1. VA Employee Honored. The lead "Local People Honored" item for the Augusta, Maine-based Kennebec Journal
(8/17) reports, "Kathleen A. Hanley of Pittston was awarded the
Disabled American Veterans National Commander's Outstanding VA Employee
Award on behalf of the Veterans Benefits Administration at a convention
held recently in Atlanta. Hanley, a decision review officer" at Veterans
Affairs' "Veterans Service Center, Togus Regional Office," has "spent
29 years serving veterans. She trains veteran service rating
representatives in delivering earned benefits to veterans as part of the
claims process."
2. Vet Attributes Cancer Recovery To Good Care At VA Hospital. According to the Fort Myers (FL) News-Press
(8/16), 73-year-old veteran Ray Conley, who has donated hand-built
models of the USS New Jersey and the USS Ronald Reagan "to the Idaho
Military History Museum at Gowen Field," was "diagnosed with pancreatic
cancer" in 1996. Conley "attributes his recovery from a disease often
considered a death sentence to good care at a Veterans Administration
hospital and 'stubbornness. I still had things to do.'"
3. VA Hospital Placing Aging Vets With Foster Families. On its website, KUTV-TV
Salt Lake City, UT (8/16, Moseley) reported, "Aging veterans often need
constant care as their health deteriorates, but a nursing home isn't
the only answer" because during the "past two years in Utah," a Veterans
Affairs Medical Center "has been placing veterans with foster
families."
4. Ground Broken On New VA Clinic. In continuing coverage, the Waynesboro, Virginia-based News Virginian
(8/17, Gonzales) reports, "A new medical clinic for veterans will allow
thousands in the Staunton area to skip lengthy drives to Salem or
Martinsburg, W.Va., said officials with the clinic and the Department of
Veterans Affairs during a groundbreaking Monday." Carol Bogedain,
interim director of Salem VA Medical Center, "said the Staunton clinic
will provide services for chronic disease, mental health, smoking
cessation and pain management." WVIR-TV Charlottesville, VA (8/16, 11:05 p.m. ET) aired a similar, positive report on the groundbreaking.
Slightly less positive coverage was offered by the Staunton (VA) News Leader
(8/17, Martinez), which says the VA "plans to open" the clinic in
"Staunton by January, about eight months later than originally
projected." The News Leader does state, however, that VA is "opening
clinics in other parts of the region and the country to improve
veterans' access to health care and meet the growing demand fueled by
the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." The News Leader also reports
that according to VA communications officer Bruce Sprecher, VA will
lease the building where the clinic is to be located.
5. Jobless Rate Up For Post-9/11 Vets. CNN Newsroom (8/16,
9:28 a.m. ET) broadcast that "trying to find a job "is a "new battle
facing America's veterans." The "jobless rate among veterans who've
served since 9/11 rose to 11.8% last month," while the national rate was
9.5%. CNN added, "Unemployment is such a big issue for the Army
National Guard that some states are testing out programs to help their
part-time soldiers."
6. Missouri's Funeral Protest Ban Ruled Unconstitutional. The AP
(8/17) notes that on Monday, Federal Judge Fernando Gaitan "ruled
Missouri's ban restricting protests at funerals to be unconstitutional,"
as it infringes on free speech rights. The ruling "affects restrictions
targeting a Kansas church whose members have picketed outside the
funerals of people killed during the Iraq war. A church leader filed a
lawsuit challenging the law."
7. Tony Blair To Donate Memoir Profits To Charity For Injured Troops. The AP
(8/17, Lawless) reports 57-year-old Tony Blair, "who took Britain to
war in Iraq and Afghanistan, is donating millions in earnings from his
forthcoming memoir to a charity for injured troops." On Monday, the
"Royal British Legion said...that the former prime minister has agreed
to give all proceeds from 'A Journey' to its Battle Back Challenge
Center." The facility, which "opens in 2012," will "provide state of the
art sports facilities and rehabilitation services for seriously wounded
personnel."
According to AFP
(8/17, Ritchie), news of Blair's donation plan "was warmly welcomed by
the charity itself." Anti-war campaigners, however, "said the money was
welcome if it helped injured soldiers, but warned it did not absolve
Blair of responsibility for the conflicts he led Britain into."
8. Funds Set Aside For Nursing Home At Beckley VAMC. The Charleston, West Virginia-based State Journal
(8/17) reports, "The federal government has set aside $46.55 million
for construction of a new nursing home at the Beckley Veterans
Administration Medical Center." On Monday, US Sen. Jay Rockefeller
(D-WV) "announced...that the funds had been secured." The WVNS-TV Beckley, WV (8/16) website ran the same story.
9. Copper Coils Stolen From VA Hospital Construction Site. The Fort Myers (FL) News-Press
(8/17, Yousif-Bashi) reports, "Copper coils were recently stolen out of
six air conditioning units at the Veterans Affairs Hospital
construction site on the corner of Corbett Road and Diplomat Parkway
East in Cape Coral, a police report said. According to the report: Bob
Neurock of Kraft Construction said it would cost $29,200 to replace the
air conditioning units." Neurock "told police that someone...stole the
coils and attempted to steal the coils from a seventh air conditioning
unit." WINK-TV Fort Myers, FL (8/16, 5:08 p.m. ET) aired a similar report.
10. Portion Of Music Festival To Benefit Vets Hospital. The Riverside (CA) Press-Enterprise
(8/17, Franko) reports, "Dwight Yoakam has been added as a headliner to
the Wagon Wheel Country Music Festival in Lake Elsinore this fall." The
festival is "donating a portion of the proceeds from the event to
charities such as the Loma Linda Veterans Hospital and the Mourning Star
Grief Centers."
11. Wounds Of Iraq War: US Struggles With Surge Of Returning Veterans. The Christian Science Monitor (8/17, Farrell).
12. Back Home, But Still Fighting. Stars And Stripes (8/16, Shane).
13. Register For Tomah VA Freedom Run. The Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune (8/17).
14. Flying High In The Sky With Kite Enthusiasts. The Greece (NY) Messenger Post (8/16).
15. Stand Down To Start Friday With Clothing Distribution. The Fairbanks (AK) News-Miner (8/17, Cole).
16. Cumberland County Housing Facility Is 'A Dream Come True' For Homeless Veterans. The Harrisburg (PA) Patriot-News (8/17, Miller).
17. Gov't Starts Talks About New Mortgage System. The AP
(8/17, Zibel) reports, "A conference Tuesday at the Treasury Department
is the first of many steps toward restructuring the nearly $11 trillion
mortgage market." Executives and "mortgage experts are prepared to tell
the Obama administration that the government must stay in the business
of backing US mortgages even if Fannie and Freddie disappear someday."
The "two mortgage giants, the Federal Housing Administration and the
Veterans Administration together backed about 90 percent of loans made
in the first half of the year, according to trade publication Inside
Mortgage Finance."
18. Silver Alerts Spread The Word Quickly When Oklahoma Seniors Are Missing. The Oklahoma City-based Oklahoman
(8/16, Patterson) said, "Much like Amber Alerts for missing children,
Silver Alerts allow local law enforcement agencies to coordinate with
other agencies and news media across the state to get photos and
descriptions of missing senior citizens out to the public." The
Oklahoman added, "People who have Alzheimer's disease and dementia often
wander out of a sense of restlessness, Dr. Germaine Odenheimer of the
Oklahoma City Veterans Administration Medical Center said."
19. Renowned Cardiologist Leslie Miller Joins USF Health. The Tampa (FL) Tribune
(8/16, Peterson) noted that Dr. Leslie W. Miller, a "renowned
cardiologist from Georgetown University School of Medicine," has "been
hired to lead an expanded department of cardiovascular sciences" at the
University of South Florida (USF). Dr. Leslie W. Miller "said he was
impressed with the cardiologists he's already met in the community and
planned to work to meet the rest after he arrived. 'Part of my approach
is to build alliances and affiliations and to get all kinds of people to
work together,' including doctors at...James A. Haley Veterans
Hospital," a USF affiliate.
20. American Legion Post 50 Hosting Meeting About VA Health Care Program. The Fayetteville (GA) Citizen (8/17).
21. American Legion Post 99 May Lose Its Hall. The San Jose (CA) Mercury News (8/17).
22. Iraq Veteran's Family Fighting Shock And Denial. The Lewiston (ME) Sun Journal (8/16, Hartill).
23. Motorcycle Ride Fundraiser Aids Veteran's Family. The Bangor (ME) Daily News (8/17, Sambides).
24. Golfers Sought For Benefit Scramble Sept. 23. The Bismarck (ND) Tribune (8/17).
25. Korean War POW's Remains To Be Buried. The AP (8/16).
26. A Living Memorial: Cruises Recall WWII Service Of Merchant Marine. The Navy Times (8/17, Taylor).
27. Vets' Visit To Memorials A Time Of Joy And Honor. The San Antonio Express-News (8/16, Huddleston).
28. WWII Veterans Welcomed Home From Honor Flight. The WTOC-TV Savannah, GA (8/16) website.
29. 2 Honor Flight Parades Through Fairgrounds. The KCCI-TV Des Moines, IA (8/16, Hanson) website.
30. Japan PM Kan Sends Signal To Asian Neighbors By Shunning Yasukuni Shrine. The Christian Science Monitor (8/17, Blair).
31. A Fight's Brewing Over A Historical Monument Honoring A World War I Aviator. The Fayetteville (NC) Observer (8/16, Zennie).
32. French Artist Picked Outstanding Oklahoman As Subject Of War Painting. The Oklahoma City-based Oklahoman (8/17, Phillips).
33. On the Hill for August 17, 2010:
The Senate is adjourned until Monday, Sept. 13.
The House is adjourned until Tuesday, Sept. 14.