Top 10 Veterans News from Around the Country
* Find out What’s Inside Today’s Local News for Veterans *
- Veteran Homelessness Fell 18% Last Year.
- Returning Veterans Face High Unemployment Rate.
- Learning Tree Inks IT Training Contract With VA.
- Minnesota VA Deputy Backs Governor On ‘Support Our Troops” License
Plate Funds.
- Advocacy Groups Seek State Veterans’ Home For Cedar City, Utah.
- Pat Tillman’s Legacy: Helps Military Veterans In College.
- NBC Profiled Paralympic Games, Veteran Skier.
- Female Combat Veteran Says Gender’s The Reason Her PTSD Went
Untreated.
- HBO Stages Events For WWII Veterans, Offers Message Service For
Service Members.
- VA Construction Set To Start In New Orleans.
1. Veteran Homelessness Fell 18% Last Year. The
online version of the Gloucester County (NJ) Times (3/13) hails “Good
news out of the national Department of Veterans Affairs this week as the
VA announced that the number of veterans out on the streets on a
typical night dropped 18 percent. The VA is entering the second year of
its initiative to eliminate homelessness among those who have served
within the next five years. An estimated 107,000 veterans were homeless
each night last year,” a reduction from 131,000 in 2008 and 154,000 in
2007. A statement from Secretary Eric Shinseki said the reduction was
achieved “through enhanced collaboration with other federal, state,
faith-based, veteran service organizations and community partner.”
2. Returning Veterans Face High Unemployment Rate.
The AP (3/13, Hefling) reports, “The unemployment
rate last year for young Iraq and Afghanistan veterans hit 21.1 percent,
the Labor Department said Friday, reflecting a tough obstacle combat
veterans face as they make the transition home from war. The number was
well above the 16.6 percent jobless rate for non-veterans of the same
ages, 18 to 24.” The jobless rate is also significantly higher than the
14.1 percent recorded for young veterans in the same age group in 2008.
An American Legion official added that many of the jobless “are members
of the Guard and Reserves who have deployed multiple times” and return
home to find that their jobs have been eliminated in company
downsizings.
3. Learning Tree Inks IT Training Contract With VA.
The AP (3/12) reports, “Learning Tree International,
which sells professional development courses for IT workers, said it has
contracted with the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide training
services. The one-year agreement, with options to renew, is worth up to
$60 million. The training started Feb. 22, the company said late
Thursday.” During the first year of the contract, Learning Tree says it
anticipates revenue of $10-$15 million.
4. Minnesota VA Deputy
Backs Governor On ‘Support Our Troops” License Plate Funds. The
political blog in the Minneapolis City Pages (3/12, Snyders) reports
that the deputy commissioner of the state Department of Veterans Affairs
“rushed to” the defense of Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R), accused by an
opposition lawmaker of “diverting money from the ‘Support Our Troops’
license plate campaign into the governor’s office.” Claiming that about
$30,000 was used to pay the salary of a Pawlenty employee working on
faith-based initiatives, instead of going to either the state Department
of Veterans Affairs or the Department of Military Affairs. Michael
Pugliese, the state veteran’s deputy, claimed that the employee in
question worked quarter-time for Veterans Affairs, which “got good
mileage” out of the arrangement, due to the employee’s contacts with and
outreach to religious groups in connection with veterans issues.
5. Advocacy Groups Seek State Veterans’ Home For Cedar
City, Utah. The St. George (UT) Spectrum (3/13, Arnold, 22K)
reports, “Iron County veterans and local and state dignitaries met
Friday with representatives from the Utah Department of Veterans Affairs
to discuss the potential new veterans nursing home to be placed in
Southern Utah. As one of the last acts of the legislative session, $12.8
million was reserved from federal reimbursement funds to go toward two
nursing home projects — one in Utah County and the other in Southern
Utah.” Participants in the meeting aimed to persuade the state VA
officials to locate the southern home in Cedar City. The account notes
that the US Department of Veterans Affairs will assume 65% of the
project’s cost.
6. Pat Tillman’s Legacy: Helps Military Veterans In
College.USA Today (3/13, Stripling, 2.11M) reports, “If
the late Pat Tillman is remembered for his selflessness, then it seems
fitting that the foundation created in the professional football
star-turned-soldier’s name would ask the same of the veterans it serves.
Now partnered with eight universities across the country, the Pat
Tillman Foundation’s Tillman Military Scholars program offers funding to
veterans who demonstrate a record of service to their communities and
pledge to continue those activities.” The foundation, which honors the
professional football player who rejected a lucrative contract to serve
in the army in Afghanistan, where he died in a Friendly fire incident,
handed out $642,000 to its first class last year, and ultimately plans
to provide $3.6 million yearly.
7. NBC Profiled Paralympic Games, Veteran Skier.
NBC
Nightly News (12/6, story 7, 2:20, Williams, 8.37M) reported,
“Well, the opening ceremonies are tonight for the Winter Games in
Vancouver; not the Olympic Games, but the Paralympics. While it doesn’t
get the attention the other games get, this is a huge event for hundreds
of athletes from around the world, including a team of 50 from the
United States. As for the flag bearer for Team USA tonight? Our report
from NBC’s Peter Alexander.” NBC (Alexander) added, “Heath Calhoun never
imagined he’d be an Olympian, much less a Paralympic athlete.” Heath
Calhoun, Paralympic skier: “Just puts a smile on my face every time I
pull something out of my bag and it says ‘Team USA’ on the back of it.”
Alexander: “When Calhoun carves his way down the slopes of Whistler next
week, it won’t be the first time this 30-year-old has represented
America. In November 2003, Calhoun was on patrol with the Army’s 101st
Airborne Division in Mosul, Iraq, when his Humvee was struck by a
rocket-propelled grenade.” Calhoun: “I can remember looking down at my
legs and seeing that my pants were torn, that blood was starting to pool
in the back of the truck.” Alexander: “The attack robbed him of both
legs. At home, Calhoun began the struggle to move on with his life, but
never thought he’d move quite like this.”
8. Female Combat Veteran Says Gender’s The Reason Her
PTSD Went Untreated. NPR (3/13, Gildea) reports that decorated war
veteran Marti Ribeiro, after eight years in the Air Force with tours in
both Iraq and Afghanistan, “was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress
disorder by military doctors at a hospital in San Antonio, where she was
stationed. She says doctors recommended she apply for benefits through
the Department of Veterans Affairs,” but after transferring to Oklahoma
City, encountered difficulty in receiving appropriate care there.
Ribeiro claims that her gender can be the only reason for her difficulty
getting treatment there, and says “she’s given up on the VA’s ability
to provide free counseling. She’s found a good therapist for herself and
her daughter, through private insurance.”
9. HBO Stages Events For WWII Veterans, Offers Message
Service For Service Members. The AP (3/12, Zongker) reports, “Tom Hanks, Steven
Spielberg and Elizabeth Dole welcomed 250 veterans to the World War II
memorial Thursday to honor their service and introduce a TV miniseries
on the battles of the Pacific. HBO and a nonprofit group brought the
veterans to Washington to mark the premiere of a 10-part series called
‘The Pacific.’”
The Honolulu Advertiser (3/12, 130K) adds that HBO
“Pacific Tribute Campaign kiosks” at the Battleship Missouri Memorial
“will allow visitors to thank veterans and active military with a
30-second video message.” The messages, recorded in high-definition
video, will be collected through Memorial Day; HBO will produce a
montage of the entries. Visitors can also opt to send a personalized
message to a friend or relative on active duty.
10. VA Construction Set To Start In New Orleans. WVUE-TV New Orleans (3/13) reports that the
Veterans Administration “said Friday, soon, some of the first
construction in the new biosciences corridor in lower Mid-City will
begin. The VA said the city and state have acquired a key building in
the VA hospital footprint, and have turned it over to them.”
But WWL-TV New Orleans (3/12, Woltering) notes that
the owner of a property taken by the state for the Veterans hospital
will likely sue, claiming he was inadequately paid. Louisiana State
University expropriated the old City Hall annex on Canal Street for a
little over $3.7 million; the owner had been asking $20 million.