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Veterans News for May 9, 2011 (part 2)

  • Wednesday, May 04, 2011 11:38
    Message # 591303
    Deleted user

    Veterans News for Monday, May 9, 2011 (part 2).

    30.                       Veterans' Caregivers Now Eligible For VA Benefits. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "Family caregivers who for years have been frustrated at the lack of federal governmental support for the daily needs of loved ones severely injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars will be able to apply for Veterans Affairs Department benefits for the first time ever on Monday. The department this week announced it will roll out the long-awaited Family Caregiver Program, providing financial, health insurance and counseling benefits for primary caregivers of post-9/11 veterans whose physical and neurological injuries require daily attention."

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    31.                       WWII Women Vets Share Experiences. Baton Rouge Advocate The president of the Baton Rouge-based Women Veterans of Louisiana "will lead a panel of World War II women veterans during a 2 p.m. session Saturday at the South Regional Library. The women will share their personal stories of service and the role women played during the war."

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    32.                       After Severe War Injuries, A New Battlefield. Los Angeles Times  A "growing number of Marines and soldiers who have suffered catastrophic wounds that will require years of care in military hospitals. The Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs are scrambling to put together a continuum of long-term care" for such severely wounded personnel. Based on what trauma doctors call the Injury Severity Scale index, "the average score for battlefield casualties brought to the Landstuhl intensive care unit is at its highest level in the nearly 10 years that the US has been at war, Landstuhl's top trauma surgeon, Air Force Lt. Col. Raymond Fang, said last week." A task force of medical experts is due to report within weeks on "all the optimal acute management and rehabilitation of these more severely wounded warriors, including pain control, psychological and spiritual support, and family support."

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    33.                       Taxes Proposed In Pierce County Would Aid Military Families, Police. Tacoma (WA) News Tribune  Voters in Pierce County, Washington "could be asked later this year to OK two very different tax proposals. One would levy a five-year, 5-cents-per $1,000 of assessed valuation property tax to help provide an array of social and mental health services to the region's military families." The United for Military Families proposal on assistance to military families, put together by a United Way vice president, could "$3 million to $4 million a year to expand mental health, counseling and an array of other services to military families." The home of … S3

     

    34.                       Wounded Troops Return To The Ballfield. Washington Post  "The soldiers and Marines on the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team display a sense of humor that helps put at ease fans who might otherwise feel awkward watching them. The 20 men, most of whom have lost limbs on missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, nicknamed themselves the 'Body Parts.'" The team "is the brainchild of David Van Sleet, a prosthetics manager for the US Veterans Affairs Southwest Healthcare Network who doubles as the team's manager."

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    35.                       US Military Trails Britain In Potentially Lifesaving Drug. Stars And Stripes "A few hundred US troops injured in Afghanistan will soon become part of a study testing the ability of a potentially lifesaving drug that aids blood clotting." Although the British military began using TXA soon after a 2010 study showed that, if given within eight hours of injury, it reduced deaths by 10%, US military officials "say they prefer to wait for the results of a joint study by the US and UK, which will examine about 1,000 patients -- one-third who will likely be US troops -- treated with TXA at Camp Bastion, the main British base in Afghanistan." S5

     

    36.                       SEAL's Mother Christens Warship In His Name. ABC World News The story of Navy SEAL Lt. Michael Murphy, killed in 2005 in Afghanistan and posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Today his mother broke a bottle of champagne, to christen the Navy's newest guided destroyer, the 9,200 ton 'USS Michael Murphy' in Maine.

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    37.                       Letter Writer Thanks Paper For Showing Family's Struggle With VA On Agent Orange. Grass Valley (CA) Union The member of a family whose Agent Orange claim was disputed by the VA writes to thank the paper for "writing the article about Agent Orange and our family's struggle with the VA."

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    38.                       Anniversary Noted For Agent Orange Settlement. AP  On that date in 1984, "a $180 million out-of-court settlement was announced in the Agent Orange class-action suit brought by Vietnam veterans who charged they'd suffered injury from exposure to the defoliant."

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    39.                       Hearings Planned On Potential Louisville VA Hospital Sites. Murfreesboro (TN) Daily News Journal  Two public hearings Wednesday on the issue of where to locate the new Louisville, Kentucky VA Medical Center. It notes that many veterans prefer a site adjacent to the current Rex Robley VAMC, but at least four other sites are also being considered. S12

     

    40.                       Career Center To Host Veterans' Benefits Seminar. Coosa Valley (GA) News The Blue Ridge Career Center and the Department of Veterans Affairs "will host a seminar on benefits for veterans on Thursday, May 26." The seminar will provide information on the VA health benefits program, other benefits programs and other topics of interest, and Georgia Department of Labor representatives will assist veterans with resume-writing and other employment-related services.

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    41.                       Prime Times Calendar. The Peoria Journal Star (5/7, Davis) notes that at a May 17 meeting of the National Active and Retired Federal Employees, Julie McLamb, administrative officer with the Bob Michel VA outpatient clinic, will discuss the development of the new VA clinic in North Peoria and its programs.

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    42.                       Tampa Event For Homeless People Underscores Need For Centralized Services, Advocate Says. St. Petersburg (FL) Times  Tampa's Homeless Stand Down and Health Fair on Friday drew over 400 attendees who "fingered pamphlets on suicide prevention and post-traumatic stress disorder and picked up backpacks, rain ponchos and $10 Publix gift cards. They signed up for birth certificates, medical care, mental health services, jobs, legal help and shelter options. In a separate room, 90 veterans enrolled for benefits, including services through a new $2 million grant from the US Department of Housing and Urban Development."

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    43.                       Wyoming Vet Forced To Repay Checks From G.I. Bill. KGWN-TV  A medically discharged Wyoming veteran with 12 years in the Air Force, including time in Iraq, last year while taking online courses at a community college was told by the VA that he needed to repay almost $10,000 in benefits. Tom Kuehler says that he has had difficulty getting an explanation of why the money, which the college told him he was entitled to, needed to be repaid. "Getting a hold of Veterans Affairs to get answers has not been easy for Tom. 'You may as well buy a lottery ticket to get through to them,'" Kuehler says.

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    44.                       Veteran Who Wants To Help Homeless Has Problems Of His Own. St. Petersburg (FL) Times  "Morson Livingston has proudly told his story: Retired Army chaplain, a combat veteran who ministered to troops in Bosnia. Years later, he said, the sight of homeless men in military fatigues inspired him to create a nonprofit agency to find shelter and other services for vets. But when he sought nearly $1 million in taxpayer-funded grants for his ambitious plans, and when he tried to plant his transitional housing facility in an upscale neighborhood, the spotlight turned brighter on him. His military records, including allegations he sexually harassed three women while serving as a Catholic chaplain, surfaced." The paper adds that the military service records for the founder of St. Jude's Veterans Resource Center do not support his claims of service in Bosnia and Kosovo or some uniform ribbons he wears, but he "stopped answering questions after the Times reported the sexual harassment scandal."

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    45.                       Fiscal Crisis Dims Personnel Initiatives For 2012. Tacoma (WA) News Tribune  "The fiscal 2012 defense budget taking shape in Congress could have the fewest significant initiatives for military personnel, retirees and their families in a generation." With Congress under political pressure to rein in ballooning federal debt, military and veterans advocates "worry about preserving what has been won, seeing major new victories as politically unrealistic." When House Armed Services military personnel panel marked up a defense authorization bill Wednesday, it included a 1.6 percent military pay raise, starting in January, to keep pace with inflation, and blocked a small increase in TRICARE Prime enrollment fees for working-age retirees. But others on Capitol Hill… S24

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    46.                       War Memorial In Virginia Nears Completion. WDIO-TV  "The Iron Range Veterans Memorial in Virginia honors veterans from the northland and across the country." To raise the $40,000 needed to complete the memorial's estimated $1 million cost, The Quad Cities Rotary held a fundraiser on Saturday, and the mayor of Virginia, Minnesota plans to ask the City Council to donate $5,000 as a matching grant.

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    47.                       7 Medal Of Honor Recipients Star Attractions. Lafayette (IN) Journal and Courier On Friday, "Seven of the 85 surviving recipients of the Medal of Honor visited Tippecanoe County to dedicate the new Medal of Honor Bridge on County Road 500 East. It is the only bridge in the United States named for all Medal of Honor recipients." Arriving in a UH-1 Huey helicopter, the group "made a dramatic entrance for a series of dedication and ribbon-cutting events, cheered at every stop on a day designed to hail them as heroes."

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    48.                       ATM Provider Links ATM Sales To Troop Support.  Credit Union Times  Express Teller Services, Inc., a Phoenix-based ATM vendor serving small institutions and retailers "has announced a special promotion to help support military men and women in uniform and their families. For every ATM purchased in May by area banks, credit unions and retailers, Express Teller will make a donation in their name to Fighter County Partnership, a not-for-profit organization focused on providing programs and services that aid, support and honor airmen and their families at Luke Air Force Base."

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    49.                       Woman Campaigns For Gold Star Plate. Macomb (MI) Daily  A local woman's campaign to persuade Michigan to join the other 45 states that provide a Gold Star Family license plate to those who have lost a family member in military service. The measure, approved Wednesday, could be signed into law by Memorial Day.

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    50.                       Volunteers Needed To Replace Veterans Cemetery Flags. South Coast (MA) Today Volunteers "are needed to replace veterans' cemetery flags ahead of Memorial Day." The effort is being led by a VFW Post and an American Legion Post, both in Middleboro, Massachusetts.

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