Posts Tagged ‘Veterans Affairs’
What Lies Ahead
VA is excited to announce that the first series of paid advertising for our National Veterans Awareness Campaign which will launch this coming Monday, October 11th. The attached video (with screen shots) – “What Lies Ahead” – will broadcast in 6 targeted markets throughout the country (Norfolk; Raleigh; Savannah; Seattle; Watertown, New York; and El Paso, Texas). These areas were chosen because of the large numbers of OEF, OIF and OND Veterans returning there. The star of the video is an OIF Marine Veteran who moved to Los Angeles recently to pursue his acting career.
An 81-Year-Old Foster Son?
New Program Pairs Veterans Who Would Be in a Nursing Home with Families Who Are Willing to Take Them In
Just outside Tampa, Fla., CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman found the story of an odd couple – a wonderful inspiring odd couple.
The house actually belongs to a sweetheart of a man named Rick Heady. Rick is a foster parent, of sorts – his foster “kid” just happens to be 81, and gruff as all get-out.
“What did you do in the Marine Corps?” Hartman asked.
“Kill people,” Charles Dowling said.
“But you survived to live another day,” Hartman said.
“To kill again,” Dowling said.
“Well you’re a lovely, lovely man,” Hartman said, laughing.
“Bulls-t,” Dowling said.
He actually is pretty wonderful, once you get to know him. Dowling served in Korea and Vietnam, and later became a drill sergeant – putting in close to 30 years with the Marines. Until recently he was living in a nursing home – destined for hospice – but then this total stranger came forward and offered to take him in.
“I’m not going to let our veterans, our veterans, be forgotten,” Heady said.
That’s a belief shared by all these people who are part of a new Veteran’s Affairs program called the Medical Foster Home program. It pairs vets who would otherwise be in a nursing home with civilians who are willing to take them into their homes instead.
“It takes a special caregiver who is really able to open their homes and their hearts to the veterans and it’s not easy,” said Beau Williams with Veterans Affairs.
Williams said medical foster homes are now in 34 states and within a few years could be in all 50. It’s partly because nursing homes average about $6,000 a month, while this only costs about half that. The money goes to caregivers like Heady, who quit his job as a sales manager to do this.
“Not only is it cost effective but more importantly the veterans feel like their part of a family, they receive love,” Williams said. “They receive a lot of attention, a lot of care.”
As for what the care giver gets out of it – let’s just say Heady has found the experience so rewarding he recently took in a second veteran.
“He’s helped me vastly in recovery,” said Clayton Smith.
Smith was in the Air Force when he got hit by a truck and suffered a brain injury. They were going to put him in a nursing home, too, until Heady stepped up.
“Rick is A-OK,” Smith said.
That’s glowing praise from a drill sergeant – and more than enough reward for Rick.
“This is what I’ll do until the day I retire,” Heady said. “It’s that good.”
Good for him, and good for America.
Putting the Concerns of Our Veterans and Our Troops to Rest
As Assistant Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, a constant concern for me is having our Veterans dragged into partisan politics. Unfortunately the debate over health reform has seen that happen far too many times, and at the VA we often have to correct misinformation and assure Veterans that the care they rely on will not be taken away from them.
One of the concerns we are hearing the most now is whether health reform will affect the care Veterans receive under the VA system.
Let me be unambiguous: The healthcare that Veterans receive through the VA system, including dependents of certain veterans enrolled in the CHAMPVA program, will be safe and sound under health reform. The Secretary of Veterans Affairs would continue to maintain sole authority over the system and for enhancing the quality and access for all eligible Veterans. …more
Why The VA Frustrates Veterans
There is a sacred tradition in the military: leave no one behind on the battlefield. But many veterans are beginning to believe their country has left them behind at home, once they’re out of uniform and in need of help. That help is supposed to come from the Department of Veterans Affairs and the financial compensation it gives to veterans disabled by their military service.
It was Abraham Lincoln who said the purpose of the VA was to “care for him who shall have borne the battle.” But the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have pushed the VA further behind in that mission, and today there are a million veterans waiting for the VA to handle their disability claims.
That has led some to latch onto another motto making the rounds for how the VA operates: “Delay, Deny and Hope That I Die.”
“When I hear that, I will tell you that it really troubles me. As somebody who has devoted 35 years of my life to this organization, and to serving veterans, it’s extremely troubling that there are veterans who feel that way,” the VA’s Deputy Undersecretary for Benefits Michael Walcoff, told 60 Minutes correspondent Byron Pitts.
Last year, $30 billion dollars – one third of the VA’s total budget – was paid in disability compensation to nearly three million veterans.
To receive a disability benefit, a veteran has to be honorably discharged.
“They have to have a current disability, and provide evidence that it was service related?” Pitts asked Walcoff.
“That it’s connected to their service, right,” he replied.
“Why, then, is the claim form 23 pages long?” Pitts asked.
VA Benefits Article on CBS 60 Minutes
Watch “60 Minutes” on Sunday, January 3rd.
Two wars and a recession have significantly increased the claims handled by the U.S. Dept. of Veteran’s Affairs, slowing the large bureaucracy and frustrating many veterans. Byron Pitts reports. Veterans for Common Sense has provided in-depth data and interviews for this article.
Craigslist Founder Joins VA Panel
Craig Newmark, who founded Craig’s List 14 years ago, will help the Department of Veterans Affairs improve the way it serves patients.
Newmark will serve on a panel of advisors that will review and evaluate ideas to improve disability claims processing times and improve transparency to veterans.
The VA sought input from employees and members of Veterans service organizations, and says it has received suggestions from all of its 57 regional offices. Those ideas will be reviewed by the panel, which is chaired by VA Under Secretary for Benefits Patrick Dunne.
“I look forward to working with VA’s leadership team to bring tangible results to our veterans,” said Newmark in a statement. “I am very encouraged by the fact that VA is embracing new ways to look at old problems.
VA says it has received more than 3,000 suggestions since Sept.8. The panel will review the top submissions and choose five that will be fully funded for project development and implementation at the regional office that submitted the idea.

Along with their loved ones, we give thanks every time our men and women in uniform return home. But we’re forever mindful that our obligations to our troops don’t end on the battlefield. Just as we have a responsibility to train and equip them when we send them into harm’s way, we have a responsibility to take care of them when they come home.
President Obama is struggling to fulfill campaign promises to pass energy and immigration measures, but he’s poised to notch another victory for a stump-speech vow: to make sure veterans’ funding isn’t held hostage to the government’s bad finances.