Friday, August 28, 2009

Help available for veterans with PTSD

Help available for veterans with PTSD
August 31, 2009

DANIEL THOMPSON
Staff Writer
staffwriter1@occc.edu

Educators at OCCC can play a critical role in helping military veterans when they re-enter society through the doorway of higher education, said Rob Braese, a clinical psychologist.

Braese said he works at the Oklahoma City Veterans Administration Hospital at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and one of his specialties is treating veterans suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

“You have a unique role and opportunity to help veterans re-tool their lives.” Braese said to the OCCC staff. “One of the more significant difficulties is readjustment.

“You do not just go into battle. A soldier has to be trained.”

Too often the flip side of the coin is ignored.
read more here
http://www.okc.cc.ok.us/pioneer/Archives/August_31_2009/news4.html

Congressman Crenshaw looking to honor Vietnam vets

This all sounds really good and should be done.
Crenshaw looking to honor Vietnam vets
08/28/2009
from staff
Fourth-Congressional District Vietnam-era veterans will receive certificates of Special Recognition from U.S. Rep. Ander Crenshaw in a Nov. 10 ceremony at Naval Air Station Jacksonville. The application deadline to receive the honor is Oct. 13.

“Vietnam veterans served our country with distinction during one of our most tumultuous times as a nation,” said Crenshaw. “They answered the call of duty, but when they returned home many did not receive the recognition they properly deserved. These brave individuals helped fight for freedom and democracy at a time when their country needed them, and this ceremony will help show our appreciation.”

In the past two years, Crenshaw has recognized nearly 500 Vietnam veterans eligible for either the Vietnam Service Medal or the Vietnam Campaign Medal. This year’s ceremony will recognize the contributions of all who served in the U.S. Armed Forces, including the Coast Guard and the Merchant Marines, during the dates of the Vietnam War, March 1, 1961–April 1975. Armed Forces members who qualified for the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal by service in Vietnam between July 1, 1958 and July 3, 1965 will also be recognized. Foreign Service Officers with the U.S. Diplomatic Corps members serving in Southeast Asia during the periods above are also eligible for special recognition. click link for more

But according to VoteSmart, it is not what his practice has been, so maybe he should keep looking at how he can really honor the Vietnam Veterans and all veterans. It's easy to say you support veterans but it is proven when we really do it. He seems to have done better for the newer veterans but does not have a track record of support. Maybe there is hope for him?
VoteSmart Vetean's Issues
http://www.votesmart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=31130
Veterans Issues
(Back to top)
2007-2008 In 2007-2008 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Representative Crenshaw a grade of B.

2006 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 66 percent in 2006.

2006 In 2006 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Representative Crenshaw a grade of C+.

2006 Representative Crenshaw sponsored or co-sponsored 14 percent of the legislation favored by the The Retired Enlisted Association in 2006.

2005 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 0 percent in 2005.

2004 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 0 percent in 2004.

2004 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the The Retired Enlisted Association 33 percent in 2004.

2003-2004 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Vietnam Veterans of America 38 percent in 2003-2004.

2003 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the American Veterans 50 percent in 2003.

2003 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 0 percent in 2003.

2003 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the The American Legion 40 percent in 2003.

2001 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 100 percent in 2001.

2001 Representative Crenshaw supported the interests of the Vietnam Veterans of America 77 percent in 2001.

Fundraisers scheduled for family of slain Tampa police Cpl. Mike Roberts

Fundraisers scheduled for family of slain Tampa police Cpl. Mike Roberts
By Robbyn Mitchell, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Friday, August 28, 2009
TAMPA — With three family-friendly events scheduled in the next week, people who want to donate to the grieving family of slain Tampa police Cpl. Mike Roberts have more options than heading to a local credit union.

From radio-controlled car racing to a professional hockey scrimmage to a barbecue, there are lots of choices.

Friday night, families can head over to Ronnie Setser Customs, 7321/2 N Dale Mabry Highway, where they'll be racing radio-controlled cars to raise money for Roberts' family.

Roberts was shot to death Aug. 19 while checking on a suspicious person. He leaves a 3-year-old son and a wife.
read more here
Fundraisers scheduled for family of slain Tampa officer

A far cry from City Hall

A far cry from City Hall

Harry Kitchen once ran for St. Petersburg mayor. Today, much of his time is spent seeking handouts.
click link for more

Report: Staff at veterans nursing home feels terrorized by administrator

Report: Staff at veterans nursing home feels terrorized by administrator
ANTHONY COLAROSSI

Sentinel staff report

2:57 p.m. EDT, August 28, 2009
DAYTONA BEACH - A State Department of Children and Families Inspector General's Investigation found that many staffers at a Daytona Beach Veteran's Nursing Home found the workplace environment to be problematic.

The probe found that 35 of 57 staff members had particular concerns about the administrator at the Emory L. Bennett Memorial State Veteran's Nursing Home. The administrator, Belkis Pineyro-Wiggins, was described by those 35 employees as "terrorizing" or "belittling" and "degrading" or "threatening," according to the 13-page Management Review completed earlier this month.

Pineyro-Wiggins could not be immediately reached for comment this afternoon.

In a comments section at the end of the report, the Inspector General's Office recommended that the Florida Department of Veterans' Affairs review specific portions ot the document and determine appropriate actions.
read more here
Staff at veterans nursing home feels terrorized by administrator

Hit and run driver was "swerving" and trying to dislodge the body from SUV

Hit-and-run claims life of motorcycle passenger
Driver critically injured; Make of suspect's vehicle identified

Susan Jacobson and Anthony Colarossi

Sentinel Staff Writers

3:38 p.m. EDT, August 28, 2009

A British woman is dead and a Clermont man seriously hurt after a hit-and-run vehicle struck their motorcycle last night, the Florida Highway Patrol said.

Now traffic homicide investigators say the suspected vehicle is a 2000 to 20003 GMC SUV. It could be a Chevy Tahoe or a Chevy Suburban. It is silver and has damage to the left front, FHP officials said.

The left front headlight is broken and will probably not be working. Part of the left front bumper is also broken.


The crash happened a little after 10 p.m. at U.S. highways 192 and 27, on the Lake County side of Four Corners.

Dunkin R. Jackson, 53, of Clermont, was driving with his passenger on a Yamaha motorcycle when a gray or silver SUV struck the motorcyle on the westbound side of U.S. 192, FHP officials said.

Jackson was thrown into the center lane. His passenger, a British National who was not identified, was thrown into the path of the SUV. After the collision, the SUV continued on in the right lane and dragged the 50-year-old female passenger more than a quarter of a mile.

The SUV's driver was "swerving" and trying to dislodge the body from the vehicle, according to the FHP report. The woman's body was finally dislodged and the driver continued westbound on U.S. 192 toward U.S. Highway 27.
read more here and pass it on to find the person who did this please.
Hit and run claims life of motorcycle passenger

Coroner rules Jackson's death a homicide

I think we should all feel bad for the family with this double shock. I do hope it does not consume all news in the process though. You know the trial will.

Coroner rules Jackson's death a homicide
The Los Angeles County coroner has ruled that Michael Jackson's death was a homicide. The pop star died from "acute propofol intoxication," a statement from the coroner's office said. "Other conditions contributing to death: benzodiazepine effect," the statement said. developing story

Ala. guardsmen honored for aiding crash victims

Ala. guardsmen honored for aiding crash victims


The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Aug 28, 2009 10:20:03 EDT

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The Alabama National Guard soldiers who rescued passengers when a Louisiana church bus wrecked on Interstate 20 are being honored with commendation medals.

The 47 soldiers were returning to Aliceville from drill at Camp Shelby, Miss., on July 12 when the tire blew out on a 30-passenger bus in front of them carrying members of the First Baptist Church of Shreveport, La.

The bus rolled over three times. The soldiers had to lift the bus so trapped victims could be freed. They also directed traffic and helped the injured until emergency personnel arrived.
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/08/ap_guard_alabama_bus_rescue_082809/

A solemn salute in Lynn

This brought back a lot of memories for me living in Massachusetts. I started writing into the Item, Letters to the Editor so many years ago, it's hard to remember most of them. Some of my fondest memories as going to Fraser field and see the traveling Wall come into the city. So many veterans from all wars gathering together among a sea of citizens holding flags and generations of families making sure the young never forget that all they have and enjoy came with a price. Mothers explained to young children what the names meant. Old veterans teary eyed standing in front of it an knowing full well what it meant as they remembered their own brothers long gone from this earth but not from their hearts.

Great sadness comes over me when I know that feeling, as deep as it is, for those who have not served, fade away so easily. They go home, go about their own lives, and forget all about how they felt standing in front of that black wall. So few in this country know what happened to the men and women that came home because of the over 58,000 names they see. Maybe their hearts just can't take more and knowing how many died because of Agent Orange or suicides or homelessness, would just be too much to take in. I don't know why people may be transformed for an hour or so and then just move on, but I am grateful these people bother to show up. Too many others don't.

To Thor in case you read this,,,wow do I miss my city! I've been home 9 times in 5 years.


A solemn salute in Lynn


By Thor Jourgensen / The Daily Item

LYNN - "This makes you understand," said Kenneth Mailloux Thursday night, minutes after he joined other loved ones in presenting a wreath in memory of his uncle, John, at The Wall That Heals on Fraser Field.

Mailloux and the relatives of 18 other Lynn residents who lost their lives in the Vietnam War saluted their brothers, son, uncles and nephews Thursday evening as an appreciative crowd applauded.

The two-hour event began with the posting of the colors and ended with a bagpiper playing as he slowly walked the length of the 250-foot, half-sized version of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington D.C. "Some of my men are on that wall," said Vietnam veteran and North Shore Community College President Wayne Burton as he watched the wreath-laying ceremony that included a presentation by Colleen Piper and Marblehead veterans in honor of the late Christopher Piper.

Medal of Honor recipient and state Veterans Services Secretary Thomas Kelley said the wall is a salute to courage and sacrifice.
read more here
http://www.thedailyitemoflynn.com/articles/2009/08/28/news/news01.txt


Medal of Honor for Thomas Kelley
Medal of Honor




KELLEY, THOMAS G.



Rank and organization: Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Navy, River Assault Division



Place and date: Ong Muong Canal, Kien Hoa Province, Republic of Vietnam, 15 June 1969



Entered service at: Boston, Massachusetts



Born: 13 May 1939, Boston, Massachusetts



Citation:



For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty in the afternoon while serving as commander of River Assault Division 152 during combat operations against enemy aggressor forces. Lt. Comdr. (then Lt.) Kelley was in charge of a column of 8 river assault craft which were extracting 1 company of U.S. Army infantry troops on the east bank of the Ong Muong Canal in Kien Hoa Province, when 1 of the armored troop carriers reported a mechanical failure of a loading ramp.
At approximately the same time, Viet Cong forces opened fire from the opposite bank of the canal. After issuing orders for the crippled troop carrier to raise its ramp manually, and for the remaining boats to form a protective cordon around the disabled craft, Lt. Comdr. Kelley realizing the extreme danger to his column and its inability to clear the ambush site until the crippled unit was repaired, boldly maneuvered the monitor in which he was embarked to the exposed side of the protective cordon in direct line with the enemy's fire, and ordered the monitor to commence firing.
Suddenly, an enemy rocket scored a direct hit on the coxswain's flat, the shell penetrating the thick armor plate, and the explosion spraying shrapnel in all directions. Sustaining serious head wounds from the blast, which hurled him to the deck of the monitor, Lt. Comdr. Kelley disregarded his severe injuries and attempted to continue directing the other boats. Although unable to move from the deck or to speak clearly into the radio, He succeeded in relaying his commands through 1 of his men until the enemy attack was silenced and the boats were able to move to an area of safety.
Lt. Comdr. Kelley's brilliant leadership, bold initiative, and resolute determination served to inspire his men and provide the impetus needed to carry out the mission after he was medically evacuated by helicopter. His extraordinary courage under fire, and his selfless devotion to duty sustain and enhance the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.
http://www.mishalov.com/Kelley.html

Compassion fatigue -- how to protect yourself

This is great advice in this piece and something I practice all the time. Ok, sometimes not often enough. The post I did about God forsaking me was the result of not doing it often enough.

Not much has changed since that post, but the wondrous thing is that a lot of you emailed me letting me know you care, sharing your own stories, your own faith and it really helped a great deal.

One of the causes behind this blog is to show how we are all really connected. Some hurt but others help. Some are in need, but others give. The problem is when we forget that the really important thing is what binds us together. I don't pick and choose who I help because none of my heroes did. I don't want to get so swallowed up in the political division in this country that everything else vanishes. That hating anyone solves nothing, ignoring the truth and believing in lies makes bad things worse, plus it leaves behind a lot of people the same energy could be used to help. Focusing on what we can do makes a lot of people a lot better off.

It was also about sharing my own joys, pains, frustrations and struggles. That was also the reason I wrote the book. No, no nobility here. I had seen a therapist and was encouraged to write it as a way of healing and helping. Healing me, getting me over the anger I was still unable to move past along with the pain, was the primary goal. If you are a caregiver, it may help you especially if you are dealing with PTSD. Click the link on the side bar back to my website and you can read it in Adobe.

This article says that talking helps, but it's not just about talking, it's about sharing the fact that we are all human and none of us can overcome everything alone no matter how much faith we have.

Compassion fatigue -- how to protect yourself
CNN

Story Highlights
Caretakers can struggle with demands on time, energy and patience
But they can also become overwhelmed if they're too empathetic
That can flood them with other person's pain, leaving them exhausted, angry
Meditate, keep a journal, keep in touch with outside and be unafraid to ask for help
By Tim Jarvis


(OPRAH.com) -- The next time someone dreams up a new superhero, she should be wielding a bedpan. And Kleenex. And playing cards and travel Scrabble.


Caregivers try to be empathetic but they run the risk of taking on the other's stress and depression.

As any of the more than 50 million Americans caring for an elderly, disabled, or chronically ill loved one knows, the task requires superhuman strength and patience -- and loads of compassion.

Given the constant demands on your time and energy -- for months or years on end -- as well as the stress and frustration involved, having large reserves of empathy is crucial.

Yet as strange as it sounds, all that empathy can backfire, flooding you with the other person's pain, and leaving you exhausted, angry, even unable to care anymore. No one likes to talk about these feelings; they seem selfish, shameful, indecent. They take a toll, however -- on both you and the patient. And they're a growing concern among physicians, who have a name for what's happening: compassion fatigue. Oprah.com: Caring for parents, keeping your sanity

"About 6 to 8 percent of physicians and nurses suffer compassion fatigue," says Michael Kearney, M.D., the lead author of a report on the subject published this year in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Unlike burnout, which is caused by everyday work stresses (dealing with insurance companies, making treatment choices), compassion fatigue results from taking on the emotional burden of a patient's agony.

In a way, it's similar to post-traumatic stress disorder, except that the stress is a reaction to the trauma of another. As with PTSD, symptoms include irritability, disturbed sleep, outbursts of anger, intrusive thoughts, and a desire to avoid anything having to do with the patient's struggle.
read more here
Compassion fatigue how to protect yourself

Students take action after naked man hijacks their school bus

Naked man hijacks bus carrying students
Story Highlights
Police: Arris Pitmon ran toward the bus and climbed in through an open window

Pitmon took control of the bus then abandoned it while it was moving, police say

The bus crashed and some students were taken to area hospitals



ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- An angry, naked man commandeered a school bus full of teenage students Thursday in Atlanta, police said.

The man drove the bus for less than a mile before a student confronted him and the bus crashed into a wall off the road, according to police.

The incident started Thursday afternoon when the bus stopped to let students out, said Atlanta police officer James Polite.

Arris Pitmon, 23, darted toward the bus and hoisted himself in through an open window, Polite said.

Pitmon took control of the bus as the frightened driver ran to the back of it, the officer said.

While the bus was moving, the man abandoned the steering wheel and walked toward the back of the bus, Polite added.

A student then ran toward the steering wheel, prompting the man to fight the student. The unmanned bus continued until it left the roadway and crashed.

Students fled the bus, many using the back door emergency exit, and onlookers subdued the man until police arrived.

Some students were taken to area hospitals. Their conditions weren't available Thursday night.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/08/28/georgia.naked.bus/index.html

Fort Campbell soldier sought in fatal stabbing

Campbell soldier sought in fatal stabbing

The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Aug 28, 2009 8:25:06 EDT

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. — Police are looking for a Fort Campbell soldier after an overnight stabbing left a man dead.

Officer Jim Knoll told WKRN-TV in Nashville that police have obtained a criminal homicide warrant for the arrest of Donald Ray Green Jr.

Green is wanted in a stabbing that occurred late Thursday night in the parking lot of a supermarket near the Army post.
read more here
Campbell soldier sought in fatal stabbing

Pastors Warned After 'Horrific' Slaying

Pastors Warned After 'Horrific' Slaying
By SEAN MURPHY, AP

ANADARKO, Okla. (Aug. 26) - Authorities warned pastors in a town where a preacher was brutally killed inside her own church that they should take precautions at their buildings, even as police refused to say exactly what happened.
District Attorney Bret Burns, who described the killing as "horrific," held a closed-door session with about two dozen pastors, along with members of law enforcement. Several pastors who were there said authorities did not discuss any facts of the case.
"We talked about security issues within their churches and their congregations," Burns said. "We asked them to remain vigilant and be aware of their surroundings and their church locations."
He did not say why the meeting was held just with pastors rather than the community at large, or what kind of a threat the clergy might face.
The body of 61-year-old Carol Daniels was found Sunday in the Christ Holy Sanctified Church in Anadarko. A preliminary autopsy found she died of "multiple sharp force injuries," but law enforcement declined to elaborate and have been tight-lipped about details of the crime or a possible motive.
Burns did not rule out the possibility that the killer specifically targeted a pastor or a church.
"There are a lot of things we're not prepared to rule out," he said. "I'm concerned about the nature of this crime. I'm concerned about the community."
read more here
Pastors Warned After Horrific Slaying

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Tricare programs offer online counseling

Tricare programs offer online counseling
By Mark Abramson, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Thursday, August 27, 2009
Servicemembers and family members in the States can now see marriage counselors and psychologists online from home, thanks to two new Tricare programs.

The Tricare Assistance Program, or TRIAP, was launched on a trial basis on Aug. 1 and allows servicemembers and family members ages 18 and older to use Skype and a webcam to go online at home or anywhere that has Internet access to see and talk with a counselor.

TRIAP users have access to marriage counselors and other similar professionals to help them deal with stress, family and relationship problems, anxiety and other issues.

“The [TRIAP] system now is low-level counseling without a diagnosis,” said Tricare Management Activity’s Kathleen Larkin.

Tricare Assistance and the similar new Telemedicine program, which has psychologists to help people deal with depression and other mental health conditions, prescribe medication and make diagnoses, are not modeled after other programs that use online counseling; they are just ways to add to the services Tricare provides, Larkin said.
read more here
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=64410

Federal employees’ leave extended to care for wounded

Federal employees’ leave extended to care for wounded
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Friday, August 28, 2009
WASHINGTON — Federal employees can take up to 26 weeks of unpaid leave from their job to care for a servicemember injured in combat under new rules outlined by the White House on Wednesday.

Office of Personnel Management officials said the rules are technically still in the proposal and review stage, but federal agencies have already begun following them based on changes made to the Family and Medical Leave Act earlier this year.

Jerry Mikowicz, deputy assistant director for pay and leave administration, said the goal is to help provide medical and emotional care to a servicemember injured in the line of duty during their recovery. It will also apply to troops who contract a potentially life-threatening disease while serving on active duty.

The unpaid leave applies to troops’ next of kin: a spouse or parent, or even a sibling or cousin who is the closest surviving relative.
read more here
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=64417

U.S. troops in Japan rescue man from fiery crash

U.S. troops in Japan rescue man from fiery crash
By T.D. Flack, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Saturday, August 29, 2009
MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan — U.S. troops from Misawa say they were simply acting on instinct when they rushed toward a fiery car crash on a dark country road Aug. 15 to save an unconscious Japanese man.

"I was just doing what I would want someone to do for me if I was in that guy’s spot," said Senior Airman Thomas Sullivan, who works with the 35th Medical Support Squadron.

Sullivan, Airman 1st Class Justin Bunton, a firefighter, and Tech Sgt. Rory Stark, an explosive ordnance disposal specialist, braved the heat of the fire to carry the man to safety, according to base and Japanese officials.

They were part of a group of about 30 airmen returning from a trip on a base tour bus when they came upon what Sullivan first thought was a "big bonfire" next to some Japanese homes along the road.

When they realized that it was the scene of a car crash — and that there was a man lying on the road next to a car and garage engulfed in flames — they stopped the bus to help. About five or six other airmen — including Airman 1st Class Aaron Lauer, with the 35th Maintenance Operations Squadron — also ran from the bus to help.
read more here
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=64424

August tied for deadliest month in Afghan war

August tied for deadliest month in Afghan war

By Amir Shah - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Aug 27, 2009 17:59:42 EDT

KABUL — A U.S. service member died Thursday in a militant attack involving a roadside bomb and gunfire, a death that pushed August into a tie with July as the deadliest months of the eight-year war.

The death brings to 44 the number of U.S. troops who have died in Afghanistan this month. But with four days left in the month, August could set a record.

More than 60,000 U.S. troops are now in the country — a record number — to combat rising insurgent violence. The number of roadside bombs deployed by militants across the country has skyrocketed, and U.S. forces have moved into new and deadlier areas of the country this summer, in part to help secure the country’s Aug. 20 presidential election.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/08/ap_afghanistan_082709/




08/27/09 : DoD Identifies Army Casualties (4 of 4)
Pfc. Dennis M. Williams,
24, of Federal Way, Wash...died Aug. 25 in southern Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

08/27/09 : DoD Identifies Army Casualties (3 of 4)
Sgt. 1st Class Ronald W. Sawyer,
38, of Trenton, Mo...died Aug. 25 in southern Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

08/27/09 : DoD Identifies Army Casualties (2 of 4)
Capt. Cory J. Jenkins,
30, of Arizona...died Aug. 25 in southern Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

08/27/09 : DoD Identifies Army Casualties (1 of 4)
Capt. John L. Hallett III,
30, of California...died Aug. 25 in southern Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their vehicle with an improvised explosive device.

08/27/09 : DoD Identifies Marine Casualty
Lance Cpl. Donald J. Hogan,
20, of San Clemente, Calif., died Aug. 26 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force...


It seems as if AP has missed the biggest point of all. This is already the deadliest year in Afghanistan. Last year US deaths were 155, this year already it is 175. Coalition forces last year was 139 and so far this year 139.
click link back to ICasualties and find out what the troops are going through there. By the way, there are still troops in Iraq in case any of your friends forgot because I know you didn't.

$70 million project but veterans still waited

When I write/talk about what went on over the last eight years, how there are some people in this country deciding they didn't want to talk about it, I have been deadly serious. This should have never, ever gotten as bad as it did and it wouldn't have if everyone in this country actually acted like adults, valued truth over spin and maybe spent some time tuning into CSPAN to actually find out what was really going on.

Now think of this. All this money allocated, veterans wait even longer and who was in charge when all of this was happening? Read this and if your blood is not boiling, then keep reading.

Report: No oversight for $70M program at VA

By Kimberly Hefling - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Aug 27, 2009 17:22:40 EDT

WASHINGTON — The inspector general for the Veterans Affairs Department says that agency managers were aware of serious problems with a $70 million project to replace its hospital appointment system several years before the VA dropped the program.

The VA announced the project in 2000 after complaints from veterans about long waits to make appointments. It was halted this year.

The inspector general says that managers didn't take timely and appropriate action to address problems, even as millions more were put into the program.

VA Secretary Eric Shinseki has since ordered improvements in the VA's information technology management. But the IG says that the VA still needs more qualified staff.
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/08/ap_va_oversight_082709/

But 2003 there was still a huge problem going on.

H.R. 3094, the “Veterans Timely Access to Health Care Act”
H.R. 3094 would establish standards of access to care within the VA health system. Under the provisions of this legislation, the VA will be required to provide a primary care appointment to veterans seeking health care within 30 days of a request for an appointment. If a VA facility is unable to meet the 30-day standard for a veteran, then the VA must make an appointment for that veteran with a non-VA provider, thereby contracting out the health care service. The legislation also requires the Secretary of the VA to report to Congress each quarter of a fiscal year on the efforts of the VA health system to meet this 30-day access standard.

Access is indeed a critical concern of PVA. The number of veterans seeking health care from the VA in recent years has risen dramatically. Since 1995, the number of veterans enrolled in the VA has risen from approximately 2.9 million to more than 5 million. Despite the Secretary’s decision to close enrollment of Category 8 veterans earlier this year, the numbers of enrolled veterans only continues to increase as we begin adding new veterans from the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Unfortunately, VA health-care resources do not meet the increased demand for services and the system is unable to absorb this significant increase. With tens of thousands of veterans on a waiting list, waiting at least six months or more for care, VA has now reached capacity at many health-care facilities and closed enrollment to new patients at many hospitals and clinics. Additionally, VA has placed a moratorium on all marketing and outreach activities to veterans and determined there is a need to give the most severely service-connected disabled veterans a priority for care.

To ensure that all service-connected disabled veterans, and all other enrolled veterans, are able to access the system in a timely manner, it is imperative that our government provide an adequate health-care budget to enable VA to serve the needs of veterans nationwide. Access standards without sufficient funding are standards in name only. PVA is concerned that contracting health care services to private facilities when access standards are not met is not an appropriate enforcement mechanism for ensuring access to care. As we stated with regard to H.R. 2379, paying for contract care out of an already inadequate VA health care appropriation draws even more resources away from the funds needed to pay for VA’s core services. Likewise, contracting out to private providers will leave the VA with the difficult task of ensuring that veterans seeking treatment at non-VA facilities are receiving quality health care. We do think that access standards are important, but we believe that the answer to providing timely care is in providing sufficient funding in the first place in order to negate the impetus driving health care rationing. For these reasons, PVA cannot support H.R. 3094.

PVA appreciates the efforts of this Committee to ensure that veterans receive timely access to care. However, we must emphasize that the VA will continue to struggle to provide timely access without adequate funding provided by this Congress. We look forward to working with this Committee to ensure that veterans not only receive timely access to care, but high quality care as well.
PVA would like to thank you for the opportunity to testify today. I would be happy to answer any questions that you might have.
read more here
http://veterans.house.gov/hearings/schedule108/sep03/9-30-03/cblake.html
Oh but that's not all. While some people in this country were fully supporting their elected just because they said they supported and cared about veterans, this is what was going on.

This was from 2005.

Snapshot of How VA Budget Shortfall is Hurting Veterans’

Access to Safe and Timely Care across the Nation



The VA claims that by shifting funds dedicated to replace old equipment and conduct maintenance the department can address its budget shortfall and meet veterans’ demand for timely, high–quality health care. The following snapshots from across the nation reflect the stark reality of the budget shortfall on veterans’ access to safe, high quality care.



The 3 surgical operating rooms at the White River Junction VAMC in Vermont had to be closed on June 27 because the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system was broken and had not been repaired due to the siphoning of maintenance funds to cover the budget shortfall.


The VAMC in San Antonio could not provide a paraplegic veteran with a special machine to help clean a chronic wound because the facility did not have the equipment dollars.


The VAMC in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, closed its Geriatric Evaluation and Management Unit which does extensive case management to help elderly veterans increase their functioning and remain at home.


The Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs) needed to meet veterans’ increased demand for care in the North Florida/South Georgia VA Healthcare System have been delayed due to fiscal constraints. The Gainesville facility has made progress in reducing its wait lists, but as of April there were nearly 700 service-connected veterans waiting for more than 30 days for an appointment.


VA Medical Centers in VISN 16, which includes Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi and Louisiana and part of Texas, have stopped scheduling appointments for many veterans who are eligible for care, pending available resources.


Even though the VA Palo Alto, California, Health Care System has used $3 million in capital funds for operating needs, as of March 1 more than 1,000 new patients had to wait more than 30 days for a primary care appointment. A third of these new patients had to wait more than 3 months. More than 5,000 patients had to wait more than 30 days for a specialty care appointment. Roughly 1,400 had to wait more than 3 months.


The replacement of the fire alarm system at the Loma Linda VAMC in California won’t be done this year because the facility is using most of its capital funds to cover operating expenses.


The White River Junction VAMC in Vermont struggling with a $525,000 shortfall in its prosthetics budget.


Because the FY 2005 budget is inadequate, the facility has not been allowed to hire 3 additional mental health care staff and 3 additional Registered Nurses for the ICU. Nurses in the ICU have been forced to work double shifts, which this Committee has found to be an unsafe patient practice.



Even though the San Diego VAMC expects to exceed its goal in medical care cost collections, it will divert $3.5 million of non-recurring maintenance funds to partially cover operating expenses, and has delayed filling 131 vacant positions for 3 months. The facility has a waiting list for patients of 750 veterans.


Because the Iowa City VAMC had to shift maintenance funds and equipment funds to cover a FY 2004 million shortfall of $3.2 million in medical care expenses in FY 2004, the facility is facing severe infrastructure problems and a larger shortfall of $6.8 million in FY 2005 that puts patient care and safety at risk. The facility wanted to spend $950,000 in non-recurring maintenance funds last year to prevent a mechanical failure of the electrical switcher, which would close the facility, but was required to use those funds to cover a budget shortfall in medical care last year. As a result in FY 2005, the VA must divert $1.5 million of medical care funds to maintain the key electrical switchgear for the hospital.


Recently, a motor failed on a hospital bed, which the VA planned to replace but couldn’t because of the shortfall, causing a fire with the patient on the bed. Fortunately the patient was able to get out of the bed safely, but the facility was forced to expend $700,000 of medical care dollars to replace all the beds, which thanks to the diligence of VA staff lasted 7 years beyond their life expectancy. The facility could not use capital funds to replace the very old beds because the money had already been siphoned off to cover medical care.



To bring the shortfall down to $6.2 million the facility has delayed hiring staff for 4 months. The deliberate short staffing of nurses on the psychiatric ward – as a means to correct the budget shortfall -- has forced the VA to cut the beds available for treatment in half.



As a result of cost cutting measures to make up for the shortfall in FY 2005, the Portland, Oregon, VAMC is delaying all non-emergent surgery by at least six months. For example, veterans in need of knee replacement surgery won’t be treated because of the budget shortfall.


Since FY 2002, the Portland VAMC has had to use its equipment and non-recurring maintenance funds to cover medical care expenses. For FY 2005 the facility needed $13 million for medical and clinical equipment but only received $2 million.



The facility is reducing staff as a cost-cutting measure and is now short at least 150 hospital staff, including nurses, physicians, and social workers. As a result of budget cuts for staffing, the VA has cut the number of medical beds available to care for veterans.



Veterans in need of outpatient psychiatric treatment at the Portland facility are on a waiting list because of the budget shortfall.



The Biloxi, Mississippi, VAMC has diverted maintenance dollars to meet operating expenses for the past two years but the facility will not be able to balance its budget without reducing staffing levels at a time when the Gulf Coast Veterans Health Care System has approximately 100 new veterans seeking enrollment each week.


Fifty percent of all the veterans receiving home health care through the San Antonio VAMC will now have to fend for themselves. This cost-cutting measure means that some 250 veterans, including those with spinal cord injuries, will no longer be provided this care.


The VA Connecticut Healthcare System is facing a major budgetary challenge of sending veterans to non-VA facilities for hospitalizations because the VA has a shortage of beds to care for veterans and staff.


Due to the budget shortfall, the VA facility in Bay Pines, Florida, has been forced to put veterans who have a service-connected illness or disability rating of less than 50% on a waiting list for primary care appointments. As of late April, some 7,000 veterans will be waiting longer than 30 days for a primary care appointment.

Prepared by the Democratic staff of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee
http://veterans.house.gov/democratic/budget/snapshot6-29-05.htm


Now put it all together and then try to remember a time when you heard about any of this on cable TV show you watch or the talk radio show you listen to. They thought you'd never find out. So are you finally getting the message that all of these false outrages are cover ups from people that just don't care about veterans but do care about power? As bad as these reports are, it only got worse. Do you still want to defend Republicans or Democrats no matter what they've done or do you now plan on defending veterans?

Fallen Lewis County deputy honored

Fallen Lewis County deputy honored

By Keith Eldridge
LEWIS COUNTY, Wash. - Law enforcement officers from all over the region gathered alongside friends and family members of Dep. Mike Gallagher to pay tribute to his life and service.

Gallagher died from his injuries last week after an elk hit his patrol car as he was responding to a domestic violence call near Packwood.

Wednesday's memorial service was held at St. Martin's University in Thurston County as no venue in Lewis County was big enough to house the crowd honoring the public servant.

Gallagher is survived by his wife Andrea and his two children, daughter Alex and son Andrew



He had a distinguished career in the Army, and was offered a position in the secret service. Gallagher declined, however, so that he could spend more time with his young family. Instead he chose a law enforcement career in the Lewis County Sheriffs office.
read more here
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/55199902.html
Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Deputy killed in crash elk was Army veteran

Girl missing 18 years walked into sheriff's office

Girl missing since 1991 found alive; two arrested
Story Highlights
NEW: Two arrested in case of girl missing for 18 years, police say

Jaycee Dugard in good health, California sheriff's office says

FBI earlier told family that woman identified herself as missing girl, stepfather says

Dugard disappeared in South Lake Tahoe, California, at age 11 in 1991

By Taylor Gandossy
CNN

(CNN) -- A girl abducted in 1991 as an 11-year-old has been found alive in California, the El Dorado County sheriff's office said Thursday.

Jaycee Dugard is in good health, the office said in a statement, but provided no details.

Jimmy Lee, a spokesman for the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department, confirmed that a man and a woman have been arrested in connection with the case, but could provide no other details.

Earlier Thursday, Carl Probyn, Dugard's stepfather, told CNN that an FBI agent had called his wife, Terry, on Wednesday afternoon to tell her that Dugard had been found.

The girl was last seen walking to her bus stop in South Lake Tahoe, California, on June 10, 1991, according to the FBI.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/08/27/california.missing.girl/index.html