Category: Veterans Issues

  • Arizona Grants In-state Tuition for All Honorably Discharged Veterans

    It didn’t get a lot of fanfare but Governor Brewer signed a bill a few days ago that granted in-state tuition for all honorably discharged veterans. This is a win-win for the state. It makes it easier for veterans to relocate to Arizona and it will eliminate the need for most veterans with residency issues to get financial aid at one of the universities, which would save the universities money. Additionally, there won’t be a real need for the Yellow Ribbon program anymore at public colleges in Arizona so that would be an additional money saver for the universities.

    Some people need to be recognized for their work in regards to this legislation. The first is State Rep. Ted Vogt, who after leaving the Air Force struggled with residency issues when he attended the University of Arizona. He was one of the primary sponsors of this legislation and its driving force in the State House. Robert Rosinski also deserves a lot of praise. Robert is a student veteran the University of Arizona and he was really the face of the student veteran effort to get this bill passed. Additionally, the various veteran advocates at U of A, ASU, and NAU in conjunction with the veteran clubs (including veteran alumni) at the three universities all contributed to getting this bill passed.

    Good job all around.

  • In the Wreckage of an Almost-Shutdown

    Today, a lot of us are taking a slightly ragged breath and relaxing a bit. Last night, around 11PM, a deal was reached that would extend for a week the operations of government as we know it. This is particularly meaningful for all of our servicemembers, many serving in harm’s way, who had already opened up Mypay to reveal a LES with only half the pay anticipated for it. This will allow them to get their midmonth pay.

    Let me stress, for those few who might happen to be unaware, that unlike the rest of the government, when the military isn’t getting paid, the military is still working. People don’t stop trying to kill them just because they’re not getting paid. Instead, it’s just another worry on their mind, preventing them from being fully focused on the dangers surrounding them, because they’re too busy wondering if their family will be able to pay the rent or buy groceries.

    I’d like to take a moment to thank those organizations that went above and beyond in order to make sure servicemembers didn’t have to worry about where their family’s next meal would come from: such as the Navy Federal Credit Union, that promised all servicemember’s mid-month checks would be covered by the institution. I’d also like to thank (and this is rare) the VA (or as Brandon Friedman likes to remind everyone, Veterans Affairs) for putting out a Veterans Guide to the Shutdown, to help address the justified concerns many veterans had about whether their disability checks and education benefits would arrive on the 1st.

    However, what really needs to be addressed is not so pretty: why did it come so close in the first place? A lot of people in both political parties want to blame the other party. But really, both parties are to blame, and both parties gambled way too much with the lives of people who have already given up a lot to serve their country.

    The one bare-minimum standard any governmental body that deals with money has is to pass a budget for the next year. But nobody wanted to pass a budget before the elections, because then they’d have to deal with possible consequences for their votes. And after the elections, when Democrats realized that they were going to be out of power next year, they hurried with pushing through the healthcare reform, instead of worrying about doing their job and passing the budget.

    But the Republicans aren’t off the hook yet. Passing a budget was their job, too, and they chose to focus on ideological battles also. They decided to play a game of brinksmanship to show how tough they were for the next budget fight, ignoring the people it was going to impact. They tried to create a temporary bill that supposedly would fund the Pentagon all year, and the rest of government a week, to save the military, but then again added ideological riders on it.
    Why do we put up with this? People on both sides, why do we act as though our party protects veterans and servicemembers? I think we need to acknowledge that both sides use us for photo ops and for talking points on the halls of Congress, but when it comes down to it, they don’t really care.

  • Vet gets citizenship

    We discussed Leland Davidson last month. He was the World War II vet who found out at the age of 95 that he wasn’t a legal US citizen. Well, that’s been rectified;

    Wearing a plaid shirt with suspenders and blue jeans, Davidson sat in the front row Tuesday next to Irene, 89, his wife of 51 years.

    Looking on were 28 family members spanning five generations.

    Davidson said he didn’t feel any different after receiving his certificate. However, his daughter Rose Schoolcraft said the ceremony marked the end of a difficult, yearlong process filled with sometimes frustrating bureaucracy.

    Welcome, Leland. Unlike many of us, you earned your citizenship.

  • Iowa Senate retools the “Stolen Valor ” Act.

    Iowa Senate is working on creating a Bill, S.F. 397, that would make it a misdemeanor with fines up to $1,875 dollars and up to a year in prison. Sen. Dennis Black, D-Grinnell address the States Bill against the original 2005 Act.

    “It does not really go as far as I’d like but constitutionally I think it goes as far as we can,” Black said before senators voted 48-0 to approve an amended version of Senate File 397 and shipped it to the Iowa House for consideration.

    Which is important since that more people may will to abuse the new car license plate honoring those who have CIBs, CABs, CMBs, and CARs.

    Legislation that cracks down on unauthorized use of military decorations and medals also unanimously passed the Senate. Senate File 397 has been dubbed “Stolen Valor” because it protects those who’ve answered the call to military service from theft of the honor they’ve earned.

    This bill makes it a serious misdemeanor to impersonate a decorated military veteran to deceive another person with the intent to receive monetary gain, such as a job, promotion or political office.

    Both of these bills now go to the House for further consideration.

    The State Government of Texas will be looking into a similar Bill 431 in the near future.

    “It’s easy to fool the general populace,” says McEntyre. “They’re not going to question you.”

    And that’s why McEntyre doesn’t want to let the issue rest. Neither should lawmakers. The proposal next goes before the House Defense and Veterans Affairs Committee.

    “With the right amount of public awareness, it might make people (who are lying about a service record) think and realize that what (they’re) doing is wrong.

    “People think this is a victimless crime,” McEntyre said. “But (the liars) are victimizing all of us in our good nature, our willingness to help other service members.

    Which is something that many people do not understand.

  • Welcome home, Vietnam Veterans

    Vietnam War

    We owe you a debt we can never satisfactorily repay. A debt which many Americans don’t even know that we owe you. Today is the only thing we can manage, apparently, so enjoy it.

  • What’s going on at VA?

    TSO send us a link about mighty Sgt. Dustin J. Douglass from Scottsbluff, Nebraska;

    Messed up his eyes (all the dust and muzzle flashes and artillery blasts and fires from exploding vehicles).

    Messed up his ears (all the noise from rifles, diesel engines and generators).

    Messed up his back (all the backpack and body armor weight he carried on patrol).

    Gave him a rash on his arms and back. Gave him tonsillitis. Gave him post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Gave him a traumatic brain injury, depression, anxiety.

    And next month it could give him up to 10 years behind bars — for faking his service-related injuries and illnesses.

    Yes, that’s right he spent a year with the 67th Area Support Group in Al Asad Air Base from 2005-2006, but he never left the wire. But he collected more than twenty thousand clams in benefits from the VA. Benefits that should have gone to veterans with real injuries.

    See, here’s my problem with the VA; someone told me about their how in their state, the Pentagon lists 15 POWs, but the VA lists more than 600 residents of the state receiving benefits for being a POW, at a cost of $21,000/year per veteran. How do these ritards slide through the system? Especially when there are veterans who can’t get what they deserve?

    Do they have a quota of people they just let slide through? Are they on some sort monthly cycle where the applications they process can’t get through and then for five days everyone get in?

    It’s good that they’re prosecuting this douchbag, but how did he get overlooked for 2 years? Especially when there are so many being scrutinized?

  • Speaking of citizenship

    95-year-old Leeland Davidson, a World War II veteran discovered that his Iowa-born parents hadn’t registered his birth in Canada, so he finds himself trying to become a citizen late in life;

    Schoolcraft says they tried to dissuade him from pursuing the matter. Employees at the local passport office scared them, telling her father “If he pursued it, (he could) possibly be deported or [be] at risk of losing Social Security.”

    “We keep telling him, leave it alone, leave it alone, and he won’t, like a dog with a bone,” Schoolcraft told the Centralia Chronicle. But Davidson says: “I want to get it done before I die.”

    Thanks to ROS, Old Trooper and Gary for the link

  • Promises kept

    I think it was 1979 or 1980 when a rigger at Fort Bragg went nuts and cut some static lines (the thin strap that pulls your parachute out when you jump) and three paratroopers one captain was killed on a training jump on Sicily Drop Zone. The Army quit jumping for a week or two while every chute in the inventory was repacked. The they loaded us all up and jumped us again…something about falling off a horse or something. No one refused to jump.

    I remember a time at the National Training Center in California, a squad leader was shot in the back during a live fire training exercise. The medics hauled him off to the hospital and the exercise continued.

    There was a jump into Fort McClellan, AL when a newbie got tangled up in a 5-tour Vietnam veteran 1st Sergeant. The newbie released his WICI bag (about 150 pounds of squad equipment) so that the 1st sergeant hit the ground at whatever velocity a 200-pound man hits the ground in a hundred-plus foot free fall, the 160 pound private landed on top of him and the WICI bag landed on top of both of them. Both men broke their backs and were hauled off the drop zone into their civilian lives as cripples. Five days later we all jumped back into Taylor Creek DZ on Fort Stewart, GA with no one refusing to jump.

    I’ve watched 26 ton Bradleys sink into Texas lakes and rivers with a 10-man crew aboard and they all surfaced, ready to go test the next POS equipment the Army handed them. I watched a Bradley roll over a thirty-foot cliff and the crew emerge a little dizzy but thoroughly entertained.

    The Army wanted to see what jumping with an M60 machine gun fully assembled would do to a man. So they had my buddy jump with one – he went into the civilian world a cripple.

    And, oh, eight Marines and two sailors were injured in an explosion at Fort Bragg yesterday.

    That was just training – it was just us doing what we did everyday because the Army told us to do it.

    And now the Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is bending over backwards to raise our Tricare premiums – ya know, the premiums that we pay for our free health care.

    Yeah, well, fuck you very much.

    ADDED: DaveO asked about casualties during relative peace and I found this at history,navy.mil.