1. Homeless Vets, Supporting Military Families: Among Obama's "Top Priority" Issues. CBS News '
"Political Hotsheet" website (8/13, Knoller) reports that, after
signing a border security measure Thursday, President Obama issued a
statement saying that securing the nation's southwest border has been "a
top priority" since he took office, then adds, "But if you think Mr.
Obama can have but a single 'top priority,' you'd be wrong. He's got a
load of them." In addition to border security and economic recovery, the
Administration has applied the "top priority" label to ending
homelessness among veterans, saying in August last year that he had
"directed Secretary Shinseki to focus on a top priority: reducing
homeless among veterans." Similarly, in May 2009, another Obama
statement said that military families." Other issues to which the
Administration has attached a "top priority label include: free trade
agreements, energy security, education reform, revamping student loans,
boosting small business exports, swine flu immunizations, hurricane
preparedness, health aid for 9/11 first responders, building ties with
Mexico and Canada, environmental protection and consumer measures.
2. Nebraska Dedicates Its First State Veterans Cemetery. In continuing coverage, an op-ed in the McCook (NE) Daily Gazette
(8/13, 6K) by Nebraska treasurer Shane Osborn notes that dedication of
the state's first veterans cemetery, at Alliance in Box Butte County.
3. Maine Schedules Briefings For Female Veterans. In a ReadMedia
release (8/13), the Maine Veterans' Services announces that the
Advisory Commission on Women Veterans is holding a series of veterans
briefings around the state, to provide female veterans with networking
opportunities and information on medical, educational, family support,
disability and other benefits.
4. California DVA Plans Women Veterans Conference. The Modesto Bee
(8/14, 73K) reports that the California Department of Veterans Affairs
"said it will hold its third annual CalVet Women Veterans Conference on
Oct. 7-8 in Clovis. The state agency said its conference committee is
planning the program and is seeking donations for the conference, set
for the Clovis Veterans Memorial Building."
5. VA Will Test Paperless Claims System In Rhode Island. In continuing coverage, CMIO
(8/13, Byers) reports that the VA "has selected its regional benefits
office in Providence, R.I. to test a paperless system and new procedures
to improve processing of Veterans' claims for disability compensation
to support VA's transformation of the claims process for Veterans, their
families and their survivors. The pilot, which initially focuses on
compensation benefits, is expected to start at the Providence facility
in November, with completion in May 2011."
6. Defense Budget Will Likely Include Some Increased Tricare Premiums. The syndicated "Military Update" column, appearing in the Everett (WA) Herald
and elsewhere (8/14, Philpott) reports, "Defense Secretary Robert Gates
has signaled that the department's fiscal 2012 budget request to
Congress early next year will include recommendations to raise health
care premiums for some Tricare beneficiaries. If past proposals are a
reliable guide, the target of higher fees is likely to be military
retirees rather than active duty families. The Bush administration had
tried for three straight years to raise fees for working age retirees.
Congress blocked those efforts." In the Pentagon press conference where
he debuted proposals to reduce military budget overhead, Gates said that
health cost controls would be proposed in the months ahead, stressing
that "Health-care reform is on my agenda."
7. Agencies Advance Use Of Health IT. Federal Times
(8/13, Spoth, 40K) reports on efforts to build the Nationwide Health
Information Network (NHIN), "an ambitious project that aims to get
federal agencies to use common standards to record and store health
records electronically." Doug Fridsma, acting director of office of
interoperability and standards within the HHS's Office of the National
Coordinator of Health Information Technology, "compared the NHIN to the
Internet -- a set of services, standards and policies that allows for a
free, secure flow of information between diverse sources." He noted that
the Veterans Affairs and Defense departments "are using the NHIN to
exchange information on veterans and active-duty service members."
8. VA Pilot Program Aims To Curb Veteran Suicides. The website of Grand Junction, Colorado-based KREX-TV
(8/13, Hilsheimer) reports that the Grand Junction VA Hospital "is
launching a pilot program aimed at helping veterans who may be thinking
about suicide. Starting in August, the VA is putting up signs at Grand
Valley Transit bus stops and in GVT buses advertising the suicide
prevention hotline number." With 20 signs placed around the city, the
Grand Junction VAMC "got the idea from an identical program in
Washington, D.C., which ended up reaching thousands," and is the only
other VA location thus far to adopt the pilot program.
9. Researchers Look For Better Ways To Diagnose TBI. The Stars And Stripes
(8/13, Robbins) reports, as scientists and physicians are looking for
better ways to diagnose traumatic brain injury, "new research could lead
to definitive tests that could be used downrange in the next three
years, said Ibolja Cernak, a scientist who has studied the effect of
blasts on the body for more than a decade." Cernak and other researchers
say that blasts produce a different, more complex type of brain injury,
in which brain cells "stay inflamed longer after a blast-related
concussion than a normal one," which brain imaging may be able to
detect. Researchers are also looking for biomarkers in blood or spinal
fluid that would indicate mild TBI.
10. Vietnam Awards Scholarships To Disabled Victims Of Agent Orange. The San Francisco Chronicle
(8/13, Haghighi, Waxmann, 318K) reports, "In an effort to raise
awareness and provide support for Agent Orange victims and people with
disabilities in Vietnam, the Ho Chi Minh City Red Cross held a ceremony
this week to offer 237 scholarships to children with disabilities. The
Aug. 10 ceremony was held at the War Remnants Museum, which chronicles
the Vietnam (American) War and its consequences through photography and
exhibitions. And it came on Agent Orange Day, which is a day that the US
military began spraying the defoliant over lands in South Vietnam." It
was Vietnam's second annual observation of Agent Orange Day.
11. Researcher Collects Candid Interviews With Female Gulf Veterans. The Huffington Post
(8/13, Kors) interviews University of Richmond professor Laura Browder,
the author of "Her Best Shot," a historical look at American women and
guns, who's now at work on "When Janey Comes Marching Home," which tells
the stories of female veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Browder says she began the project as a corrective to the public
impression of women in combat during the Gulf War. Browder noted that
two best-known female veterans from the Gulf Wars were Jessica Lynch,
whose time as a prisoner in Iraq was "pure fiction" as described by the
Pentagon, according to Browder, and Lynndie England, the reservist later
convicted of mistreating prisoner at Abu Ghraib prison. "For me,"
Browder said, "what those two stories meant is that there were 235,000
female soldiers whose stories weren't being told." While women in the
military are officially barred from combat, but in a war without
clearly-defined front lines, "the ban on combat is meaningless."
Browder's candid interviews deal with issues ranging from motherhood,
PTSD, sexual harassment, reconnecting with family, and dealing with
sexism among their fellow soldiers and commanders, and will be on
display at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at
Arlington National Cemetery till September 5.
12. VA Relocation Is Pushing Out DC Board Of Trade. The Washington Post 's
"The Federal Eye" column (8/13, O'Keefe, 684K) reports that the Board
of Trade "relocates to make way for Veterans Affairs: With a Friday
moving deadline, the business advocacy group is heading out of its
24,000 square feet location as the VA makes fixes."
13. VA Data Breach Reports Are Being Posted Online. InformationWeek
(8/13, Montalbano) reports, "Once again showing that it's serious about
transparency, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has begun posting
reports about data breaches on its website. The monthly reports, which
the agency compiles for Congress, list different ways the VA has lost
data, such as through lost hardware or misdirected emails." It notes
that a report covering the period from July 5 to August 1 "shows the
agency lost two PCs, 13 BlackBerry devices and six laptops. It also
reported 103 of so-called 'mismailed' incidents,
and 90 'mishandling' incidents." The agency "is taking its data
breaches seriously enough that VA CIO Roger Baker has begun monthly
calls with members of the press to discuss them."
14. National Cemeteries in Kansas Get Over $1 Million For Improvements. The AP
(8/13) reports that VA "says it will use more than $1 million in
federal stimulus money to make improvements and buy equipment at three
national cemeteries in Kansas. The VA says the money is being used at
Fort Leavenworth, Leavenworth and Fort Scott national cemeteries in
Kansas." The Leavenworth National Cemetery has received $485,564 which
it will use to repair a maintenance building, buy a vehicle and repair
two historic monuments. The Fort Leavenworth National Cemetery received
$201,220 to paint a maintenance building, repair roads and curbing and
to buy equipment, while the Fort Scott National Cemetery will get
$399,625 for road repairs. KMBC-TV Kansas City, MO, (8/13, 7:15 p.m. EDT), WDAF-TV Kansas City, MO (8/13, 7:06 p.m. EDT), KSHB-TV Kansas City, Mo (8/13, 6:05 p.m. EDT), KTKA-TV Topeka (8/13, 7:08 p.m. EDT) and KWCH-TV Wichita (8/13, 1:05 p.m. EDT) also report the story.
15. Ceremonies Commemorate 65th Anniversary Of World War II's End. A blog on AL.com
(8/13, Daniels) reports, "The Alabama National Cemetery on Saturday
will be one of many places across the nation where veterans will mark
the 65th anniversary of the end World War II. There will be resolutions,
proclamations, the playing of taps and a flyover during the 6:45 p.m.
event, said Bob Barefield, chairman of the Support Committee for the
Alabama National Cemetery, off Alabama 119 in Montevallo."
16. Former Official Urges VA Roseburg Healthcare Be Retained As Full-Service Facility. In a guest column in the Roseburg (OR) News-Review
(8/13, Becker, 18K), the retired executive secretary at the VA Roseburg
Healthcare System writes of the adverse consequences she sees if the
downsizing of the local VAMC by the Northwest Veterans Integrated
Service Network and the VA Roseburg Healthcare System continues. The
changes amount to the "essential elimination of the emergency department
and intensive care unit," with the result that local veterans are being
referred to private practice providers and to the single private-sector
hospital in the area, or to far-flung parts of the state for specialty
service. If the Roseburg VAMC is not maintained as a full-service
hospital, the area will see economic loss and veterans will have fewer,
less convenient choices. The column concludes by urging residents to
comment to the Booz Allen Hamilton team researching the issue.
17. VA Plans First Primary Care Clinic For Portland, Maine Vets. The Portland (ME) Press Herald
(8/14, Bell) reports that the Department of Veterans Affairs "plans to
open a mental health and primary care outpatient clinic on Fore Street.
It would be the first primary care clinic for veterans in the Portland
area." The agency expects the facility to open early in 2011.
18. Overton Brooks Awarded Radiation Oncology Accreditation. The Shreveport (LA) Times
(8/14, Brumble, 49K) reports, "Overton Brooks VA Medical Center in
Shreveport is among 10 sites in Louisiana to receive an accreditation in
radiation oncology from the American College of Radiology." Twelve VA
medical centers have this accreditation.
19. Veterans Counseling Center To Get Trial Run. The Hemet, California-based Valley Chronicle (8/13,
Hand) reports that the Hemet City Council "this week gave approval for a
one-day-a-week test run of a veterans counseling center at the Simpson
Center that Councilman Jim Foreman believes will blossom into a
full-time operation with a comprehensive menu of services. Foreman,
himself a retired Army veteran, got the idea from Doug Allmen of the
Temecula Vet Center, which will operate the Hemet satellite office to
gauge the need in the San Jacinto Valley."
KLAX-TV Alexandria,
LA (8/13, 11:05 p.m. EDT) reports that Louisiana will also celebrate
and remember V-J Day with an event in Baton Rouge.
20. Gillibrand Obtains Posthumous Medals For Brooklyn WWII Veteran. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle
(8/13) reports, "After a Brooklyn veteran's family discovered toward
the end of the soldier's life that he was owed war medals for his
service during World War II 60 four years ago, U.S. Sen. Kirsten
Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) honored the family's request to secure the medals in
his memory." At the American Veterans Memorial Pier in Brooklyn, Sen.
Gallibrand presented the medals to the family of William Danner
McGuinness, who died in 2009.
21. WW II Veterans Invited To Tour D.C. Memorials. The Knoxville News Sentinel (TN)
(8/14, 116K) reports that the seventh HonorAir Knoxville flight will
bring World War Ii veterans to Washington, DC on October 6.
22. Site, Plans For Disabled Veterans Memorial Win Approval. A Newswire Today
release (8/13) announces that the National Capital Planning Commission
at a July hearing approved the final site and building plans for the
American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial. The US Commission of Fine
Arts last year approved the memorial's design.
23. HP Sponsors DAV Service Offices On Wheels. Computer trade website Notebooks.com
(8/13, Lanier) reports that Hewlett Packard is "helping disabled
veterans get the benefits and services they've earned through their
sacrifices to the country." The computer maker is providing HP Elite
notebooks and HP all-in-one printers to mobile service offices run by
the Disabled American Veterans, which lat year traveled over 114,000 in
visiting 727 mostly rural towns to assist more than 18,000 veterans.
24. Blue Star Mothers Chapter, Other Group Work To Get Clothing To Recuperating Troops. The Hanover (PA) Evening Sun
(8/13, Deinlein, 19K) reports that the local chapter of the Blue Star
Mothers group and the Notre Dame Club of Gettysburg are working together
"to collect items for injured troops recuperating at a hospital in
Germany." The new clothing they collect will be sent through another
non-profit, Soldiers Angels, to troops recovering in Landsthul Regional
Hospital.
25. Marine Greenskeeper Creates "Most Patriotic Golf Hole" in America. FOX News
(8/13, Ross) profiles the "most patriotic golf hole" in America, the
190-yard, par-three 11th hole at the Sleepy Hollow Golf Course in
Charles Town, West Virginia. From the sign by the tee area that reads
"Dedicated to all Veterans both Past and Present," to dozens of American
flags and other red, white and blue markers, the uniquely decorated
hole is the creation of part-time greenskeeper and former Marine Jim
Dodson, who also worked for more than four decades as a barber at the
Martinsburg VAMC.
26. Morehead City Selected As Regional Site For Veterans Day Observances. NEWS14-TV
Charlotte, NC (8/13, Rao) reports that the Department of Veterans
Affairs "picked four North Carolina towns as regional sites for the
observance of Veterans Day this year, including Morehead City,
Charlotte, Fayetteville and Warsaw.
27. On the Hill for August 14, 2010:
The Senate is adjourned until Monday, Sept. 13.
The House is adjourned until Monday, Aug. 9, when it will convene at 7 p.m. in a pro forma session. No votes are expected.
Senate: Not in session.
House: Not in session.
28. VA Hearings as of August 14, 2010:
Hearing on September 15. HVAC will hold a hearing entitled, “Personality Disorders Discharges: Impact on Veterans’ Benefits.”
Hearing on September 16. The Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity will hold a hearing to receive an update on the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill.
Hearing on September 16.
HVAC, Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs will
hold a hearing on “VBA Claims Processing Training Requirements.”
Hearing on September 22. The American Legion will give its annual briefing on its legislative agenda before a joint hearing of SVAC and HVAC.
Hearing on September 23. SVAC Oversight Hearing: “VA Disability Compensation: Presumptive Disability Decision-Making.”
Hearing on September 23. HVAC, Subcommittee on Health, will conduct a hearing on “VHA Contracting and Procurement Practices.”
Hearing on September 29. HVAC, Subcommittee on Health will hold a hearing on pending legislation.