Menu
Log in
Log in

VA News for Tuesday, October 19, 2010

  • Tuesday, October 19, 2010 19:30
    Message # 446950
    Deleted user

     

    1.      Shinseki Tours Livermore VA Hospital With Lawmakers Hoping To Keep It Open. The San Jose (CA) Mercury News (10/19, Benca) reports, "Local political leaders made a pitch Monday" to Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki for the "continued operation of the Livermore VA hospital. While no firm decision has been made regarding the future of that facility, congressmen Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, and John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove, who along with a number of local veterans led Shinseki on a tour of the campus, said they hope it can remain open in some capacity. 'I was very pleased about how it went,' McNerney said of the meeting with Shinseki." The Walnut Creek, California-based Contra Costa Times (10/19, 175K) runs the same story.
         The
    Pleasanton (CA) Weekly (10/19, Ciardelli) notes, "The Veterans Administration plans to open a new medical facility in the San Joaquin Valley, said McNerney." The Weekly also points out that VA is "still deciding what to do with the 113-acre facility on Arroyo Road in rural Livermore. 'Secretary Shinseki wants to keep flexibility,'" stated McNerney, who has "said the 113 acres on Arroyo Road would make an excellent setting for veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome."
         While At Hospital, Secretary Meets With Vet Groups, Hears Their Concerns. The
    KCBS-TV San Francisco, CA (10/18) website said Shinseki "paid a visit Monday to two dozen veterans in the East Bay to hear their concerns," during "roundtable discussions" that "took place at the Livermore VA Hospital." Shinseki "told the group he wanted to improve access to services, reduce the backlog of paperwork and end homelessness among veterans," a point that "struck a chord with veteran Cary Martin," who stated, "There are a hell of a lot of vets who are suffering" on the streets. KCBS added, "The younger vets wanted to impress upon Shinseki that student veteran groups in the community college system can help direct vets to services and programs, but financing is needed."

     

    2.      Fed Says VA Fee Schedule Can Be Relied On When Meeting Appraisal Requirement.  American Banker (10/19, Muolo, 10K) reports, "The Federal Reserve Board on Monday afternoon issued its much anticipated interim rules on appraisals, declaring that refusing to pay appraisers a 'customary and reasonable' fee will violate the agency's new guidelines." According to American Banker, the Fed said lenders and appraisal management companies could rely on the fee schedule the Department of Veterans Affairs uses for its panel of approved appraisers.

     

    3.      Virginia Company Wins IT Services Contract From VA. The Washington Post (10/19, Mizell, 605K) reports, "Innovative Management Concepts of Sterling won a $1.5 million contract from the Department of Veterans Affairs" to provide "information technology services, including telecommunications services."

     

    4.      Discovery Of Plane's Wreckage Solves Mystery For WWII Vet's Family.  CNN Newsroom (10/18, 10:49 a.m. ET) broadcast that the discovery in the Philippines of wreckage from a World War II vet's plane "solves a mystery that haunted" Arthur Parkhurst's "family for decades." CNN showed members of Parkhurst's family reminiscing about the vet and expressing satisfaction about knowing what happened to him.

     

    5.      Vietnam Vet's Remains Identified. The Greater Binghamton (NY) Press & Sun-Bulletin (10/19, Stern) says 42 years after "being missing in action," Vietnam vet Douglas Glover of Cortland, New York, will "get his own burial with full military honors after the Department of Defense announced over the weekend his remains were identified" Glover's family "expects a funeral service to take place at Arlington National Cemetery in March or April."

     

    6.      Veteran To Be Honored With Library In Vietnam. The Seattle Times (10/18, Bartley, 273K) reported, "Since the Vietnam War," decorated veteran Chuck Meadows has "made more than 30 trips back, most often to organize retrieval efforts of unexploded ordnance, sometimes to build kindergartens or libraries," and most recently, to lead other "veterans on tours to places they knew." The Times added, "Many of Meadows' men have raised money for a library in Quang Tri province to honor him." The facility, "expected to be complete in March," will "serve as a community gathering place and education center" and will "offer information to locals about land mines and other ordnance that, even 40 years after the war, still cause deaths and injuries."

     

    7.      Vietnam Vet Receives Purple Heart 42 Years After Being Injured. The Omaha (NE) World Herald (10/18, Hammel) said that 42 "years ago in Vietnam, a young medevac" helicopter pilot named John Wood "suffered two minor gunshot wounds that should have qualified him for the Purple Heart." Instead, Wood was "patched up and back on duty the next day, and his wounds were forgotten in the fog of battle. That oversight was finally righted Monday in a State Capitol ceremony led by a fellow Army vet," Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman.
         VA Hospital Notified Vet Of Eligibility. According to the
    KETV-TV Omaha, NE (10/18) website, Woods "said he never thought about the Purple Heart medal until three years ago when he went" to a Veterans Affairs hospital "because of complications from exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam. The staff discovered his record and notified him," after which time Woods applied for the medal.

     

    8.      VA Using Mass Transit Campaign To Advertise Suicide Prevention Hotline.  KOAT-TV Albuquerque, NM (10/18, 10:52 p.m. MT) aired a report on a "message of hope from the Department of Veterans Affairs," which is "advertising its suicide prevention hotline with a mass transit campaign." After noting that the campaign involves putting the 1-800-273-TALK hotline "number up on buses and shelters across the country from now until 2011," KOAT said the hotline has "helped more than 180,000 veterans and their loved ones since it started in 2007."

     9.      VFW PAC's Future Uncertain. In continuing coverage, the Weekly Standard (10/19, Warren, 83K) notes in its "The Blog" that "Blackfive reports...Richard Eubank, commander-in-chief" of Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), has "announced a proposal to dissolve VFW's political action committee to quiet outcry over some of the PAC's endorsements of liberal, anti-war Democrats over Republicans, many of whom are actual foreign war veterans."
         The "Washington Wire" blog for the
    Wall Street Journal (10/19, Carlton, 2.09M), meanwhile, says the PAC has largely shut down its operations amid a post-congressional endorsement backlash. According to the Journal, Eubank removed all board directors of the PAC after they would not comply with a request from him and other VFW leaders to rescind their endorsements.

     

    10.    IG: Marion VA Hospital's Quality Control Has Improved. The AP (10/19, Suhr) reports, "A southern Illinois Veterans Affairs hospital has made 'substantial improvement' in quality control since major surgeries were suspended more than three years ago in the wake of several patient deaths, a VA inspector general's report has concluded." The findings, however, which were "based on an unannounced, three-day inspection of the Marion VA" conducted in August, "critiqued the medical center's procedures -- not actual quality of care -- and came with no recommendations, still leaving unclear when major surgeries could resume there." The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (10/19, 238K) publishes a similar story, while WSIL-TV Carterville, IL (10/18, 10:03 p.m. CT) broadcast that in the IG report, the Marion VA received "high marks for patient care and safety, organization, and management."
         Hospital Officials Help Dedicate Two New DAV Vehicles. The Carbondale-based
    Southern Illinoisan (10/19, Barker, 27K) notes that patients "may soon find it a little easier to catch a ride" to the VA hospital in Marion, because the "Ford Motor Co. recently donated two new vehicles for use in the Disabled American Veterans' volunteer transportation network." On Monday, officials from VA, "local Ford dealers and statewide DAV chapters gathered at Marion Ford in Marion and Vogler Ford in Carbondale...to dedicate two new vehicles donated to the program, which regularly serves about a quarter of the patients at the Marion VAMC. 'We're more than happy to provide the health care, but it's a lot more than that,' said" the VA hospital's director, Paul Bockelman, who added that partnerships with "organizations like DAV" help "take care of our veterans."

     

    11.    New VA Clinic Opens In Guam. Guam's Pacific News Center (10/19, Kerrigan) says a new "Veterans Affairs Clinic opened its doors" Tuesday "in Agana Heights, without fanfare or ceremony. But by mid-morning, the new...facility was already bustling with veterans seeking care." Some veterans "who spoke to PNC News said they welcomed the convenience of not having to go through security to get to the out-patient clinic."

      

    12.    VA Clinic In Tennessee Reopens. In continuing coverage, the WBIR-TV Knoxville, TN (10/18, Matheny) website noted that on Monday, the Veterans Affairs outpatient clinic in "Rockwood opened its doors to patients for the first time in almost a month," which pleased veteran Bill Kovalsky, who said he does not like to "drive all the way to Knoxville" for care. Rockwood officials "said a contract dispute with medical staff forced the clinic to shut down in mid-September."

     

    13.    Despite Some Residents Not Having Moved, New Orleans VA Hospital Work Continues. In continuing coverage, the WWL-TV New Orleans, LA (10/18, Satchfield) website said Mid City in New Orleans, the site of a future Veterans Affairs hospital, "doesn't look much like a neighborhood anymore and neighbors we talked" with, including Gaynell Blatcher, "say they're ready to move, but can't until their cases are resolved." While Blatcher and five others continue "haggling with the state over how much" they will receive for their property, "work is underway to dismantle the neighborhood around" them, including utilities to their still-occupied homes. Officials from the Louisiana Division of Administration, who point out that they have offered the remaining residents access to a temporary utilities service, "say they're working to fulfill their agreement with the Veterans Administration to make the hospital site available for Nov. 30, which entails cutting utilities, clearing all properties, and having land prepared for construction."

     

    14.    Office In Grand Junction VAMC Among Those Being Shut Down By DAV. The KKCO-TV Grand Junction, CO (10/18, Pallone) website noted that on Monday, Disabled American Veterans (DAV) "offices across the state" of Colorado, including one at the Grand Junction Veterans Affairs Medical Center, "learned they will be closing down at the end of next month" due to lack of funding. KCCO said the DAV office at the Grand Junction VAMC, which is not run by VA, "helps around 25 people a day with getting their benefits and gives around 15 disabled vets a ride to and from" the VA hospital a day. KJCT-TV Grand Junction, CO (10/18, 10:13 p.m. MT) broadcast, "Funding for the DAV comes from donations, memberships, and thrift stores, but there just hasn't been enough money to keep" the offices in Colorado open.

     

    15.    VA Hospital Offering Free Flu Shots. The Huntington (WV) Herald-Dispatch (10/19, 25K) says the Huntington Veterans Affairs Medical Center is "offering free flu shots for all veterans enrolled" for VA healthcare. Drive-through "flu shot clinics will be held" at the hospital "from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 23, and Tuesday, Oct. 26, on the east end of the VA campus near the Marshall medical education building."

      

    16.    Run To Benefit Haley House. The Ruskin, Florida-based South Shore News & Tribune (10/18) noted that on November 6th, the "Riverview Detachment of the Marine Corps League and the American Legion Riders from Alafia Post 148 will host a poker run to benefit the Haley House," a "temporary home for the family members of veterans who are being treated in the specialized ward at the James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital's Spinal Cord, Traumatic Brain and Blast Injury Treatment Center."


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.

The Internal Revenue Service has determined that Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc. is an organization exempt from federal income tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. A donation to SWVBRC, Inc. is deductible to the extent permitted under law.

© 2008 - 2022 Southwest Veterans' Business Resource Center, Inc.

 Privacy Policy

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work is posted under fair use without profit or payment as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and/or research.

Contact Us
Designed by The ARRC® & Powered by Wild Apricot.

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software