VA News Briefs
Thursday, January 1, 2009 at 09:50 AM
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VA Ramps Up Job Search for Injured Vets
WASHINGTON – Thirty percent of employees of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) are veterans – the second highest ranking among cabinet departments after the Department of Defense -- and nearly 8 percent of VA employees are service-connected disabled veterans. But the VA intends to increase the number of disabled veterans who obtain employment in its workforce.
"I am proud of this effort," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake. "VA knows the true quality of our men and women, and we should be a leader in employing them."
Peake said all severely injured veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will be contacted by VA's Veterans Employment Coordination Service to determine their interest in -- and qualifications for -- VA jobs. So far, that office has identified 2,300 severely injured veterans of those wars, of whom 600 expressed interest in VA employment.
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Some Veterans to See Another Travel Reimbursement Increase
WASHINGTON – Service-disabled and low-income veterans who are reimbursed for travel expenses while receiving care at Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities will see an increase in their payments beginning January 9.
A recently passed law allows VA to cut the amount it must withhold from their mileage reimbursement. The deductible amount will be $3 for each one-way trip and $6 for each round trip -- with a cap per calendar-month of $18, or six one-way trips or three round trips, whichever comes first. The previous deductible was $7.77 for a one-way trip, and $15.54 for a round trip, with a calendar-month cap of $46.62.
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January Grassroots Survey
Thursday, January 1, 2009 at 09:40 AM
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Last month, we asked, "With the election over, do you think our citizens will become more united?"
A majority of respondents—more than 65% percent—believe that the division of American citizens will continue in the years to come. Many noted, however, that people really need to put their differences aside for the health of the country.
- "America is strong as a people, and it's the people who will bring us back as the guiding light of the world, not the government."
- "These are tough times. We've used times like this to re-unite and get stronger. We're Americans first, as that we're all one."
- "We have to, and leaders in all organizations would best serve the goals of the organization and the country by encouraging everyone to do so."
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Vets Visits on TV - December 2008
Monday, December 29, 2008 at 08:34 AM
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VA Reaches 11,000 Survivors for Retroactive Benefit
Monday, December 29, 2008 at 08:10 AM
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WASHINGTON (Dec. 24, 2008) -- The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has identified nearly 11,000 surviving spouses of deceased veterans who will receive a lump-sum payment before the New Year to correct an error in their VA benefits. Also documented were more than 73,000 who had been previously paid. VA officials are still tracking down eligible survivors.
"I am pleased that our task force working to correct this problem has been able to identify this first group this week," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake. "We understand the difference these funds can make for these surviving spouses, especially during the holiday season."
Payments will be released to these survivors on Dec. 29. The total value of the payments is about $24 million.
At issue is a 1996 federal law that makes a surviving spouse eligible to receive the veteran's VA compensation or pension benefit for the month of the veteran's death. VA failed to properly implement that law in all cases.
Most likely to have been affected by this problem are surviving spouses who never applied for VA survivors' benefits following the death of a veteran. Eligible for the payment are surviving spouses of veterans who died after Dec. 31, 1996. The Department doesn't have current addresses for many of them, which makes the process of contacting them difficult.
VA has established a special Survivor Call Center (1-800-749-8387) for spouses who believe they may be eligible for this retroactive benefit. The Call Center is open Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., Central Standard Time. Inquiries may also be submitted through the Internet at
http://www.vba.va.gov/survivorsbenefit.htm.
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A Christmas Message from VFW National Commander
Wednesday, December 24, 2008 at 09:11 AM
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Anyone who has worn a uniform overseas knows this is the most difficult time of year to be separated from family and friends.
"It is easy to say 'let us remember our troops' during the Christmas season, but how many of us really understand the painful nobility of this sacrifice?" Bruce Kluger asked in USA Today last Christmas. "For those on active duty in the Middle East, the business of battle knows no holiday."
I could not have possibly said it better. But this writer did not stop there. "Equally heartbreaking—and incomprehensible—is the wrenching vacuum that war inflicts on families on the home front," he wrote.
Christmas celebrations in Afghanistan and Iraq are, by necessity, subdued. More quality food, special church services and private thoughts of loved ones usually constitute this most beloved of holidays in the war zone. Yet these gestures never seem to be enough.
On Dec. 25, 2007, McClatchy News Service was one of the few media outlets to report on the troops directly from the field. At Patrol Base Warrior Keep in southwest Baghdad, two of its reporters interviewed soldiers of the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, to sample their sentiments.
"If I didn't feel like this is where I needed to be, I think it'd be horrible," Chaplain Eric Light told them. "Our holidays are so tied to our families, it's nearly impossible to re-create them here."
What we can do as veterans is to remind those around us of the emotional importance of this time of year to the troops thousands of miles from home. After all, they are "honoring our nation with their service while fighting wars whose consequences have nothing and everything to do with the humanity at the heart of the holiday," Kluger aptly pointed out.
While we are keeping them in our thoughts, let's not forget the other GIs on far-flung fronts that never make newspaper headlines. From Kosovo in the Balkans to South Korea in Northeast Asia, tens of thousands of Americans maintain lonely vigils. Still others prowl the seas, protecting our shores from afar. Their missions should never be taken for granted or forgotten.
The debt of gratitude we owe the tiny percentage—less than 1%—of Americans who bear the burden of our freedom can probably never be adequately paid. But the least we can do is to give them more than a passing thought. As we enjoy Christmas revelry, keep in mind that someone in uniform is making that possible. Chances are that it might even be a family member. If so, you need not be reminded of the sacrifices being made.
As the mother of one Afghanistan soldier said, "Each American should remember during this season that our soldiers are fighting the battle over there so we can be safe here at home."
In that spirit, let my wife, Jean, and me wish all veterans a Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah and a great New Year.
Glen Gardner
VFW Commander-in-Chief
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Operation Uplink Gets One Million Minutes for Holiday Talk Time
Thursday, December 18, 2008 at 07:25 AM
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Sport Clips Gift to make possible a Million+ Minutes for Military Calls Home (L to R) Bettye and Gordon Logan of Sport Clips; Dan West, Roy Grona, and James Nier of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. (PRNewsFoto/Sport Clips)
GEORGETOWN, Texas, Dec. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- Service men and women will receive more than a million minutes of phone/internet talk time over the Holidays through Sport Clips' donation to the Veterans of Foreign Wars' (VFW) Operation Uplink. Operation Uplink is a VFW program that keeps military personnel and hospitalized veterans in touch with their families and loved ones.
As the nation's leading men and boy's hair care provider, Sport Clips announced that its Team Members and Clients raised more than $118,000 through its 600+ locations across the country for the donation.
The gift was presented to
Roy J. Grona
, State Adjutant/Quartermaster of the Department of Texas VFW, at the Sport Clips store in Bee Cave, Texas, that outpaced all other stores across the country in raising funds for this effort.
Sport Clips founder and CEO
Gordon Logan
, himself a veteran and Lifetime VFW member, said, "It is powerful that members of our Team and the Clients we serve have shattered our goal of raising $100,000 for our troops to call home - especially in tight economic times. It shows their commitment to the men and women who are serving our country and their family and friends back home."
Logan added, "I know how important it is to hear the voices of loved ones when you are overseas for months at a time, having been there myself. It's our honor and privilege to make this a Holiday gift to those who are selflessly serving our country."
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VA Urges Vets to Sign-up for Direct Deposits
Monday, December 15, 2008 at 03:59 PM
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WASHINGTON (December 15, 2008) -- Every month, 730,000 veterans or survivors look for their compensation, pension checks or educational assistance payments in their mailboxes. Nearly all receive them, but theft and mail delays cause problems for some veterans, which can be prevented by direct deposits.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is urging those veterans and family members now receiving paper checks to join nearly 3.1 million others whose VA payments are safely deposited electronically.
"VA is teaming up with the Treasury Department in a new campaign to protect government beneficiaries against the theft of funds and of their identities," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake. "Veterans earned -- and rely on -- the financial support we send them every month. I urge them to help VA ensure they get those funds reliably and safely by signing up for direct deposit."
Peake cited several easy ways to sign up for direct deposit -- calling VA toll-free at (800) 333-1795 or enrolling online at
www.GoDirect.org. Veterans, and family members who receive VA payments, also can sign up by contacting a VA regional benefits office or their financial institution. Information about direct deposits will be included in VA's monthly compensation and pension envelopes throughout 2009.
The VA Secretary urged veterans to remember that direct deposits relieve worry about mail delivery being delayed by severe weather or natural disasters. The deposits also eliminate trips to banks or credit unions to deposit checks, while providing immediate access to money at the same time each month.
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