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Veterans News for Tueday , July 10, 2012

  • Wednesday, July 11, 2012 12:47
    Message # 1005969
    Deleted user
    From: Wayne Gatewood, Jr 
    Subject: Veterans News for Tues
    day , July 10, 2012

    Happy Tuesday folks.  Hope everyone is well; that you and yours are in the best of health. 
     
    For you Military retirees, how many of you knew that Vehicle Decals will no longer be issued? Took my wife and her car to Ft. Meyer a couple of weeks ago for a new decal for her car and was told from now on the person driving the car into a base simply produces their I.D. card.  With 100% I.D. card checks it makes sense.  Fact is, anyone can steal a car with a sticker and drive it into the Base with bad intentions...so, asking for I.D. cards is a good thing.
     
    For Today:  What we think, we become. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts, we make the world.  - The Buddha
     
    East Coast - Boston, MA to South Carolina Scheduled Career Fairs and Open Houses. Please see attached pdf file sent in by our good friend and Veteran, Harry Brooks, State of Maryland Department of Labor.  Thanks Harry!
     
    VA Report: New Training Model Yields Faster, More Accurate Claims Processinghttp://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=2352
     
    Defense Network Alliance - Social Network for Defense Professionals and Veterans.  Must have a .mil e-mail address to participate.  http://defensenetworkalliance.com/landing/?dna-redirect=%2F
     
    Paralympic Program Motivates Disabled Veterans. http://www.va.gov/health/NewsFeatures/20120709a.asp
     

    How Archery Saved One Veteran’s Life. Read about one woman’s journey to take her life into her own hands and how she’s inspiring other athletes at the National Veterans Wheelchair Games. Learn more. Learn more.

     

    Prayers and blessings for you and your loved ones and for our fantastic Troops and their loved ones everywhere.  One Percent of America Serves...One Percent!
     
    Sincerely....................Wayne
    -------------------------------------------------
    Veterans News for Tuesday, July 10, 2012.  Thanks to Kevin Secor, VA VSO Liaison.
     

    1.      For one war widow, moving on is a marathon

    2.      PTSD can harm families of veterans

    3.      A 100-wedding-dress salute to military couples in Minnesota

    4.      Couple commits to missing cousin, other Vietnam POW-MIAs

    5.      March LifeCare developer vows to fight for VA clinic

    6.      Grant available for veterans enrolling at DSC. 

    7.      PTSD Study halfway Finished. 

    8.      Fort Bragg Soldier's Story Shows Why Preventing Military Suicides Is A "Frustrating Challenge." 

    9.      Tele-Psych Services Now Available. 

    10.  Special Court Gives Errant Veterans Another Chance. 

    11.  Scam Targets Veterans. 

    12.  Study: Some Schools Don't Meet Aid Benchmark. 

    13.  They Served. They Deserve. 

    14.  UnitedHealth Launches Own Blue Button Program For Personal Health Records. 

    15.  Research Focuses On Sunburns. 

    16.  VA Doctor Was Lead Investigator On Sunburn Study. 

    17.  Craig Telehealth Clinic To Be Renamed

    18.  Adaptive Rowing Seminar On Tap At VA In Northampton. 

    19.  Bad Weather Stops Attempt By Group Of Disabled Vets To Climb Mt. McKinley. 

    20.  Helping Out: Home Depot Focuses On Homes For Vets. 

    21.  PTSD A War Issue That Dates Back 3,000 Years. 

    22.  Vet Heals Through Music But Decries "Hero" Label. 

    23.  Battleship Iowa Goes Great Guns On Museum Opening Day. 

    24.  Austin Thanks Iraq War Veterans With Parade, Helps Them With Job Fair. 

    25.  Wounded Afghanistan Veteran Chases Challenge In R.I. Ironman Triathlon. 

    26.  PTSD Can Harm Families Of Veterans. 

    27.  Film Documents Guardsman's Post-War Struggle. 

    28.  VA / VSO-MSO Hearings as July 10, 2012:

    29.  Today in History:

     

    1.     For one war widow, moving on is a marathon.  Now the war that claimed John’s life is increasingly an afterthought, and Lisa, 31, is one of thousands of widows from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq trying to get on with their lives. Everyone seems to be moving on, including the other soldiers and spouses from John’s unit who have left for other bases and other assignments. Lisa, meanwhile, remains.

    2.     PTSD can harm families of veterans.  For 22 years, Shirley Booze attributed her husband’s violent nightmares and depression to “mental fatigue.” It was clearly more than just everyday stress that was affecting the Army veteran, but Booze had no other way to classify his emotional isolation.

    3.     A 100-wedding-dress salute to military couples in Minnesota.  For the fifth year in a row, Jacquelyn Basney will salute 100 couples with military connections. Her store in Blaine, Minn., Angelique's Bridal Gowns, will give away bridal gowns Sunday, along with free rental tuxedos and flowers, to 100 couples willing to share their love stories.

    4.     Couple commits to missing cousin, other Vietnam POW-MIAs.  From time to time, someone asks Jack and Wilma Laeufer if their 41-year effort with the Lima Area POW-MIA has been a waste of time, because they've never determined what happened to their cousin, Owen G. “Pete” Skinner, a Navy pilot who went missing in Laos on Dec. 12, 1970. It's a ridiculous question, really.

    5.     March LifeCare developer vows to fight for VA clinic.  Press-Enterprise  The developer of the 144-acre March LifeCare medical complex wants the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to build a healthcare center on his campus, not near the VA hospital in Loma Linda. The federal agency on June 28 posted its third request for ...

    6.     Grant available for veterans enrolling at DSC.  Daytona Beach News-Journal  The Veterans Retraining Assistance Program, offered by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, is designed for unemployed veterans between the ages of 35 and 60 years old. To apply a veteran cannot be eligible for any other VA educational benefit ...

    7.     PTSD Study halfway Finished.  UT San Diego  "The largest research project in US military history aimed at studying the long-term effects of post-traumatic stress disorder has now passed the halfway point. The Millennium Cohort Study, run out of the Naval Health Research Center in San Diego, is a 21-year study that is comprehensively following the lives and habits of 187,000 service members." Results from the study "will eventually be used to help the VA treat service members."

    8.     Fort Bragg Soldier's Story Shows Why Preventing Military Suicides Is A "Frustrating Challenge." Fayetteville (NC) Observer  Three days after a suicide attempt in May, Fort Bragg Pvt. Eric Watson "ended up in the Cumberland County Detention Center," where "jailers weren't even told to put him on suicide watch." This "raises questions about Fort Bragg's handling of his problems," says the Observer. The Observer adds, however, that the US military and Veterans Affairs "are doing more each year" to prevent suicides, in part by co-hosting a conference on the subject. Insiders Health  Matthew Gudernatch says Veterans Affairs "estimates that a veteran commits suicide every 80 minutes, or about 18 deaths per day." Gudernatch, who says the Defense Department can do more to prevent veteran suicides, adds, "The Veterans Crisis Line, launched in 2007 with little financial backing, has fielded more than 400,000 calls and has saved over 14,000 lives, according to the VA mental health website. That's a whole lot of help from a pretty simple policy change."

    9.     Tele-Psych Services Now Available. Craig (CO) Daily Press "Veterans can now get tele-pysch services at the Craig VA Telehealth clinic." Wilkinson adds, "If there are any questions contact Jayne Scribner at VAMC Grand Junction via phone or email. Her email address is Jayne.Scribner@va.gov."

    10.                        Special Court Gives Errant Veterans Another Chance. Roanoke (VA) Times  Three veterans have graduated from a Veterans Treatment Court which has been operating for a year in Virginia. The "court diverts offenders to a variety of services available" at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Salem, Virginia. According to the Times, such courts are part of VA's effort to improve mental health services for vets. The Times said VA is also hiring approximately 1,600 more mental health clinicians, including 13 at the Salem VA. AP  Jackson County in Missouri "has launched a new court that will offer military veterans alternatives to jail for some non-violent offenses. The court is a combined effort of the circuit court, the prosecutor's office" and the US Veterans Affairs Department.  "In some cases, charges against the veterans will be dismissed if they successfully complete the program and others will be offered services such as drug counseling or job training as part of their probation after being found guilty."

    11.                        Scam Targets Veterans.  WITN-TV The US Department of Veterans Affairs is "warning veterans about a scheme they call an 'inexcusable scam.'" The agency "says the scam artists call veterans and say the process of dispensing their prescription medicines have changed. The scam artists then ask for credit card information." WITN quotes Dr. Gerald Cross, VA's undersecretary for health, who said, "VA simply does not call veterans and ask them to disclose personal financial information over the phone."

    12.                        Study: Some Schools Don't Meet Aid Benchmark. Army Times  "Nearly 60,000 veterans have used their Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits at schools where some programs fail to set graduates up for a better life, according to data from the Education Department and Military Times EDGE magazine." The Times adds, "Last year, the Education Department announced that starting in 2015, in order for programs to be eligible for federal financial aid programs - called Title IV financial aid - at least one-third of students had to be successfully repaying their student debt, and those repayments had to be under either 12 percent of their total income or 30 percent of their discretionary income." The Times points out that Veterans Affairs Department spokesman Steve Westerfeld "said disqualifying a school for Title IV funds would not change its GI Bill eligibility."

    13.                        They Served. They Deserve. Lowell (MA) Sun  "The female veteran population is expected to reach 15 percent by 2035, as women continue to be the fastest-growing veteran population, spurring the VA to turn its focus to caring for those women. In March, the Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital opened the doors of its Women's Clinic, a place for female veterans to get the comprehensive care they need in a wide range of areas from counseling and mental-health services to substance abuse, gynecological and general-health services." US Army Nurse Corps Lt. Col. Denise Koutrouba, a nurse practitioner and the Bedford VA's Women Veterans Program manager, said VA is changing its "whole culture" in order to better serve female veterans.

    14.                        UnitedHealth Launches Own Blue Button Program For Personal Health Records.  Fierce Health Payer "UnitedHealth is implementing a Blue Button program, an initiative begun by the Department of Veterans Affairs, that allows members to access and print their personal health records (PHR) online. 'Blue Button is a new, convenient way people can access their health records securely and easily with just a single click,' Karl Ulfers, vice president of UnitedHealth's Consumer Solutions, said in a statement." Ulfers added, "This technology encourages people to update their personal health records, as well as print them, so they can take their records with them and discuss their health and treatments with their doctors."

    15.                        Research Focuses On Sunburns. ABC World News  Researchers "have learned what goes on in your cells when you get a sunburn: They say it's the UVB rays that damage your cells and that painful red sunburn is the...swelling caused by your body trying to get rid of them. But when there's so much damage that the body can't keep up, skin cancer is the result." Scientists "hope they can now use that knowledge to block cancer."

    16.                        VA Doctor Was Lead Investigator On Sunburn Study. HealthDay  Dr. Richard Gallo with the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System was its lead investigator. The study, "published in the July 8 online edition of Nature Medicine," could "have implications for a number of medical conditions and treatments, including psoriasis. 'For example, diseases like psoriasis are treated by UV [ultraviolet] light, but a big side effect is that this treatment increases the risk of skin cancer,'" said Gallo, in a release put out by Gallo's other employer, the University California, San Diego (UCSD).

    17.                        Craig Telehealth Clinic To Be Renamed. Craig (CO) Daily Press  "The public is invited to a ceremony at 10 a.m. on July 20, 2012 to rename the Craig Telehealth Clinic at 785 Russell. Colonel Adams will be there to honor his father, Major William Adams, for whom the clinic will be named." The elder Adams "was a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient for his heroic actions in Vietnam."

    18.                        Adaptive Rowing Seminar On Tap At VA In Northampton. Daily Hampshire (MA) Gazette  A"seminar about adaptive sports will be held Tuesday" at the Veterans Affairs hospital in the Leeds portion of Northampton, Massachusetts. The seminar, which is open to the public, will "feature a presentation by David Lee, director of Northeast Passage, a program based in Durham, N.H. that provides therapeutic recreation services. Sandra Diamond, supervisor of rehabilitation therapy at the VA's Leeds campus, will talk about the benefits of exercise and how it can help veterans manage pain."

    19.                        Bad Weather Stops Attempt By Group Of Disabled Vets To Climb Mt. McKinley. CNN Newsroom  "Bad weather and poor conditions" have forced a group of disabled veterans to stop their attempt to climb Mt. McKinley in Alaska. CNN spoke to Kirk Bauer, one of the disabled vets who attempted the climb. Bauer, who is the executive director of Disabled Sports, USA, said that attempting to climb Mt. McKinley was "truly the most exciting and exhilarating and challenging venture I've ever been on."

    20.                        Helping Out: Home Depot Focuses On Homes For Vets. Washington Post  Home Depot Foundation President Kelly Caffarelli. Caffarelli tells the Post that last year, her foundation announced "that we were going to put our grant dollars, volunteer hours and product donations behind addressing the housing needs of military veterans. We made a pledge to invest $30 million over three years to ensure that every veteran has a safe place to call home." Caffarelli says the work that her foundation does "includes rehabs and modifications for homeowners."

    21.                        PTSD A War Issue That Dates Back 3,000 Years.  Great Falls (MT) Tribune

    22.                        Vet Heals Through Music But Decries "Hero" Label.  AP

    23.                        Battleship Iowa Goes Great Guns On Museum Opening Day. Los Angeles Times

    24.                        Austin Thanks Iraq War Veterans With Parade, Helps Them With Job Fair. Austin (TX) American Statesman

    25.                        Wounded Afghanistan Veteran Chases Challenge In R.I. Ironman Triathlon.  Providence (RI) Journal

    26.                        PTSD Can Harm Families Of Veterans. Augusta (GA) Chronicle

    27.                        Film Documents Guardsman's Post-War Struggle.  AP

    28.                        VA / VSO-MSO Hearings as July 10, 2012:

                July 25, 2012.  The House Committee on Veterans Affairs and the House Armed Services Committee will hold a joint hearing titled “Back from the Battlefield: DOD and VA Collaboration to Assist Service Members Returning to Civilian Life.”  10:00 AM; 2118 Rayburn HOB

     

                July 18, 2012. HVAC, Disability and Memorial Affairs Subcommittee, will hold a hearing entitled: “Obtaining Benefits for Military Sexual Trauma.”  Time and location TBD.

     

DOD Welcome home-small.jpg A welcoming home for our Troops.

Welcoming home our men and women doesn't end after the crowd disperses, it MUST continue on for the life of the Veteran! They've served us, now we will serve them with programs that work so they reintegrate into society.

We are a national public benefit nonprofit organization that educates American Communities about best practices to serve Veterans.  We honor their service by empowering Veterans to apply their training and skills to successfully transition to productive careers and enterprises.

We provide free vocational training 24/7 to all of our members through our website, in addition to local events.  We believe the tenet that American Communities are the ultimate beneficiaries when Veterans claim their benefits and invest in productive endeavors.

The SWVBRC enlists the support of members of local Communities like you to increase Veteran awareness of the value of obtaining a VA card and receiving earned benefits.

Sponsorships, donations, volunteers and support from communities like yours enable us to reach out to Veterans and empower them to transition back into successful, productive enterprises that ultimately benefit all Americans and support future generations.

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