a million other college-educated Veterans. They went on to provide the leadership that catapulted our economy to worlds largest and our Nation to leader of the free world and victor in the cold war.

Slow processing of enrollment certificates by VA and slower than anticipated submission of enrollment documents by some educational institutions delayed issuance of checks to schools and Veterans. On 2 October, VA began an emergency disbursement of monies nationally, working with the Treasury Department to provide almost $70 million in advance payments to more than 25,000 Veterans in the first two days of the program. These payments continue as a way to bridge the gap until the Veterans’ routine, monthly payments begin. We will do whatever it takes to get checks into the hands of Veterans for their education, and we will improve the delivery system to eliminate the barriers to effective distribution of benefits in future years.

jobs: This summer, I addressed over 1,700 Veteran small business owners at the 5th Annual Small Business Symposium on 21 July. I reminded them that Veterans hire Veterans because they know what they’re getting. Customers and partners value their skills, knowledge, and attributes and are eager to work with them. Just last fall, in a survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management, over 90 percent of employers said they valued Veterans’ skills, in particular, their strong sense of responsibility and teamwork.

VA puts Veterans first in our contracting awards because we recognize the on-time, on-budget, quality solutions they bring to our contracting needs. In fiscal year 2008, our unique “Veterans First” buying program resulted in VA’s spending more than $2 billion on Veteran-owned small businesses. That represented 15 percent of our procurement dollars, up five percent from the previous year. $1.6 billion of that amount was invested in service-disabled, Veteran-owned businesses.

At VA, our experience is that Veteran-owned small businesses have a high likelihood for creating new jobs, developing new products and services, and building prosperity. Increasing opportunities for Veteran-owned small businesses is an effective way to help address many needs during this economic downturn.

So, education, jobs, health care, and housing: We have work to do here; but we have momentum, and we know where we are headed. We are positively engaged with the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and the Small Business Administration to work our collaborative issues.

A transformed VA will be a high-performing 21st century department, a different organization from the one that exists today. Beyond the next five years, we’re looking for new ways of thinking and acting. We are asking why, 40 years after Agent Orange was last used in Vietnam, this Secretary had to adjudicate claims for service-connected disabilities that have now been determined presumptive. And why, 20 years after Desert Storm, we are still debating the debilitating effects of whatever causes Gulf War Illness. If we do not stay attuned to the health needs of our returning veterans, 20 or 40 years from now, some future Secretary could be adjudicating presumptive disabilities from our ongoing conflicts. We must do better, and we will.

VA’s mission is inextricably linked to the missions of the Departments of Defense (DoD) and Health and Human Services (HHS)—and closely linked to the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Education, Labor, and the Small Business Administration. We are not an independent operator. We administer the Servicemen’s Group Life Insurance program and are prepared to deliver benefits for any of the 2.25 million men and women of all Services and Components, who are insured through it. And, together with DoD, we operate two of the Nation’s largest health care systems—one for health care to meet operational commitments and one to deal with the long term health care effects of those operations. As a result, we are a participant with HHS in discussions of how to best deliver health care. VA’s budget requirements are largely determined by the operational missions performed by the courageous men and women in the DoD and the entitlements and benefits which accrue to them for taking those risks. Additionally, VA is uniquely positioned to help with ideas and a model for providing more Americans with better, more cost-effective health care, something VA has long pursued on behalf of Veterans.

Largely hidden from public view is an enormous VA effort to improve management infrastructure and implement a Departmental model of management that insures significant improvement in human resources, IT, acquisition, financial and facilities management. This effort is critical to strengthening both our performance and accountability mechanisms across VA.

In all our missions, VA seeks to become more transparent by providing Veterans and stakeholders more information about our performance than ever before. We want Veterans to have the information they need to make informed decisions. We will be sharing more data about the quality of VA health care than ever before. Using our own web sites, we are displaying information on quality including Health Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) scores, wait times, and Joint Commission results.

Another element of transparency is disclosure when mistakes are made. We have aggressively disclosed problems with the reprocessing of endoscopes and with brachytherapy at several sites. These issues were found by our own staff and then publicly disclosed. In each of these cases, we notified Congress, the media, VSOs, and the patients. While this process is at times painful, it is the right thing to do for Veterans and the Nation and will ultimately result in greater trust and better quality.

Summary

Our mission is to serve Veterans by increasing their access to VA benefits and services, to provide them the highest quality of health care available, and to control costs to the best of our ability. Our efforts will remain focused on transforming VA into a 21st Century organization—People-centric, Results-driven, and Forward-looking, and further refinement of our strategic plan to achieve our commitments and provide metrics for holding ourselves accountable. We are applying business principles that make us more efficient and effective at every opportunity.

However, transforming VA and the current pace of military operations have required new levels of resources. The care of Veterans, like the sacrifices they make on behalf of the Nation, endure for many years after conflicts are resolved. This investment in our Veterans will, over time, provide increasing returns for them, for the Nation, and for VA. Providing Veterans the care and benefits they have earned is a test of our character.

# # #

God Bless
Jose M. Garcia
National Executive Director
Catholic War Veterans,USA
josegarcia4@sbcglobal.net
Better to understand a little than to misunderstand a lot.
In God We Trust

Veterans Legal Service

I read at least 20 veteran publications combing for material that I deem helpful to the largest population of veterans. Many of the press releases I get are from the Catholic War Veterans, and they are quite good and chock full of practical help. While my Blog has never been retail, it does appear that this lawyer and his promotional narrative may well be of assistance to our readers and family members. It is a shame that we do not have more Attorneys in Arizona trained in Veteran Law. It seems a bit odd to have such a dearth, as are veteran population per capita is quite high. The lawyers whose resume follows, appears to know his game.

I am writing to introduce myself and to provide you with information on my background and Veteran’s law practice. I represent Veteran’s who have been denied benefits by the Board of Veterans’ appeals. Additionally, I assist Veteran’s who are victims of medical malpractice and serious personal injury. Our VA appellate representation is done on a pro bono basis, at no charge to the Veteran or spouse. Please feel free to call me with any questions.

The Veterans Law Firm

Peter J. Meadows, P.A.

Graduate of Florida State University

Graduate of Washington and Lee University School of Law

Member of the Florida Bar

Member of the Bar of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Member of the Bar U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims

Member of the National Organization of Veterans Advocates

Member of the Veterans Law Section of the Federal Bar Association

Mission Statement

Our Mission is to provide high quality legal representation to veterans and their families, where the Board of Veterans’ Appeals has denied a veteran’s claim within the previous 120 days or who have been the victim of medical malpractice or grievous personal injury.

The Veterans Law Firm

1314 E. Las Olas Blvd. Suite1088 Fort Lauderdale , FL 33301

Ph: (800) 868-2813 Fax: (800) 868-2815

Veterans Appeals
Before the U.S. Court of Appeals
for Veterans Claims

At Peter J. Meadows, P.A. we work with Veterans who have appeals before the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. We will pursue Veterans’ claims vigorously in order for our Veterans to receive the benefits, which they have earned and to which they are entitled.

We are able to represent Veterans from every state in the country. No matter where a Veteran lives, we can represent him or her before the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in Washington D.C.

Our representation of Veterans is provided without charge. Instead, our firm seeks compensation from the government under the Equal Access to Justice Act. We use our inside knowledge of the Veterans appeals process to aggressively manage an appeal. We promise to keep our clients informed of the progress of the appeal. The Veteran can be fully confident that we take the best interests of our clients very seriously.

We are also happy to assist in matters relating to:

· Medical Malpractice

Experience Matters

The veteran’s appeals process can be intimidating. Mr. Meadows served as a law clerk intern to Chief Judge Kenneth B. Kramer of the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims and as an appellate attorney with the Appellate Litigation Group of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of the General Counsel. His Veteran’s appeals experience and knowledge can help bring positive results following years of frustrating denials. We want veterans to enjoy the benefits, which they have earned and to which they are entitled. Mr. Meadows’ ten years of VA and Veterans law experience is yours to help win your claim.

Agent Orange: The Gift That Keeps on Giving

Secretary of Veterans Affairs establishes service connection in association with Agent Orange

VA Department of Veterans Affairs
Office of Public Affairs
Media Relations

Washington, DC 20420
(202) 461-7600
www.va.gov

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Oct. 13, 2009

VA Extends “Agent Orange” Benefits to More Veterans – Parkinson’s Disease, Two Other Illnesses Recognized

WASHINGTON –Relying on an independent study by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki decided to establish a service-connection for Vietnam Veterans with three specific illnesses based on the latest evidence of an association with the herbicides referred to Agent Orange.

The illnesses affected by the recent decision are B cell leukemias, such as hairy cell leukemia; Parkinson’s disease; and ischemic heart disease.

Used in Vietnam to defoliate trees and remove concealment for the enemy, Agent Orange left a legacy of suffering and disability that continues to the present. Between January 1965 and April 1970, an estimated 2.6 million military personnel who served in Vietnam were potentially exposed to sprayed Agent Orange.

In practical terms, Veterans who served in Vietnam during the war and who have a “presumed” illness don’t have to prove an association between their illnesses and their military service. This “presumption” simplifies and speeds up the application process for benefits.

The Secretary’s decision brings to 15 the number of presumed illnesses recognized by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

“We must do better reviews of illnesses that may be connected to service, and we will,” Shinseki added. “Veterans who endure health problems deserve timely decisions based on solid evidence.”

Other illnesses previously recognized under VA’s “presumption” rule as being caused by exposure to herbicides during the Vietnam War are:

• Acute and Subacute Transient Peripheral Neuropathy
• AL Amyloidosis
• Chloracne
• Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
• Diabetes Mellitus (Type 2)
• Hodgkin’s Disease
• Multiple Myeloma
• Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
• Porphyria Cutanea Tarda
• Prostate Cancer
• Respiratory Cancers, and
• Soft Tissue Sarcoma (other than Osteosarcoma, Chondrosarcoma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, or Mesothelioma)

Additional information about Agent Orange and VA’s services and programs for Veterans exposed to the chemical are available at www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/agentorange.

PS. From M.Brewer. And you gotta wonder if Depleted Uranium is not next. Many soldiers who went back to Iraq after Desert Storm, to clean up the Bradley Tanks for future use, did not come home healthy and many died. The major media never hinted once that this incident occurred. Has journalistic lock down arrived?

Hang out for combat veterans and families.