New Veteran Club in Town

This past Friday, September 4th, a group of Iraq and Afghan Vets gathered at the Downtown Campus of Pima Community College to form a new Veterans Club. The timing is right and the energy is high for these young warriors to gather together in a brotherhood of common experiences and guide themselves through the trails of academic life.

I only wish we had such camaraderie after the Nam. Possibly college life would not have been laced with as many obstacles as the war itself. With only 10 years to use the GI Bill, it took many vets that long to adjust, and by then the benefits were gone.

These men and women are on their game. The organizational skills of many of the first time attendees were impressive. The group of soldiers, sailors and Marines wasted no time in electing a slate of officers and establishing meeting times, currently to be on Fridays at 1pm in the Student Life Conference Room at the Downtown Campus.

The club members submitted a variety of names and selected the name; PCC Vets4Vets.

The officers for the Charter Organization are as follows:

President: Scotty Scotton/ United States Army veteran of 5 Conflicts

Vice President: Chris Clemens/ United States Army

Secretary: Levi Godkin/ United States Navy

Treasurer: Sam Rodenberger/ United States Army

Faculty Advisor: Tim Kelliher/ Army Ranger/ 206-7207

Student Life Coordinator: Bill Marshall/ Work Study/ Former Parachute Instructor.

Staff Program Coordinator: Mike Lopez/ 206-7528

At Large Resource Staff: Bob Hyde/ United States Navy Submarines/ Adjunct Teacher in
Business and Tutor. Owner of Artistic Gifts on 4th Ave.

Michael Brewer/ United States Marine Corps/ Chaplain for Pointman
Ministries Inc/ Service Officer Marine Corps League Nighthawk 72
Detachment/ Mentor for Merritt Retreat Center for Returning
Veterans. 540-7000

Community Business Boosters: Civano Hair Salon in La Placita Village/ Sandra
Century 21 Heritage Real Estate/ Steve Sisson PhD.dog-tags
Cars4Vets

For more information contact the PCC Vets4Vets President; Scotty Scotton at 272-7031 or the Campus staff; Mike Lopez at 206-7528

SERV/ Supportive Education for Returning Veterans

The University of Arizona has a tremendous vanguard program for transitioning to academic life. The University Teaching Center in collaboration with the Southern Arizona VA Health Care, are offering an academic and workforce success program for returning veterans. The program consists of three college-credit courses that are cohort based wherein you will take these classes with other veterans. This program is tailored made with all of the veterans concerns at heart.
The classes increase your resilience and ability to manage stress, something I wished I had learned how to do prior to starting my college coursework right out of Vietnam…. a mistake. Ergo; 10 years to complete my degree!

There is a focus on memory improvement, problem solving skills, and working with the residual symptoms that linger from war. The fact that these classes are taken in the safe environment of peers is testimony to its innovative approach.

Call Maralynn Bernstein at the Veterans Affairs Service Office at the U of A. 520-621-950142-15560571

More Leathernecks

Once a Marine, always a Marine
Once a Marine, always a Marine
The few and the proud in the Marine Corps are not as few they used to be, according to Brig. General Robert Milstead Jr. of the Marine Corps Recruiting Command. The General tells us that the Corps has grown by 27.000 in the past two years. That is half the time that was allotted for expected growth.

In 2007 the Marines launched a program to reach a total of 202.000 Marines by 2012. The Corps is currently over the 200,000 mark. Much of the credit goes to the addition of 500 Recruiters and a budget for recruiting bonuses. The Marines have also retained much of their force. In 2008 35% of Marines re-enlisted. That is up from 24% in 2006. Army officials also reported meeting their goals for the third year in a row, adding 80,000 soldiers last year.

General Milstead said a teetering economy and a plunging job market may make enlistment more attractive, but he says the service remains attractive too. “Kids join the Marines because they want to be Marines, not because they are tired of flipping burgers.”

I did, and I am damn proud of the choice. The training is for life, and sticks. Semper Fi.

Online Chat Service for Vets

Department of Veterans Affairs establishes online chat service for Vets

Let no one say that our Veterans Administration is not in the vanguard of care and concern for the American Veteran. There are days that these folks are like the Gold Standard for Health Care. Even with the uninitiated maligning our Government, as if they are not US!

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
August 31, 2009

VA’s Suicide Prevention Program Adds Chat Service New Service Expands Online Access for Veterans

WASHINGTON – The Suicide Prevention campaign of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is expanding its outreach to all Veterans by piloting an online, one-to-one “chat service” for Veterans who prefer reaching out for assistance using the Internet.

Called “Veterans Chat,” the new service enables Veterans, their families and friends to go online where they can anonymously chat with a trained VA counselor. If a “chatter” is determined to be in a crisis, the counselor can take immediate steps to transfer the person to the VA Suicide Prevention Hotline, where further counseling and referral services are provided and crisis intervention steps can be taken.

“This online feature is intended to reach out to all Veterans who may or may not be enrolled in the VA health care system and provide them with online access to the Suicide Prevention Lifeline,” said Dr. Gerald Cross, VA’s Acting Under Secretary for Health. “It is meant to provide Veterans with an anonymous way to access VA’s suicide prevention services.”

Veterans, family members or friends can access Veterans Chat through the suicide prevention Web site (www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org). There is a Veterans tab on the left-hand side of the website that will take them directly to Veteran resource information. On this page, they can see the Hotline number (1-800-273-TALK), and click on the Veterans Chat tab on the right side of the Web page to enter.

Veterans retain anonymity by entering whatever names they choose once they enter the one-on-one chat. They are then joined by a counselor who is trained to provide information and respond to the requests and concerns of the caller.

If the counselor decides the caller is in a crisis, the counselor will encourage the Veteran to call the Suicide Prevention Hotline, where a trained suicide prevention counselor will determine whether crisis intervention techniques are required.
The pilot program, which has been in operation since July 3, has already had positive results. In one instance, the online counselor determined that a Veteran in the chat required immediate assistance. The counselor convinced the Veteran to provide the counselor with a home telephone number and then remained in the chat room with the Veteran while the hotline staff called the number and talked to the Veteran’s mother. The hotline counselor worked with the Veteran’s mother to convince the Veteran to be admitted to a medical facility for further treatment.

“The chat line is not intended to be a crisis response line,” said Dr. Janet Kemp, VA’s National Suicide Prevention Coordinator at the VA medical center in Canandaigua, N.Y., where VA’s trained counselors staff the chat line 24 hours a day, seven days a week. VA’s suicide prevention hotline is also staffed continuously.

“Chat responders are trained in an intervention method specifically developed for the chat line to assist people with emotional distress and concerns,” Kemp said. “We have procedures they can use to transfer chatters in crisis to the hotline for more immediate assistance.”

Both Veterans Chat and the VA’s Suicide Prevention Hotline have been established under the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which was established through collaboration between VA and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Since becoming operational in July 2007, VA’s Suicide Prevention Hotline has received more than 150,000 calls, resulting in 4,000 rescues.

Band of Brothers
Band of Brothers

Duty Time Determines Level of Benefits

Chapter 33, Post GI Bill education benefits are based on how long the honorably discharged veteran served on active duty after September 10th, 2001. To receive your full benefits you must have served for three years of active duty September 10th, 2001.

If you are going to school now under the Montgomery GI Bill be careful if you are thinking of switching from the old; Chapter 30 to the new Chapter 33, as the switch is irrevocable, and it may actually be less money.

90 consecutive days 40 percent
6 months cumulative 50 percent
12 months cumulative 60 percent
18 months cumulative 70 percent
24 months cumulative 80 percent
30 months cumulative 90 percent
36 months cumulative 100 percent.

The Dependents of a 100% Disabled Veteran also receive benefits for 45 months of education. In many States the tuition is waived for dependents of the disabled. This provision does not exist in Arizona, as a result of unenlightened leadership. This writer intends to lobby to change this status for Arizona veterans.

Any way you look at this, Yogi Bera would still say; “cash it is kinda like money.”

33 Million in Grants For Job Training

The Department of Labor expects to outreach to at least 18,000 veterans in the form of 115 Grants to help them find jobs. These funds will be distributed amongst public agencies and non-profits in 33 States.

A huge portion of those grants are earmarked for homeless veterans. $25 million to be exact.
The Department of Labor says these grants will provide vets with the following services;

Skills assessment
Individual Job Counseling
Class room training
Skills upgrading and retraining.

One of the assets to this program is that all you have to show is your DD-214. You do not have to have a disability rating.

Another 7.5 million is intended to help approximately 3000 vets find “green jobs” through the Veterans Workforce Investment Program. The jobs are to be in energy efficiency, renewable energy and clean vehicles. (does that mean more car washes!) Information can be gained at “wwwdoleta.gov” “Green Jobs” Also at “www.dol.gov/vets

The Forgotten Veterans Project

The Forgotten Veterans Project

BACKGROUND

For two generations our government has used the bravery and sacrifice of the Navajo and Hopi Code talkers in WWII as a recruiting tool to entice young member of the Navajo and Hopi to enlist in the military. Today a large percentage of Navajo and Hopi men and women are veterans or active military.

Despite the fidelity and service of these veterans, our country has failed to live up to its duty to care for those men and women who won and have maintained the nations freedom. Across the Navajo and Hopi Nations, there remains a disproportionately lower level of VA Services and Benefits. Most notably, there is no VA Hospital or Community Basic Outpatient Clinic (CBOC) on either Nation, forcing veterans to travel up to six hours in order to receive proper VA medical treatment.

Leo Chischilly, Director, Navajo Department of Veterans Affairs states that 12,837 veterans are currently registered. Many newly separated veterans are not registered, however. In July 2008 they submitted a report with the number of veterans in the Navajo Nation but the VA rejected the numbers, stating they needed to be revisited.

Earlier this year, March 2, 2009, Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley an Prescott VA Hospital officials signed an agreement with the goal of the Navajo and Hopi Nation being building a VA (CBOC) clinic in Chinle. The clinic is proposed to provide many of the specialized services that veterans currently must travel hundreds of miles in order to receive. Although this is a positive step, according to a Navajo Nation Department of Veterans Affairs staffer, this agreement took 30 years to accomplish. Why does it take so many decades for our Government to even begin to meet its obligations to these veterans?

The next step is an even higher hurdle. In order to open the clinic, Congress must appropriate funding for it and recruit staffers with an awareness of cultural differences needed to be fostered and understood.

POINTS OF ACTION

1) In an attempt to raise awareness among all Arizonans, collect pledges of support for the VA Clinic (CBOC) in Chinle, AZ. Ask community members to contact their Members of Congress, in a effort to gain support for funding of the clinic and proper staffing. Ask community members to volunteer to help us to raise public awareness.

2) In an attempt to raise awareness among all Arizonans, collect and pass on health-care related stories of Navajo and Hopi veterans. These anecdotes will showcase the lack of services and long travel times involved. These anecdotes, with accompanying videos and pictures, will drive New Media opportunities to garner support and encourage volunteer sign-ups.

3) Working together with the Democratic Native American Caucus, the Arizona Democratic Veterans Caucus will present to the Arizona Democratic State Party Meeting in October 2009, a resolution asking for support of the immediate funding and proper staffing of a CBOC in Chinle Arizona.

4) The Veterans Caucus will do a follow-up phone bank to remind individuals who signed pledge sheets to call, write or email their Congressional delegation in support of immediate funding and proper staffing of a CBOC in Chinle, Arizona.

Attached to this email is a pledge sheet for each of you to get three names. Ronald Canady of Tucson has mailed me a sheet of Veterans he signed in his area. Bill Gertz, of Mesa, has turned five sheets. Ben Love has emailed me that he has 40 signatures. Please feel free to use the attachment to print out as many sheets as you need. In printing the document make sure the disclaimer at the bottom of the sheet is legible.

Please mail all completed sheets to the Arizona Democratic Party Headquarters, 2910 N. Central Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85012, ATTN: Veterans Caucus, or scan and email the documents to me at this email address. If either one to those two options is not possible please make sure all signed pledge sheet are turned in at the Arizona Democratic Party Meeting scheduled for October.

We believe that this is a fight worth fighting and it is an issue that we can win.

I would like to thank all of you for your support and participation.

Thank you

Bob Stelling

Chairman: the Arizona Democratic Veterans Caucus

Paid for by the Arizona Democratic Veterans Caucus | 2910 N. Central Ave | Phoenix, AZ 85012

Not authorized by any Candidate or Candidate Committee

The Greatest Generation


Local Event for World War ll Veterans

Subject: Tribute to WWII Veterans

Press Release

For Immediate Release
September 1, 2009
Contact: Walt Stephenson, Event Coordinator
Home: 520-398-4755
Cell: 520-591-0451

Tribute to WWII Veterans

The Pima County Republican Party is pleased to announce a “Tribute to WWII Veterans Event” at the Pima Air and Space Museum on Saturday October 10, 2009 starting at 4:30 PM.

This is a non political event, sponsored by the Pima County Republican Party, to pay tribute to the “The Greatest Generation”. “According to Veterans Administration Statistics our WWII Veterans are dying at a rate of 1500 to 2000 a day” stated Walt Stephenson, Event Coordinator. He went on to say” it is our goal to provide a forum in which the Southern Arizona Community can come together and honor our Southern Arizona WWII Veterans who sacrificed so much for so many”. The program will include a buffet style BBQ dinner, 40’s music with the Allston sisters, tram rides of the facility and a special event in the 390th Bomber Squadron for WWII Vets only and their guests. The main event will be held in building 4, home of the B-29 and will begin with a WWII Documentary sponsored by KUAT (Arizona Public Media), then move on to musical entertainment. U.S. Senator John McCain is the keynote speaker, plus we have a few surprises

This event is open to anyone and is free to all WWII Veterans. Monies collected above expenses will go to benefit the Wounded Warrior Project (www.woundedwarriorproject.org ). Please review the flyer and contact me if you have any questions.

###

Paid for by the Pima County Republican Party.

—— End of Forwarded Message

Some Not So Rosy News

Veteran Suicides on the Increase
Veteran Suicides on the Increase
It has been reported by the Department of Defense that 33 Marines have killed themselves in 2009. We have seen an increase in suicides over the past three years, and we have four months remaining. The outreach and prevention programs have never worked so hard to isolate the problems, with videos, briefings on the signs and symptoms and confidential counseling. With all this the trend has actually worsened. All suicides have been male and 27 of them were between the ages of 18-24. There is no evidence that ones Military occupational status is the contributing factor. 18 Marines were reported to have attempted suicide in July. At this pace it would be about 165 attempts for the year, the most since the invasion in 2003. Rest assured this perplexing phenomena is being addressed on a daily basis.

For The Good of the Order

President Barack Obama and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs met with a group of journalists recently to declare their promises to restore faith in the the VA System. Those declarations were thus;

To reach out to all Veterans and bring them into the system. Enrollment is open again for Priority 8 clients.

The electronic medical records system is to be installed at every facility

More resources dedicated to mental health

Veterans health benefits will not be reduced or impacted in any way by national health care reform. (note this is health care reform, not insurance reform).

Insure that veterans are not denied benefits because links have not yet been made to war-zone burn pits. Evidence is still coming in and no premature decision should be made, like the exposure to the atomic tests in the 1950’s. Agent Orange in Vietnam,( which is now known to have been utilized 2.4 times more often than was reported), or toxins in the 1991 Gulf War.

Boosting the VA funding is going to be a necessity for many years to come as the Iraq and Afghan vets rotate home for maybe the next 10 years. We know this will be the case, and this time around we can plan ahead instead of crimping the VA budget, just to go begging and then have the media shout that we are not taking care of our troops.
The bean counters are struggling with this, as we have never in the history of modern warfare had so many survivors who have lost limbs and mental faculties. As we provide a guardianship for the world this going to pester us for years to come

Hang out for combat veterans and families.