Friday, August 10, 2018

Veterans related links 081018



White House: U.S. Can’t Afford Veterans’ Health Care Without Cuts

Accountability Hearing: How Far Can Peter O’Rourke Hit Softballs?

VA gets a new top health official, but still searches for a permanent nominee

Conferees urged to reject Senate-passed TRICARE fee hikes

Postcards Warning of Tricare Dental Changes Are in the Mail

VA Medical Centers May Be Hurting The Agency’s Veteran Suicide Prevention Efforts

VA Creates Special Office to Direct $16B Health Record Overhaul

House creates subcommittee to oversee VA tech modernization, EHR implementation

Senate plans path ahead for ‘blue water Navy’ benefits fix

Government shuts down website for doctors searching for treatment guidelines

Scientists Hunt For A Test To Diagnose Chronic Brain Injury In Living People

First, Do No Harm – VA Committee Launches Patient Wellness Investigation

Come Again? Hearing Equipment For Veterans In Need Sat Unused

OAN News: ‘Noncontroversial’ GI Bill Cuts To Flight Training Are Unethical

New GI Bill Cuts Pushed Covertly By ‘Obsessed’ Veterans Committee Staffer: How one Hill staffers obsession to cut pilot training for veterans will hurt many seeking to become pilots using the GI Bill.

Delaware Valley Veterans Consortium 

Falsified Credentials Spell Disaster For Would-Be American Legion Executive

Senate Confirms Robert Wilkie as Secretary of Veterans Affairs: The new secretary has worked both in government and at private-sector defense contractors

Coup Insider Curt Cashour Out As VA Press Secretary Say Sources

New Talent On Tap? Jake Leinenkugel To Lead VA Mental Health Commission. Yes, That One.

Tennessee Former VA Worker Convicted of Defrauding Veteran of $680K

Executive Order Cuts 75 Percent Of Union Activities During Work Hours

Veteran commits suicide hours after being turned away at VA facility – Rest In Peace

Willow Grove Veterans Memorial Park Helicopter Monument a Reality
A helicopter is synonymous of all five branches of the service," said war veteran Ralph Storti, whose monument quest began 14 years ago.

FLASH ALERT - H.R. 299 - BLUE WATER NAVY VIETNAM VETERANS ACT
The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee will hold hearings on H.R 299 on Wednesday, August 1 at 2:30pm (EDT).  Testimony supporting H.R. 299 Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act 2018 will be presented at that time.  The hearing will be held in room 418 Senate Russell Office Building, Washington, DC.  This will be the last hearing before the Senate send the bill to the senate floor for vote and passage.  The bill passed the House on June 25, 2018 by a vote of 382-0.  Please go to  http://capwiz.com/vva/home/  and send the prepared alert to your Senator requesting their support of  H.R. 299 prior to the hearing and please follow-up with a phone call to their offices.

Lisa Rein V Curt Cashour: VA Swipes At WaPo, Blows Off Secretary’s Swearing In

A retired Navy Seabee finally finishes a veterans' memorial in Pa., 14 years in the making

At Least $10 Million In Taxpayer Funds Blown On Unnecessary Disability Exams

Mr. Snee Testimony - Copy.mp4

The Forgotten South Vietnamese Airborne

How the Defense Department Identifies the Remains of Our War Dead

Information, courtesy of Veterans for Change and Commander (Ret.) John Wells.
This week the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held a hearing on the bill on Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2018. VA Under Secretary Lawrence urged senators Wednesday to vote against legislation that would extend VA benefits to sailors who served off the coast during the Vietnam War and claim their illnesses were caused by exposure to Agent Orange.
Not surprising, although it's extremely disappointing, when VA upper echelon lies through their teeth when it comes to taking care of all those who have served.
We are asking that everyone, active duty, veteran and civilian continue calling your Senator’s offices in Washington, requesting that they please vote to pass H. R. 299. You can call either 202-224-3121 or the toll-free number 866-272-6622. We are asking that you please call every week and share this information with friends and family asking they too make the calls weekly.
• The VA position opposing the bill was a complete reversal of former Secretary Shulkin’s testimony in support at the Oct 24, 2017 House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing.
• Dr. Erickson’s testimony that ships did not distill water within 12 nautical miles of land is untrue. The Institute of Medicine found that this guidance was routinely ignored. Actually, water was routinely distilled for the boilers close to land and in harbors and there was no prohibition against that. Since the same distillation system was used for both boiler water and potable water the entire system would have been contaminated.
• Under Secretary Lawrence testified that the Navy ships were “miles offshore.” That is untrue. Some ships were anchored in harbors just a few feet from shore and often in the discharge path of the river discharge. Studies discovered that toxic level of dioxin remained in the harbor sediment 20 years after the war in Nha Trang Harbor. Another study showed that dioxin that was accidentally spilled into the Passaic River in New Jersey was found in seafood 150 nautical miles from shore.
• Dr. Erickson’s testimony that the Australian study was flawed, as was the methodology used is untrue. The theory behind the enrichment of the dioxin during the distillation process is based on Henry’s Law of thermodynamics. Two separate committees of the Institute of Medicine reviewed and affirmed the methodology used and the enrichment effect of the dioxin process.
• Dr. Erickson testified that “The Australian format allowed them to draw water close to shore. You cannot go from that experiment and make a conclusion about U.S. naval personnel." Dr. Erickson is wrong. Most Navy ships operated in the bays harbors and close shore waters to maximize their field of fire.
• Under Secretary Lawrence’s statement that the Institute of Medicine could not confirm the contamination of the bays harbors and estuarine waters is misleading. The Committee indicated that due to the passage of time they could not confirm the presence of Agent Orange with certainty but that there was a plausible path for exposure. The Committee went on to note that there was no more or less evidence to support exposure among the blue water Navy veterans than there was among the ground force and brown water compatriots. Several IOM Committees since have indicated it is generally accepted that the dioxin entered the estuarine waters. One IOM committee specifically recommended that the Blue Water Navy personnel not be excluded from the presumption.
• Under Secretary Lawrence’s statement that the Blue Water sailors can receive benefits on a case by case basis is patently false. Claims are routine rejected based on a lack of “boots on the ground.” The VA’s own adjudication manual requires the rejection of claims if the veteran was not on land or served in the internal rivers. While a ship moored to the pier may be covered if the veteran went ashore, ships anchored a few feet off the coast are not covered.
• The term “inland waters” has been defined by national and international es inland waters, this includes the waters landward of the demarcation line marking the start of the territorial seas. All bays and harbors and most estuarine waters are covered in this definition of inland waters. The VA has repeatedly ignored the law on this subject in formulating their flawed policy. The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims rejected the VA definition and methodology in Gray v. McDonald, 27 Vet. App. 313 (2015).
• The dynamics here are fairly straight-forward, The herbicides were mixed with petroleum. Petroleum floats. It flowed down the rivers and streams and washed off the land mass into the bays and harbors. Tidal action took it to the South China Sea. It was taken into the distillation plant suction. Some emulsified and fell to the sea bed where maritime traffic would stir it up causing it to float up to the distillation intake. The distillation process enriched the dioxin. The same system used for potable water made water for the boilers.
Paul Sutton

Take It To Heart: VA Cardiologist Gets 20 Months In The Slammer For Fraudulent Billing

The Opposite Of Your Job: Former VA Employee Defrauds Disabled Veteran Of $680,000

Dioxins and their effects on human health

VA rips 'Blue Water' Agent Orange bill, urges Senate to sink it

VSO Beer Garden: Celebrating our Vietnam Veterans

AMNESIA: IT Updates For GI Bill System To Cost $70 Million

Department of Veterans Affairs opposes enactment of H.R. 299, Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2018.  Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing on H.R. 299, Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans 
The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held legislative hearing on August 1, 2018, on nine pending bills before the Committee. VVA testimony at the hearing focused on our support for H.R. 299, the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act, which passed the House on June 25, 382-0.
The Department of Veterans Affairs during their testimony presented by the Undersecretary for Benefits, Paul R. Lawrence, opposed passage of the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veteran Act because there’s still no credible scientific evidence to support extending Agent Orange-related benefits to shipboard personnel who never went ashore in Vietnam or patrolled its rivers. Without such evidence, he said, it would be wrong, and would create a disastrous precedent, to award VA benefits. VA also is opposed to paying for the provisions of this bill by increasing the cost that some veterans must pay to access their home loan benefits. Veterans will either have to finance the VA funding fee with interest, or pay up front with cash. This means fewer veterans will buy homes or will buy homes using non-VA options, potentially opening them to predatory lenders.  However, Rick Weidman, VVA Executive Director for Policy and Government Affairs stated before the Committee that Congress already presumes veterans who served anywhere in Vietnam were exposed to Agent Orange and doesn't try to calculate the level of exposure. “That benefit of the doubt should be applied to shipboard personnel too. ”How much exposure makes no difference.”
Senator Gillibrand, D-NY, cosponsor of the companion bill S.422, stated those who served on the ground and on the rivers of Vietnam are already able to claim Agent Orange benefits, and “it doesn’t make any sense” to exclude the blue water sailors, said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York. “I think this is an injustice that we can and must rectify,” as she testified before the committee supporting passage of H.R. 499.
Chairman Isakson has considered the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act a top priority for the committee and last week’s hearing was held to ensure that the committee is not overlooking needed improvement to the bill.
The Senate as well as the House are now in recess.
VVA will continue to advocate and request your grassroots support on behalf of our Blue Water Navy Veterans until justice prevails and the bill become law.
Department of Veterans Affairs opposes enactment of H.R. 299, Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act
To view the hearing and witness testimonies go to:
You must scroll down on the page to download witness testimonies.

Returned Korean War dog tag belonged to Army medic: The lone military identification tag that North Korea provided with 55 boxes of human remains last month belonged to Master Sgt. Charles H. McDaniel, an Army medic from Indiana who was killed in the opening months of the Korean War.

Senate Has 'Serious Concerns' With Blue Water Navy Bill After Recent Hearing

Don't Forget to Meet With Your Representative This August

Burn Pit Accountability Act Gains Momentum With MOAA Support

Preserving Their Valor: Survivors Remember the USS Indianapolis

109-Year-Old Veteran and His Secrets to Life Will Make You Smile | Short Film Showcase

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