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Top 10 Veterans Stories in Today’s News
From
The VA
Marine Gunnery Sergeant John D. Fry only had a week left in Iraq when
he injured his hand. He could have gone home with a Bronze Star.
Instead, he volunteered for one last run to defuse bombs. After working
seven hours, Gunnery Sgt. John D. Fry was killed March 8, 2006 by an
improvised explosive device. Now, a new scholarship program named after
Fry will allow his three small children and those of other service
members who died on duty in Iraq and Afghanistan to apply for benefits
under the Post 9/11 GI Bill. Beginning this week children of service
members who died in the line of duty after September 10, 2001 can
receive education benefits under the Post 9/11 GI Bill. The Marine
Gunnery Sergeant John David Fry Scholarship amends the Post-9/11 GI Bill
to include the children of service members who died in the line of duty
after Sept. 10, 2001. Eligible children attending institutions of
higher learning may receive payments to cover their tuition and fees up
to the highest amounts charged by a public, in-state undergraduate
institution. A monthly living allowance and books and supplies stipend
are also paid under this program. VA will begin to pay benefits under
the Frye Scholarship Program on August 1, 2010. Eligible participants
may elect to receive benefits retroactively to August 1, 2009, the same
day the Post-9/11 GI Bill took effect. A dependent may be married or
over 23 and still be eligible. Eligible children are entitled to 36
months of benefits at the 100 percent level. They have 15 years to use
the benefit beginning on their 18th birthday, and may use the benefit
until their 33rd birthday. Fry’s wife Malia said that when people asked
him why was in Iraq Fry told them “to help the children.”
Top Veterans Stories in Today’s News
- Lincoln in line for new VA clinic Lincoln,
Nebraska (AP) – The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is looking at
building a new clinic in Lincoln and converting its 60-acre campus in
the capital city into a new use. VA officials say Lincoln would get a
new modern clinic in exchange for allowing a developer to use all or
part of the Lincoln campus for up to 75 years, under what is called an
extended-use lease.
- Veterans want to keep both service offices open
Fearful of the impending closing of one of Escambia County’s Veterns
Administrtion offices, a group of Atmore veterans attended a Thursday
workshop of the Escambia County Commissioners to voice their concerns of
the possible closing of the office in Atmore. Commissioners told the
veterans the decision of which office to close — Atmore or Brewton — was
out of their hands. The Veterans Administration has been in contact
with commissioners in recent weeks to let them know that one of the two
offices — either Atmore or Brewton — will likely close as a VA
cost-cutting measure.
- TN veterans face tough battle to find employment
Clarksville, Tennessee – Terry Pack was an aircraft mechanic serving in
the Army in Iraq, spending two of the last six years in combat
overseas. Now that he’s done his service for the country, he can’t even
get a job doing oil changes at Sears. “It’s tough,” said the unemployed
Clarksville veteran, who was honorably discharged in January. “I’ve been
looking for any job.”
- Tulsa veterans court hopes to expand program
Tulsa, Oklahoma - Some men stood at parade rest as they appeared
before Tulsa Special Judge Sarah Day Smith. Others leaned on their
crutches or walkers or stood close to military attention. The veterans
are representatives from six different wars and range widely in age.
They also battle addictions leading to problems with their families,
housing and brushes with the law.
- Rural Veterans Wait to Receive Expanded Health Care
Options Washington, DC – The House Veterans’ Affairs
Health Subcommittee, led by Chairman Michael Michaud (D-ME), held a
hearing to assess the progress of the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) in implementing an enhanced contract health care pilot program for
veterans living in rural areas. The pilot program was authorized in the
110th Congress and required the VA to conduct a three-year demonstration
project in five regions where highly rural veterans enrolled in the VA
health care system may receive covered services through non-VA
providers.
- Veterans, families, friends honor soldiers lost in
Vietnam SAn annual ceremony honoring Illinois soldiers who
died during the Vietnam War is a way to help their families cope. Part
of that remembrance is a 24-hour vigil at the Illinois Vietnam Veterans
Memorial at Oak Ridge Cemetery that began at noon Saturday.
“We come up every year, the first weekend in May, in recognition of
them,” said Lee Oakley, a veteran and member of the vigil committee from
Mattoon. - VA honors more than 1,000 volunteers
Temple, Texas – Officials of the Central Texas Veterans Health Care
System honored their more than 1,000 volunteers in nine locations
Thursday at an Africa-themed roast beef luncheon at the Frank W. Mayborn
Civic and Convention Center.
- Ill Gulf War vets urged to seek care through VA
Gulf War veterans with medical symptoms should seek treatment through
the Department of Veterans Affairs in light of a recent study that says
Gulf War service is a cause of post-traumatic stress disorder, according
to Dr. Michael Kilpatrick, director of strategic communications for the
Military Health System.
- Development of employees should be priority
Policy, infrastructure and technology alone do not create a government
that works — people do. Those of us privileged to serve in government
meet these people every day: dedicated, mission-oriented employees who
care deeply about the country they serve. These are the individuals we
recognize during Public Service Recognition Week. But many hard-working
civil servants often lack the tools they need to meet our rising
expectations.
- Vietnam War still stirs passionate divisions at Kent
State May 4 events Kent, Ohio – Spirited debate about the
Vietnam War and its legacy lives on at Kent State University. War
veteran and anti-war activist Country Joe McDonald screened two short
documentary-style films about the war’s impact at a gathering Sunday.
The reaction to the movies at Kent State — where the impact of that war
may have been felt more than anywhere else — was divided and passionate.
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