Politics
Nye: $750 a Month is Too Much, Too Fast
Feb 22nd
Washington, DC – Congressman Glenn Nye (VA-02) is asking the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to
ease the burden on local veterans.
Last week, the VA announced that it will ask veterans who received $3,000 emergency payments under the Post 9/11 GI Bill to begin repaying the money – at a rate of up to $750 per month. The emergency payments were issued last year to veterans whose tuition benefits from the Post 9/11 GI Bill were delayed due to processing backlogs at the VA.
On Monday, Nye sent a letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki, asking the VA to reduce the repayment rate from $750 per month to a rate of no more than 20% of each veteran’s monthly living stipend. For veterans receiving the lowest living stipend, this would mean a repayment amount of $132 per month.
“Asking our veterans to repay $750 a month is too much, too fast, especially when many veterans are struggling to get back on their feet after their benefit payments were delayed last fall,” said Congressman Glenn Nye. “The idea of this program is to help our veterans get ahead, not to bury them in debt and paperwork. The VA should implement a realistic repayment plan that eases the burden on our veterans so they can focus on getting a college education.”
When the Post 9/11 GI Bill program went into effect last fall, many veterans found that their tuition and living benefits were delayed for weeks or months due to extended processing backlogs. After students were forced to take out personal loans or run up credit card debt in order to pay bills while waiting for their benefit checks, the VA issued one-time, emergency payments of $3,000 to help veterans make ends meet.
These emergency payments were an advance against future benefits – not an additional bonus – and they must eventually be recouped by the VA. In mid-February, the VA announced on its web site that it would begin deducting $750 from veterans’ monthly benefit payments.
Popularity: 20% [?]
Eric K. Shinseki’s VA budget proposal aimed to transform the VA into a 21st century organization
Feb 5th
(Media-Newswire.com) – WASHINGTON – White House Seeks $125 Billion for Veterans in 2011 to expand health care to a record-number of Veterans, reduce the number of homeless Veterans and process a dramatically increased number of new disability compensation claims, the White House has announced a proposed $125 billion budget next year for the Department of Veterans Affairs.
“Our budget proposal provides the resources necessary to continue our aggressive pursuit of President Obama’s two over-arching goals for Veterans,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “First, the requested budget will help transform VA into a 21st century organization. And second, it will ensure that we approach Veterans’ care as a lifetime initiative, from the day they take their oaths until the day they are laid to rest.”
The $125 billion budget request, which has to be approved by Congress, includes $60.3 billion for discretionary spending ( mostly health care ) and $64.7 billion in mandatory funding ( mostly for disability compensation and pensions ).
“VA’s 2011 budget request covers many areas but focuses on three central issues that are of critical importance to our Veterans – easier access to benefits and services, faster disability claims decisions, and ending the downward spiral that results in Veterans’ homelessness,” Shinseki said.
Reducing Claims Backlog
The president’s budget proposal includes an increase of $460 million and more than 4,000 additional claims processors for Veterans benefits. This is a 27 percent funding increase over the 2010 level.
The 1,014,000 claims received in 2009 were a 75 percent increase over the 579,000 received in 2000. Shinseki said the Department expects a 30 percent increase in claims – to 1,319,000 – in 2011 from 2009 levels.
One reason for the increase is VA’s expansion of the number of Agent Orange-related illnesses that automatically qualify for disability benefits. Veterans exposed to the Agent Orange herbicides during the Vietnam War are likely to file additional claims that will have a substantial impact upon the processing system for benefits, the secretary said.
“We project significantly increased claims inventories in the near term while we make fundamental improvements to the way we process disability compensation claims,” Shinseki said.
Long-term reduction of the inventory will come from additional manpower, improved business practices, plus an infusion of $145 million in the proposed budget for development of a paperless claims processing system, which plays a significant role in the transformation of VA.
Automating the GI Bill
The budget proposal includes $44 million to complete by December 2010 an automated system for processing applications for the new Post-9/11 GI Bill. VA also plans to start development next year of electronic systems to process claims from other VA-administered educational programs.
The Post-9/11 GI Bill authorizes the most extensive educational assistance opportunity since the passage of the original GI Bill in 1944. Over $1.7 billion in regular Post-9/11 GI Bill benefit payments have been issued since the implementation of the program on Aug. 1, 2009. In 2011, VA expects the number of all education claims to grow by 32 percent over 2009, going from 1.7 million to 2.25 million.
“To meet this increasing workload and process education claims in a timely manner, VA has established a comprehensive strategy to develop industry-standard technologies to modernize the delivery of these important educational benefits,” Shinseki said.
Eliminating Homelessness
The budget proposal includes $4.2 billion in 2011 to reduce and help prevent homelessness among Veterans. That breaks down into $3.4 billion for core medical services and $799 million for specific homeless programs and expanded medical care, which includes $294 million for expanded homeless initiatives. This increased investment for expanded homeless services is consistent with the VA secretary’s established goal of ultimately eliminating homelessness among Veterans.
On a typical night, about 131,000 Veterans are homeless. They represent every war and generation, from the “Greatest Generation” to the latest generation of Veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. To date, VA operates the largest system of homeless treatment and assistance programs in the nation.
Targeting Mental Health, Preventing Suicides
“The 2011 budget proposal continues the department’s keen focus on improving the quality, access and value of mental health care provided to Veterans,” Shinseki said.
The spending request seeks $5.2 billion for mental health, an increase of $410 million ( or 8.5 percent ) over current spending, enabling expansion of inpatient, residential and outpatient mental health services, with emphasis on making mental health services part of primary care and specialty care.
The secretary noted that one-fifth of the patients seen last year in VA’s health care facilities had a mental health diagnosis, and that the department has added more than 6,000 new mental health professionals since 2005, bringing to 19,000 the number of employees dedicated to mental health care.
The budget request will enable the department to continue expanding its programs for post-traumatic stress disorder ( PTSD ) and traumatic brain injury ( TBI ), along with the diagnosis and treatment of depression, substance abuse and other mental health problems. Shinseki called PSTD treatment “central to VA’s mission.”
The proposed spending will continue VA’s suicide prevention program. Since July 2007, the department’s suicide prevention hotline has received nearly 225,000 calls from Veterans, active-duty personnel and family members. The hotline is credited with saving the lives of nearly 7,000 people.
Reaching Rural Veterans
For 2011, VA is seeking $250 million to strengthen access to health care for 3.2 million Veterans enrolled in VA’s medical system who live in rural areas. Rural outreach includes expanded use of home-based primary care and mental health.
A key portion of rural outreach – which shows promise for use with Veterans across the country – is VA’s innovative “telehealth” program. It links patients and health care providers by telephones and includes telephone-based data transmission, enabling daily monitoring of patients with chronic problems.
The budget provides an increase of $42 million for VA’s home telehealth program. The effort already cares for 35,000 patients and is the largest program of its kind in the world.
Serving Women Veterans
The 2011 budget provides $217.6 million to meet the gender-specific health care needs of women Veterans, an increase of $18.6 million ( or 9.4 percent ) over the 2010 level. Enhanced primary care for women Veterans remains one of the Department’s top priorities. The number of women Veterans is growing rapidly and women are increasingly using VA for their health care.
Shinseki said the expansion of health care programs for women Veterans will lead to higher quality care, increased coordination of care, enhanced privacy and dignity, and a greater sense of security among women patients.
Among the initiatives for women in the 2011 budget proposal are expanded health care services in Vet Centers, increased training for health care providers to advance their knowledge and understanding of women’s health issues, and implementing a peer call center and social networking site for women combat Veterans. This call center will be open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Delivering World-Class Health Care
During 2011, VA expects to treat 6.1 million patients, who will account for more than 800,000 hospitalizations and 83 million outpatient visits.
The total includes 439,000 Veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, for whom $2.6 billion is included in the budget proposal. That’s an increase of $597 million – or 30 percent – from the current budget.
The proposed budget for health care includes:
- $6.8 billion for long-term care, an increase of $859 million ( or 14 percent ) over 2010. This amount includes $1.5 billion for non-institutional long-term care;
- Expanding access to VA health care system for more than 99,000 Veterans who were previously denied care because of their incomes;
- $590 million for medical and prosthetic research; and
- Continuing development of a “virtual lifetime electronic record,” a digital health record that will accompany Veterans throughout their lives.
VA is requesting $54.3 billion in advance appropriations for 2012 for health care, an increase of $2.8 billion over the 2011 enacted amount. Planned initiatives in 2012 include better leveraging acquisitions and contracting, enhancing the use of referral agreements, strengthening VA’s relationship with the Defense Department, and expanding the use of medical technology.
Preserving National Shrines
“VA remains steadfastly committed to providing access to a dignified and respectful burial for Veterans choosing to be buried in a VA national cemetery,” Shinseki said. “This promise requires that we maintain national cemeteries as shrines dedicated to the memory of those who served this nation in uniform.”
The requested $251 million for cemetery operations and maintenance will support more than 114,000 interments in 2011, a 3.8 percent increase over 2010. In 2011, the department will maintain 8,441 acres with 3.1 million gravesites. The budget request includes $37 million to clean and realign an estimated 668,000 headstones and repair 100,000 sunken graves.
Building for the Future
$1.15 billion requested for major construction for 2011 includes funding for medical facilities in New Orleans; Denver; Palo Alto, Calif.; Alameda, Calif.; and Omaha, Neb. Also budgeted for 2011 are major expansions and improvements to the national cemeteries in Indiantown Gap, Pa.; Los Angeles; and Tahoma, Wash., and new burial access policies that will provide a burial option to an additional 500,000 Veterans and enhance service in urban areas.
A requested budget of $468 million for minor construction in 2011 would fund a wide variety of improvements at VA facilities.
Popularity: 21% [?]
Michelle Obama announces more funding for military families in FY 2011 budget
Jan 27th
By Robin Givhan–Washington Post–
First lady Michelle Obama, on Tuesday afternoon, delivered a promise of more federal money dedicated to supporting military families — the first tangible results of her many visits to bases and hospitals, as well as conversations with veterans and their loved ones in 2009.
In a 20-minute speech to the Joint Armed Forces Officers’ Wives’ Luncheon at Bolling Air Force Base, Obama announced a 3 percent increase in funding over the 2010 fiscal year budget. That bump-up in dollars would bring spending on military support — from child-care services and improved housing to spousal-education programs — to $8.8 billion.
“These are all major investments,” Obama said in her speech. “They are the result of military families speaking up and being heard. And they are part of a larger ongoing commitment to care for our troops and their families even after the fighting ends.”
Even before Obama became first lady, she emphasized her concern for military families and the stresses placed on them as the country fights two wars. She spent part of last year reaching out to servicemen and women and their families through private conversations and public events. She thanked them for their dedication before she and vice-presidential spouse Jill Biden attended the opening game of the World Series. And she honored their history when she hosted a tea for military women at the White House. Mostly, however, Obama was on a listening tour.
Popularity: 11% [?]
GI Bill backlog climbs as new semester looms
Jan 7th
By Rick Maze – Military Times
With the latest numbers showing a still-rising backlog for Post-9/11 GI Bill claims, a key lawmaker says he doesn’t think the Veterans Affairs Department is ready for a flood of new claims for the spring semester.
Rep. Harry Mitchell, D-Ariz., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee’s oversight and investigations panel, said he is “disappointed” with VA’s performance in the fall semester, which left 26,000 people still waiting for benefits when classes ended.
VA officials said most of those 26,000 veterans have now been paid. But VA’s Jan. 4 report on pending benefits claims shows that more than 48,000 Post-9/11 GI Bill claims are still being processed. Some of those could be for the spring semester.
“With a second semester only weeks away, I believe the situation remains unacceptable,” Mitchell said in a letter to VA, in which he noted he continues to get complaints about long waits.
“The confusion and uncertainty about when checks will arrive, coupled with the need to meet immediate expenses, is adding stress to veterans at a time when many are already struggling with [post-traumatic stress disorder],” Mitchell said.
Popularity: 11% [?]
President Obama Addresses Veterans, Fort Hood in Weekly Address–watch it here.
Nov 15th
Also attached are President Obama’s Veterans’ Day comments at Arlington National cemetery and his comments at Fort Hood.
Popularity: 8% [?]
Senator Vitter, Senate Republicans, honor veterans by pulling no show on homelessness hearing
Nov 11th
Yesterday the Senate Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation, and Community Development held a hearing titled, Ending Veterans’
Homelessness. While it is not unheard of to see meager appearances at Congressional hearings, particularly when dealing with subcommittees, it is uncommon to see a complete no show by the minority, particularly the ranking member.
This also comes coincidentally at a particularly loaded time in which Republicans are sending a Veterans’ Day letter urging President Obama to send more troops to the war in Afghanistan. The purpose of my article is not to point out individuals and score cheap political points for the democrats. In fairness, I consider myself a moderate democrat and have worked for democrats in Congress—that’s my disclosure. But day in and day out I work with both sides of the aisle and my job is to get the benefits our veterans deserve—and honestly I don’t care what party gets us there so long as it is done.
So here is my BOOOOOOOOO to the Republicans on the Housing, Transportation, and Community Development Subcommittee. My question for you Senator David Vitter (Louisiana), Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (Texas), Senator Mike Crapo (Idaho), Senator Bob Corker (Tennessee), Senator Jim DeMint (South Carolina), Senator Mike Johanns (Nebraska), and Senator Judd Gregg, is what was so important that not one member from your party could be present to represent the republicans on such an important issue? Yes you answer to your constituents, but you also have an obligation to those who very proudly served our country and are now sleeping in the gutters of the streets you represent. Boo, Boo, Boo, to you. I pray you are not firing up your veteran loving rhetoric today in your home districts about the great feats you are attempting to accomplish for our nation’s veterans. Do me a favor, stay at home and write your apology for failing America’s veterans yesterday. Furthermore, please refrain from making any suggestions on what our military ought to be doing if you cannot first take care of those who have already served.
In my pro-veteran, non-partisan fairness (The Virginia Veteran is all about fair and balanced reporting), this question is also extended to those not present on the democratic side. Senators Tim Johnson (South Dakota), Sherrod Brown (Ohio), Herb Kohl (Wisconsin), and Senator Mark Warner (Virginia). In further fairness, at least their party was well represented and actually had the most members I have seen from one side on a subcommittee hearing on veteran’s issues.
My personal thanks to Senator Robert Menendez (New Jersey), Senator Jack Reed (Rhode Island), Senator Charles Schumer (New York), Senator, and Chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee, Daniel Akaka (Hawaii), Senator Jon Tester (Montana), Senator Jeff Merkley Oregon.
My thanks for taking seriously the more than 131,000 veterans that will sleep in the streets on the night we honor Veterans. If any of these are your no-show representatives I hope you will call and ask them a simple question—why? And follow that with “no, never again!”
Popularity: 41% [?]
Coburn named as senator holding up vets bill
Nov 4th
By Rick Maze – Military Times
Thirteen major military and veterans groups have joined forces to try to force one senator — Republican Tom Coburn of Oklahoma — to release a hold that he has placed on a major veterans benefits bill.
Coburn has been identified by Senate aides as the lawmaker preventing consideration of S 1963, the Veterans’ Caregiver and Omnibus Health Benefits Act of 2009, by using an informal but legal practice of putting a hold on a bill.
Coburn’s staff did not respond to questions, but Senate aides said the first-term senator has expressed concern about creating new and unfunded benefits and wants the opportunity to amend the measure.
Popularity: 20% [?]
Vet counseling programs national models
Oct 29th

CONCORD, N.H. — Two veterans counseling measures based on New Hampshire programs have been signed into law.
The suicide prevention amendment was sponsored by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and Congressman Paul Hodes. It requires that the Department of Defense establish a program to provide National Guard members and reservists, their families, and communities with training in suicide prevention and counseling in response to suicide.
The Yellow Ribbon Plus amendment, also sponsored by Shaheen, calls on the department to identify lessons learned from programs such as one in New Hampshire that identified the need for more personalized counseling and support services for National Guard and reservists and their families.
Popularity: 7% [?]
Webb Tapped to Chair Personnel Subcommittee of Senate Committee on Armed Services
Oct 23rd
From the Office of Sen. Webb–
Senator Has Life-long Experience Addressing Needs of Military Servicemembers and their Families
Washington, DC – Senator Jim Webb (D-VA) was selected this week to chair the powerful Personnel Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Armed Services for the 111th Congress. As chairman, Webb will draw on his extensive experience and expertise in military and defense matters to strengthen congressional oversight over a wide range of issues relating to the welfare, professional development, and quality of life of servicemembers and their families.
As a member of both the Senate Committee on Armed Services and the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs for nearly three years, Senator Webb drafted and introduced legislation that led to a modern, comprehensive post-9/11 GI Bill; spearheaded the effort to increase “dwell time” between combat deployments for active duty and reserve servicemembers; obtained an independent investigation to examine the effectiveness and reliability of body armor; and authored legislation that led to the establishment of the Commission on Wartime Contracting to root out waste, fraud, and abuse in Iraq and Afghanistan wartime-support contracts.
“As the son of an Air Force officer, the father of a Marine, and a Marine combat veteran myself, I understand the sacrifices that our servicemembers and their families make every day. I have worked on the issues championed by this Subcommittee throughout my life, and it is an honor to be named chairman,” said Webb.
“The Commonwealth of Virginia is home to hundreds of thousands of active-duty and retired military families,” continued Webb. “Whether these families serve at the Pentagon in Northern Virginia, Ft. Lee outside Richmond, or the Norfolk Naval base and its associated commands, these families share a common set of concerns ranging from health care to basic pay and benefits. Working with Senator Graham, the subcommittee’s ranking member, I look forward to this new position as an opportunity to explore the ever-changing needs of our armed services and identify policies that ensure the well-being of our servicemembers and their families.”
Senator Webb served with the Fifth Marine Regiment in Vietnam, where as a rifle platoon and company commander in the infamous An Hoa Basin west of Danang, he was awarded the Navy Cross, the Silver Star Medal, two Bronze Star Medals, and two Purple Hearts. He later served as a platoon commander and as an instructor in tactics and weapons at Marine Corps Officer Candidates School, and then as a member of the Secretary of the Navy’s immediate staff, before leaving the Marine Corps in 1972. Following law school, Webb served in the U.S. Congress as counsel to the House Committee on Veterans Affairs from 1977 to 1981. In 1984, he was appointed the inaugural Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs. In 1987, he became the first graduate in the Naval Academy’s history to serve in the military and then become Secretary of the Navy.
The Subcommittee on Personnel’s responsibilities include: military and DOD civilian personnel policies; end strengths for military personnel; personnel compensation and benefits; military health care; and military nominations. Additional areas include: professional military education; DOD schools, DOD child care and family assistance; civil-military programs; POW/MIA issues; Armed Forces Retirement Home; morale, welfare and recreation; and military commissaries and exchanges.
The Subcommittee oversight responsibilities include the budget accounts for military personnel, military retirement, Defense Health Program, DOD Medicare-Eligible Retiree Health Care Fund, and operation and maintenance for certain education and civil military programs. Oversight of DOD offices and agencies include the positions of Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel & Readiness, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, and Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs; and the TRICARE Management Agency, Defense Commissary Agency, and Uniformed Services University of the Health Services.
To download a PDF of the Subcommittee structure for the Senate Armed Services Committee, please go to: http://armed-services.senate.gov/SASC%20SUB%20STRUCTURE%20111TH.pdf
Popularity: 6% [?]
Lawmakers form caucus for military families
Oct 23rd

One co-chair of the caucus is Rep. Cathy McMorris-Rodgers, a Republican lawmaker from Washington state who is married to a 26-year Navy veteran. The other co-chair is Rep. Sanford Bishop Jr., D-Ga.
The Military Family Caucus officially launches Nov. 4 at an event at which Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, will be the keynote speaker.
McMorris-Rodgers, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, represents a district that includes Fairchild Air Force Base. Bishop, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, represents a Georgia district that includes Fort Benning and Marine Corps Logistic Base Albany.
Popularity: 17% [?]

