It’s Official: Voc Rehab to Pay for University Health Insurance

Disabledveterans.org and Veterans for Common Sense worked together to make this happen 

Director Ruth Fanning published the official position of Voc Rehab. That position is that health insurance, if required by the college for all students, will be paid for by Voc Rehab.

The reason for this change is that the old system forces the veteran to use their Social Security number as their insurance number. The position of the VA was that VA healthcare through the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is the same as health care. This is not true. Get the detailed news on cccf .

Health insurance is not the same as health care. Many veterans seen in emergency rooms outside of the VHA while on trips were forced to pay those bills out of pocket because VA would refuse to pay a third party.

The old law defeats the purpose of the health insurance mandate, which is to ensure the college student receives quality care without incurring financial risk that could impact their ability to attend college.

Here is the policy letter in its entirety. Veterans should take this letter to their counselor if they have not already seen it.

Chapter 31 Vocational Rehabilitation Policy Letter

The link below contains the policy. It is also posted below the link in its entirety.

http://www.disabledveterans.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/VRE-Letter-28-12-32.pdf

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged | Comments Off on It’s Official: Voc Rehab to Pay for University Health Insurance

Senate panel approves burn pit registry

 

From Navytimes.com

By Patricia Kime – Staff writer Posted : Wednesday Sep 12, 2012 11:27:38 EDT

An effort to create a registry of service members and veterans who may have been exposed to airborne toxins while serving near open-air burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan advance in Congress this week.

Bills that would require the Veterans Affairs Department to track service members and veterans stationed near open-air disposal sites in the war zones were considered in both the House and Senate.

The House passed a veterans’ education bill, HR 4057, Tuesday that included a rider calling for VA to establish an “Open Air Burn Pit Registry” for those who served near pits. If enacted, the legislation would require VA to publicize the registry and inform veterans and troops of their eligibility to be listed. It also would require VA to keep registry members apprised of research and treatment developments for illnesses and diseases associated with exposure to toxic chemicals and fumes.

The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee passed similar legislation Wednesday as part of a veteran’s mental health care bill. S. 3340, the Mental Health Access to Continued Care and Enhancement of Support Services bill, proposed by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. It includes similar requirements, directing VA to establish a registry, update members on developments and contract with an independent scientific organization to study the Defense Department’s efforts to collect and track air quality in forward-deployed areas.

The original legislation was drafted in 2011 by Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo., and Sen. Tom Udall, D-New Mexico, and supported by many members of both parties.

Hundreds of troops believe they have developed lung diseases or other conditions as a result of serving on bases where burn pit smoke often drifted over their work and living areas.

DoD contends there is no conclusive evidence associating long-term health consequences with the use of burn pits.

In a letter to Akin written July 23, Joanne Rooney, principal deputy under secretary of defense for personnel and readiness, said DoD disagreed with the findings of a U.S. Army environmental engineering officer who wrote in April 2011 that burn pits were the primary contributor to elevated levels of particulates — pollution — in the air.

“The data and conclusions from detailed scientific studies do not support this,” Rooney wrote.

Lawmakers said Tuesday that a burn pit registry would help pave the way for troops to receive better care for their illnesses.

“I’ve heard from countless veterans consumed with and concerned about their health related to the waste from burn pits,” Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle, R-N.Y., who chairs the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s health panel, said in urging her colleagues to vote for the bill.

It passed by voice vote.

The House version of the 2013 defense authorization bill also includes requirements relevant to environmental exposures: The bill would require DoD to develop a plan for tracking environmental exposures as well as developing a system for collecting exposure data and sharing the information in future operations.

Posted in Burn Pits, Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Senate panel approves burn pit registry

Can Counseling Complicate Your Security Clearance?

From NPR

by Larry Abramson

Jennifer Norris was a devoted member of the Maine National Guard.

“I was ecstatic. I absolutely loved serving in the military,” she says.

Norris still wanted a career in the Guard even after she was sexually assaulted by other members of the military. After she was raped, she says she got psychological counseling.

But then it came time to renew the security clearance she needed for her job as a satellite communications technician. One question on the form — Question 21 — asked whether she’d sought help from a mental health professional over the past seven years.

“I just could not bear sharing that information with all those people when my husband didn’t even know,” she says.

You shouldn’t lose your security clearance because someone raped you in the military and you sought counseling.

– Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine

Norris says the prospect of divulging that information was too much. Instead, she decided to leave the National Guard.

An essential element for many jobs in the military or other areas of government is receiving security clearance. In addition to undergoing a background check (according to standard practice manuals on https://www.checkpeople.com/background-check), applicants must answer questions about their personal life, including whether they’ve had psychological counseling.

But that requirement, experts say, is discouraging some people from applying for the jobs or from seeking help.

Rethinking Question 21

Others have stories similar to Norris — although many still in the military were afraid to speak on the record, fearing the impact on their careers.

Congresswoman Chellie Pingree, a Democrat from Maine, says these stories convinced her that Question 21 is simply out of bounds.

“It’s one thing to ask, perhaps, if you’ve been hospitalized or had long-term treatment, but just to say have you gone to counseling or therapy, have you gone through a bad time, that shouldn’t cause the potential of you being eliminated from your security clearance,” she says.

Pingree wants the director of national intelligence to at least add an exclusion for victims of sexual assault.

There’s a precedent for that. In 2008, the form was changed to exclude counseling for combat stress, as part of the effort to remove the stigma from counseling for post-traumatic stress disorder. Pingree says the same logic should apply here.

“You shouldn’t lose your security clearance because someone raped you in the military and you sought counseling,” she says.

Some who work in the field say there’s no reason to be afraid of Question 21. The security clearance form states plainly that mental health counseling in and of itself is “not a reason to revoke or deny eligibility for access to classified information.”

Evan Lesser is founder of ClearanceJobs.com, which helps people get work that requires a clearance. He says investigators do not focus on a single issue, like therapy. Instead, they follow what’s known as the “whole person concept.”

“They take into account the totality of someone and their actions, their circumstances, how they got there,” Lesser says. “And a few decades ago, seeing a psychological counselor might have been a problem for a security clearance adjudicator.”

Not today, though, says Lesser. He says that with millions of people in counseling, the government knows it would be shooting itself in the foot if it excluded those who’ve sought help.

‘A Major Deterrent For Seeking Care’

But many who work in mental health say the real damage happens before the clearance process starts.

Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, a former Army psychiatrist who now works for the government of Washington, D.C., says people avoid getting help so they can answer “no” on the form.

“Question 21 is a major deterrent for seeking care in the military or, indeed, in other federal agencies,” she says.

Ritchie says Army questionnaires show that fear of losing a security clearance is one reason soldiers don’t seek counseling. So, she says, whatever the official policy is, many people play it safe and avoid putting their clearance at risk.

“You have even a few people whose security clearances [were] held up, and everybody hears that, and knows that, and especially for people who are interested in getting a job after the military,” she says, “what is the first question that most of the consulting firms ask is, ‘Have you ever lost your security clearance?’ ”

The Pentagon would not comment for this story. But James Clapper, director of National Intelligence, has convened a working group, with the Departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs and other key agencies, to revise Question 21. That working group is also looking at other ways to reduce the stigma around mental health counseling.

But for now, the question stands, and people who have sought counseling — even for sexual assault — still must answer it on the form.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on Can Counseling Complicate Your Security Clearance?

New Stolen Valor Act tops list of vet-related bills before Congress

From Stars and Stripes

by Leo Shane III

WASHINGTON — Veterans advocates are optimistic that Congress will have enough time left this year to pass several meaningful initiatives for their members, starting this week with a law to replace the Stolen Valor Act.

The original act, which mandated jail time for those who falsely claimed or wore military medals, was struck down in June by the Supreme Court, whose members argued it unfairly limited free speech.

The justices wrote that a more narrowly written bill might meet constitutional standards, and lawmakers from both parties promised to revisit the issue to protect the honor of military heroes.

On Tuesday, the House was expected to approve a new version of the law, this one written by Rep. Joe Heck, R-Nev. His bill would make it illegal to falsely claim military medals “with the intent to obtain money, property or anything of value.”

The Senate isn’t expected to vote on the bill until this fall, but the legislation is expected to be one of the few successes for a divided Congress that has agreed on little and put into law only a handful of measures.

Veterans groups hope it isn’t the only victory. Officials from the Veterans of Foreign Wars have listed 22 additional bills that Congress “must pass” this session, to protect veterans’ rights and benefits.

More than 70 members of the VFW’s legislative committee are on Capitol Hill this week lobbying for action on those measures, which include better employment protection for guardsmen and reservists, more job opportunities for returning veterans, and undoing $500 billion in automatic spending cuts to the Defense Department.

In its session Tuesday, the House was also expected to approve a bill mandating new counseling for veterans applying for GI Bill benefits, to ensure they understand their college options and payments.

ADVERTISEMENT

The idea was drafted in response to criticism of for-profit schools, which have been accused of misleading student veterans into costly academic programs of questionable value. The for-profit industry has objected to those accusations but backed the counseling bill, calling it sensible assistance.

The measure also includes an unrelated provision creating a national burn pit registry, to better track health issues among troops who served near the open-air garbage fires in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Those ideas have drawn support from both parties in the Senate, but likely won’t be voted on until later this year.

Members of the Senate on Tuesday began consideration of the president’s Veterans Jobs Corps proposal, a $1 billion plan to create jobs for veterans as emergency responders, local law enforcement and national park rangers.

The idea has met strong resistance from House Republicans, who instead back proposals to retrain and credential veterans for civilian jobs.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on New Stolen Valor Act tops list of vet-related bills before Congress

House Passes Bill Protecting Veterans from For Profit Schools


Militarytimes.com 

By Rick Maze – Staff writer Posted : Tuesday Sep 11, 2012 19:55:12 EDT

The House voted Tuesday to prevent schools that accept GI Bill benefits from paying bounties for recruiting students.

In a move aimed at aggressive recruiting in the for-profit school industry that could spill over to other schools, the House passed HR 4057, a comprehensive veterans bill that includes a section that would prohibit payment of a commission, bonus or any other tangible benefit for either recruiting a student or providing financial aid to a student.

Schools that provide bonuses or compensation would be barred from receiving GI Bill tuition and fee payments, meaning that veterans attending the schools would have to pay the costs themselves. Most veterans would not enroll in the schools, House aides said.

The bill includes a lengthy section aimed at trying to make veterans education benefits more consumer-friendly, mostly by collecting more information to make it easier for students to compare schools and by creating a formal process for students to file complaints.

Among the information students would get: tuition and fees for each school, median student-loan debt, loan default rate, enrollment and graduation rates, rates of students who pass license or certification tests after training for the tests, career counseling and job placement help, availability of academic and technical support, and whether a school accepts academic credits awarded from a proprietary for-profit institution. Most of this information could be available on the internet, either at the Veterans Affairs Department website or via links on VA’s website.

The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee is scheduled to pass similar legislation Wednesday morning.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged | Comments Off on House Passes Bill Protecting Veterans from For Profit Schools

September 11 2001: The Day Everything Changed for the US Military

By VCS Advocate and Purple Heart Veteran Christopher Miller

From Policy Mic

For many who spent time in uniform on 9/11/01, life is very much a story of before and after. I listened to the broadcast of the attacks on BBC radio while on an Army field exercise in Graefenwoehr, Germany. Much was different for soldiers before that day and much has changed since then.

Before, we trained with deployments to places like Bosnia or Kosovo in mind, not Afghanistan or Iraq. We wore Cold War-era equipment and woodland camouflage uniforms and slept in tents in the woods or in soft-sided military vehicles. Being stationed in Germany, we were all more practiced at fighting a Warsaw Pact enemy in the snow, mud, and rain of Europe than the urban or desert terrain of the Middle East. The Army life was generally as routine as military life can be. You get a new assignment and pack your bags for someplace new about every two years.

As we listened to the towers fall, still hoping it was some kind of an accident, we didn’t know how much things were about to change. Our exercise was cut short and we loaded into our vehicles and headed back to our post the next morning. An image I will always remember from that convoy is of Germans driving past waving small American flags out of the windows of their cars and shouting slogans of support. If any country knows what good the U.S. military has done in the world, it is Germany. Fifty six years before, America and its allies had rolled over the Nazis and then spent the next several decades rebuilding our former enemy under the Marshall Plan. U.S. soldiers stationed in Germany have been supporting the economy and our NATO ally since 1945. It may have been a rocky relationship since 2003, but I’ll always remember the faces of those German men and women waving the flag in support of America, in support of a country not their own and to people they would never meet.

Less than two years later our convoy was greeted again with waves from smiling citizens, but this time we were rolling into Baghdad. The results of ‘shock and awe’ were still very apparent. The people there were glad to see us at first. They all said thanks and then asked when we were leaving. Over the coming months we would all come to learn much about Iraq, Islam, Baathists, IEDs, snipers, and ambushes on city streets. The learning curve was steep. As we rolled back down to Kuwait on the way home 15 months of combat later, we did so with 10 of our brothers dead and four times as many, including myself, wounded in action.

One image that is forever burned into my memory is of two kids in an alley way near the bank of the Tigris. As I pulled security at the end of the alley, they snuck up on a mangy stray dog asleep in the sunshine, one of them holding a cup of gasoline and the other a lit piece of newspaper. They threw it on the dog and laughed as it cried and burned and died. Kids play with dogs; they don’t kill them. The things you want to remember, you forget; the things you’d like to forget, you always remember. Some people would call American soldiers savages, but there are worse things in this world.

We went home for a year and came back again. This time we flew in and slept in air-conditioned trailers and had showers and Burger King. But the streets outside were still the same, if not worse. I was assigned to a small team embedded with an Iraqi army unit we were to train and support. As the sectarian war raged, I remember getting a call from the U.S. battalion paired with our unit. They had found six bodies and five heads and needed us to come out. That wasn’t the first time I took a call like that or the last.

Three days before we all flew home, on the last mission he was to go on, we lost a platoon mate. The mixture of sorrow and joy left you feeling almost drunk. We sat around in the gravel, numb under our ponchos in the rain, and smoked and talked about what we were going to do when we got home. At that point, I was supposed to have been out the Army for three months already, but they had ‘stop-lossed’ me. They let me go three months later and I decided to make a clean break of it. I went to college on the GI Bill. I finished my degree in 2010. I’m starting grad school next week.

9/11 changed a lot in my life and in a lot of other lives. Everyone that went to war knows someone that didn’t make it back. A lot of veterans left a piece of themselves there. A lot of young men and women saw more than most others will see in a lifetime. Many soldiers came home to empty houses or drank themselves to sleep at night or worse. Families split up. Kids have grown up without a parent. People politely thank me for my service and I politely thank them back, but talking about the wars makes people back home uncomfortable. Usually I don’t offer up that I’m a veteran, but most know by looking at me.

Everything is different after 9/11. If you told me I could throw a magic switch and take back 9/11 and stop the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, I would do it in a heartbeat. No question. But if you said that I could only take back my own part in the fighting, I wouldn’t do it. It was the most terrible time in my life, but it was also the best time of my life. It made me who I am. I know that is hard to understand for most people. I have trouble understanding it myself. But there it is. 9/11 changed everything for our soldiers.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on September 11 2001: The Day Everything Changed for the US Military

9/11 Anniversary 2012: New York Ceremony Held For September 11

From the AP

by Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK — Americans marked the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks Tuesday in familiar but subdued ceremonies that put grieving families ahead of politicians and suggested it’s time to move on after a decade of remembrance.

As in past years, thousands gathered at the World Trade Center site in New York, the Pentagon and Shanksville, Pa., to read the names of nearly 3,000 victims killed in the worst terror attack in U.S. history.

But many felt that last year’s 10th anniversary was an emotional turning point for public mourning of the attacks. For the first time, elected officials weren’t speaking at the ceremony, which often allowed them a solemn turn in the spotlight, but raised questions about the public and private Sept. 11. Fewer families attended the ceremonies this year, and some cities canceled their remembrances altogether.

“I feel much more relaxed” this year, said Jane Pollicino, who came to ground zero Tuesday morning to mourn her husband, who was killed at the trade center. “After the ninth anniversary, that next day, you started building up to the 10th year. This feels a lot different, in that regard. It’s another anniversary that we can commemorate in a calmer way, without that 10-year pressure.”

As bagpipes played at the year-old Sept. 11 memorial in New York, family clutching balloons, flowers and photos of their loved ones bowed their heads in silence at 8:46 a.m., the moment that the first hijacked jetliner crashed into the trade center’s north tower. Bells tolled to mark the moments that planes crashed into the second tower, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field, and the moments that each tower collapsed.

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama observed the moment in a ceremony on the White House’s south lawn, and then laid a white floral wreath at the Pentagon, above a concrete slab that said “Sept. 11, 2001 – 937 am.” He later recalled the horror of the attacks, declaring, “Our country is safer and our people are resilient.”

Victims’ families in New York tearfully read the names of the attack victims, often looking up to the sky to talk to their lost loved ones.”Rick, can you hear your name as the roll is called again? On this sacred ground where your dust settled?” said Richard Blood, whose son, Richard Middleton Blood, Jr., died in the trade center’s south tower. “If only those who hear your name could know what a loving son and beautiful person you grew to be. I love you, son, and miss you terribly.”

Thousands had attended the ceremony in New York in previous years, including last year’s milestone 10th anniversary. A crowd of fewer than 200 swelled to about 1,000 by late Tuesday morning, as family members laid roses and made paper rubbings of their loved ones’ names etched onto the Sept. 11 memorial. A few hundred attended ceremonies at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania.

 Read morehttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/10/911-anniversary-2012-new-york-city-memorial_n_1872166.html

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged | Comments Off on 9/11 Anniversary 2012: New York Ceremony Held For September 11

Veterans Plank in DNC Platform-Quote from Ben Krause

From Page 48 of the Democratic Platform. Complete with quote from VCS AD Ben Krause

 

“Under President Obama, veterans have started to realize the promise of a square deal. PTSD is no longer a dirty word. More veterans are getting their benefits. More veterans are in college. More veterans have more options in finding good jobs. I am one of these veterans. America has finally started to honor its promises to veterans after decades of breaking them.” -Ben Krause

 

Supporting Troops, Military Families, and Veterans. President Obama and the Democratic Party are committed to keeping the sacred trust we have with our troops, military families, and veterans. These brave men and women and their families have borne the burden of war and have always made our

Platform | 47military the best in the world. We will not only continue to support them in the field, but we will also continue to prioritize support for wounded warriors, mental health, and the well being of our military families and veterans. We will keep working to give our veterans the health care, benefits, education, and job opportunities that they have earned. That’s why the

President and the Democratic Party supported the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill to provide opportunities for military personnel, veterans, and their families to get a better education. That’s why the President is working to ensure returning veterans are able to get good jobs and put their skills to good use at home. That’s why the President has launched partnerships with the private sector to help veterans transfer their experience into skilled manufacturing jobs, and why the President has proposed a new Veterans Jobs Corps to put veterans to work as first responders. That’s why the President signed an executive order making it harder for for-profit colleges to prey on veterans. That’s why we enacted the Returning Heroes Tax Credit and the Wounded Warrior Tax Credit to give companies incentives to hire vets. That’s why we have committed to ending veterans’ homelessness by 2015, and have launched new partnerships with the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and with veterans’ organizations to do just that. That’s why, because the traumas of war don’t always end when our loved ones return home, this administration is continuing to work to meet the mental health needs of our veterans. That’s why we will continue to partner with the nation’s Veterans Service Organizations and veterans advocacy groups to ensure that every veteran of every generation receives the care and benefits they’ve earned. That’s why we have made it easier for veterans in rural communities to get the care they need. And it is why we have substantially increased funding for the VA, and directed it to eliminate its backlog of claims, hire additional claims processors, and deploy new systems to improve claims processing times.

Posted in VA Claims Updates, Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Veterans Plank in DNC Platform-Quote from Ben Krause

War might be making young bodies old

BOSTON (USA Today) – A litany of physical or emotional problems spill out as Iraq and Afghanistan veterans make their way, one by one, to the 11th floor of a VA hospital in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood.

The tragic signs of post-traumatic stress disorder or battlefield concussion are all too evident. Even more alarming for researchers is emerging evidence that these newest American combat veterans – former GIs and Marines in their 20s and 30s – appear to be growing old before their time. Scientists see early signs of heart disease and diabetes, slowed metabolisms and obesity – maladies more common to middle age or later.

“They should have been in the best shape of their lives,” says William Milberg, a Harvard Medical School professor of psychology and project co-director. “The big worry, of course, is we’re going to be taking care of them until they’re in their 70s. What’s going to happen to them in the long run?”

The research is in its early stages, and scientists with the Department of Veterans Affairs are rushing to understand it. If what they’re seeing is a form of early aging, it seems most common to those with both blast-related concussion and PTSD- about 30{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} of the veterans being studied in a long-term research effort. There is even imaging evidence of diminished gray matter in high-functioning areas of the brain, changes that shouldn’t happen for decades, if at all.

Scientists say their theory may not be proved until they can study these veterans over the next few years, and it remains unclear how these findings might impact policies on the length and number of combat deployments.

Read more…http://www.todaysthv.com/news/article/225488/288/War-might-be-making-young-bodies-old

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on War might be making young bodies old

Quadruple amputee soldier fulfills promise: greets his combat unit

From Stars and Stripes and Dallas Morning News

by David Tarrant

Standing on his new prosthetic legs, wearing artificial arms and dressed in combat fatigues, Staff Sgt. Travis Mills showed up in the pre-dawn darkness to greet soldiers as they stepped off the plane in Fort Bragg, N.C.

He was fulfilling a promise he had made to himself just weeks after an April explosion in Afghanistan left him a quadruple amputee.

Mills flew last week from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., to North Carolina to meet his fellow paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division. They had just completed a tough seven-month assignment in southern Afghanistan.

He shook hands and received hugs, trying hard to control his emotions. Mills spotted Sgt. Daniel Bateson, the medic who first came to his aid. Mills embraced him. “Here’s the guy who saved my life,” he shouted.

Mills, 25, who was on his third combat deployment when he was injured, talked about his whirlwind reunion and his road to recovery as one of only five quadruple amputees to survive the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. He spoke during a recent visit with his wife’s parents in Frisco.

His goal meant he had to work at least as hard at his rehabilitation as his fellow soldiers fighting in Afghanistan. “Honestly, they’re working hard overseas every day,” he said, “so I better be working hard where I’m at, doing whatever I can do to get better.”

To show up for his unit’s homecoming was his way of paying respect and letting them know, “Hey guys, I care,” he said. “I’ve done all this hard work for you, because you guys don’t stop working.”

 Read more…http://www.stripes.com/quadruple-amputee-soldier-fulfills-promise-greets-his-combat-unit-1.187841?localLinksEnabled=false&utm_source=Stars+and+Stripes+Emails&utm_campaign=Daily+Headlines&utm_medium=email

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Tagged , | Comments Off on Quadruple amputee soldier fulfills promise: greets his combat unit