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  • 10
    May
    2013
    11:33am, EDT

    Communities work to prevent 'lost generation of veterans'

    Courtesy Ashley Gonzalez

    Ashley Gonzalez, 40, retired from the Navy last year after a 21-year-career. He had a smooth transition back to civilian life thanks to a network of veterans organizations in San Diego.

    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News contributor

    After 21 years in the Navy, Ashley Gonzalez, 40, had to make a tough choice last year: uproot his family from San Diego for an assignment in Mississippi or retire and rejoin the civilian world. 

    Gonzalez, a chief petty officer, had previously deployed to counter-narcotic operations in South and Central America and participated in a routine war games exercise on the Korean peninsula. Civilian life, he knew, would be much different. But his daughter, 16, and son, 12, wanted to stay in San Diego, and so began Gonzalez’s transition back to a life he’d left long ago. 

    Gonzalez was confident at first; after all, he’d spent the past two decades earning a masters degree and learning skills like management, mentoring and public speaking. The shaky economy, however, tested his optimism. 


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    “It was overwhelming, it was tough,” he told NBC News. “There were times when we questioned the transition.”

    Gonzalez is lucky to live near a city where there are more than 100 non-profit organizations that provide a range of services to veterans. In the past few years, these groups have formed a coalition to ensure that every service member has access to resources like health care, education, legal aid and job counseling, which can be essential for starting anew as a civilian. 

    Gary Rossio, co-founder of the San Diego Veterans Coalition, said the collaboration has an urgent mission to assist those who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile, more than 1 million service members will leave the military in the next four years as positions are eliminated through budget cuts and the drawdown from Afghanistan. 

    “We don’t want another lost generation of veterans like we had with Vietnam,” said Rossio, who served in the Air Force in the 1970s and spent 30 years as an official at the Department of Veterans Affairs.  

    San Diego, where 15,000 service members leave the military annually, may be unique in its demographics, but there is a concerted effort nationwide to provide communities with tools to connect veterans to resources, streamline services, and recruit civilian volunteers.  

    'It's not just about a job'
    Gonzalez, who retired from the Navy last October, quickly found assistance from San Diego’s web of providers. 

    He attended several job fairs and followed leads, including a recommendation from his Navy career counselor to attend a local workshop called Reboot that covered not only how to compete for the right position, but also how to find purpose in a post-military life. Within a few months, thanks to the Reboot class and networking, Gonzalez landed a well-paying job as a senior consultant in logistics support for a firm that contracts with government and commercial clients. 

    “I was very fortunate,” said Gonzalez, who now attends Reboot classes to share his experience with students. “Because of my whole process, I’ve decided to pay it forward.” 

    Success stories like Gonzalez’s are becoming more common. The unemployment rate for post-9/11 veterans, particularly among women, has been stubbornly higher than the national civilian rate. The unemployment rate for veterans of post-9/11 conflicts was 7.5 percent in April, down from 9.2 percent in April 2012, according to the Labor Department.

    Increasing veteran employment has been the target of several initiatives, most notably the White House program Joining Forces, which last week announced that American companies have committed to hiring 435,000 veterans and military spouses in the next five years. 

    While this is welcome news, some advocates worry that an exclusive focus on jobs ignores other important elements of transitioning from military culture to civilian life. 

    Maurice Wilson, a retired chief petty officer in the Navy and president of NVTSI, the non-profit that runs Reboot, said that the program guides veterans through a psychological reintegration before even talking about jobs. 

    Service members, he said, go from “a very organized, ordered world that is so established you don’t even have to ask questions about who you are, where you belong. What happens is that people go from order to disorder and their mind goes into a tailspin.”

    Each veteran also has different needs. While one may be a double amputee, another may have post-traumatic stress disorder. “It’s not just about a job,” Wilson said. “It’s about his life now.” 

    Reboot, which has graduated more than 800 students in nearly three years and has a long waiting list, identifies those unique needs and refers veterans to other organizations that offer assistance. This could include, for example, a VA program called From Warrior to Soul Mate, which helps veterans develop better communication skills and strengthen trust and commitment in their relationships. A legal aid program helps veterans facing jail time for minor offenses, often drug- or alcohol-related, enter therapy instead. 

    Wilson, who serves as a board member on the local coalition, said that the project has been a success as leaders recognize the value of working together rather than in silos with little knowledge of what other groups are doing. 

    “It takes the community to do it,” Wilson said of helping veterans to reintegrate. “The government can’t do it alone.” 

    Going national
    This is the philosophy of a recently launched nationwide initiative called Community Blueprint. 

    The project, which is run by the Atlanta-based non-profit organization Points of Light, was developed over the past three years with the expertise of several dozen leaders of veteran organizations. 

    The goal, said Mike Monroe, vice president of military initiatives at Points of Light, is to provide communities with a model for how to efficiently serve veterans while also offering civilians opportunities to volunteer for a cause they may feel is important but know little about. 

    The program offers a “toolbox” of solutions in eight key areas, including employment, family strength, housing and education. The toolbox gives guidance on how to improve resources for veterans. If a community wants to train health providers in treating veterans with PTSD or TBI, for example, a tip sheet outlines how to measure success and raise money for training in addition to suggesting related volunteer opportunities. 

    Community Blueprint also runs Veteran Leader Corps, in which 75 AmeriCorps volunteers are placed in 19 communities across the country for one year of service. 

    Since launching in October, Community Blueprint has been adopted in 44 cities, including Phoenix, Cincinnati, Boston and San Diego. Each month, partner organizations will join a call to discuss different challenges or strategies for success. “It’s pretty humbling when you start looking at the numbers and there’s 75 people on the call,” Monroe said.

    Yet, he is concerned this momentum could be blunted both by a perception that service members become “poor, sad veterans” to be helped only by the government and that reintegrating into civilian life will be a less urgent a public priority once there are no longer front-page stories about battle.

    “There’s going to be a tipping point and I hope it goes in the right direction,” he said. 

    Gary Rossio is hopeful that coalitions like the one in San Diego, as well as initiatives like the Community Blueprint, can provide models for how to help veterans successfully reintegrate into civilian life. 

    “The idea is that it takes everybody to bring these folks home, and that they come home to a community, not to the VA or VFW,” Rossio said. “With that kind of attitude, you can do just about anything.” 

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter based in Oakland, Calif. 

    24 comments

    We as a nation have neglected generation after generation of veterans. Let us hope that these veterans of the past two wars will not be cast aside and allowed to be homeless or worse spend their lives in jail for crimes committed while they stuggled with undiagnoced PTSD or traumatic brain injury. A …

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    Explore related topics: military, veterans-affairs, veterans, veteran-employment, rebecca-ruiz
  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    5:56pm, EST

    Panel tells VA to tackle Gulf War, Iraq illnesses

    By Maggie Fox, Senior Writer, NBC News

    There’s no good single treatment for the depression, pain, headaches, lack of sleep and other symptoms that nag many veterans of wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, experts said on Wednesday. But that doesn’t mean that the Department of Veterans Affairs shouldn’t take the complaints seriously and offer what help is available, from antidepressants to acupuncture and support groups, the Institute of Medicine panel said.

    It recommends that the VA get a better grip on the problem, examining veterans as soon as they are discharged and keeping better records of their maladies. The VA should also actively look for veterans who are suffering and offer help.

    The issue of whether “Gulf War Syndrome” even exists has been controversial almost since the first Gulf War began in 1991.  Veterans complain they have been labeled as malingerers and denied treatment or compensation. Congress asked the Institute, one of the independent National Academies of Science, to examine the issue in 2010.

    The report doesn’t offer any clear medical guidance, but it does call on the VA not only to act on complaints from veterans, but to reach out into the community to educate them about the syndrome. It’s no longer called Gulf War syndrome but chronic multisystem illness or CMI.

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    “Chronic multisymptom illness (CMI) is a serious condition that imposes an enormous burden of suffering on our nation’s veterans,” the report reads.

    “Veterans who have CMI often have physical symptoms (such as fatigue, joint and muscle pain, and gastrointestinal symptoms) and cognitive symptoms (such as memory difficulties) and may have comorbid syndromes with shared symptoms (such as chronic-fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and irritable bowel syndrome) and other clinical entities (such as depression and anxiety).”

    The panelists, who include experts in family medicine, alternative medicine, rehabilitation and chronic pain, reviewed other studies about the syndromes.

    "Based on the voluminous evidence we reviewed, our committee cannot recommend using one universal therapy to manage the health of veterans with chronic multisymptom illness, and we reject a 'one size fits all' treatment approach," Dr. Bernard Rosof, who chaired the panel, said in a statement.

    "Instead, we endorse individualized health care management plans as the best approach for treating this very real, highly diverse condition,” added Rosof, an expert in health care quality who heads the board of directors of Huntington Hospital in New York.

    The report only partly satisfies Paul Sullivan of Austin, Texas, a 49-year-old Gulf War veteran. “That’s very good that the Institute of Medicine is suggesting that the VA take this issue seriously,” Sullivan said in a telephone interview. “VA has ignored the problems of Gulf War veterans for more than two decades.”

    Sullivan who works doing veteran outreach at the law firm Bergmann & Moore, says he started suffering repeated respiratory infections, including bronchitis and pneumonia, when he returned from Iraq 22 years ago.“I came back with chronic respiratory problems and essentially, VA’s response had been to treat with antibiotics as needed,” he said. “It helps. But it doesn’t help me understand what causes it.”

    Sullivan says he was exposed to many possible sources of damage to his lungs and breathing passages, including smoke from burning oil wells, pesticides and experimental drugs to counteract nerve agents. Thousands of veterans make the same complaints. “I was a healthy, fit person prior to joining the military, while in the military and while I was in the war zone,” Sullivan says.

    The Institute of Medicine report is full of sympathy.

    “About 700,000 military personnel served in the 1991 Gulf War, and as of September 2011, about 2.6 million military personnel have been deployed to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. There is no script for the stresses that are endured; they are personal and many,” it reads.

    “We hope that our recommendations will make a difference in the lives of people who have CMI. It is clear that this condition has adversely affected the health and well-being of a substantial number of our veterans and their families.”

    The Department of Veterans Affairs should put into place a long term, systemwide approach to managing the many different and varying symptoms of veterans with CMI, which include pain, respiratory and digestive ailments, the panel said. But it doesn’t have specific medical advice. 

    “CMI may benefit from such medications as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors and cognitive behavioral therapy,” it suggests. These are all treatments for depression but they have also been shown to help patients manage pain.

    It also says VA needs to examine veterans as soon as they are discharged. “The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) should commit the necessary resources to ensure that veterans complete a comprehensive health examination immediately upon separation from active duty,” the report advises.

    “The results should become part of a veteran’s health record and should be made available to every clinician caring for the veteran, whether in or outside the VA health care system. Coordination of care, focused on transition in care, is essential for all veterans to ensure quality, patient safety, and the best health outcomes. “

    The report calls for “CMI champions” at each VA medical center who would help coordinate care. Civilian doctors should be included when they want to be, the report adds.

    And it says the VA should pay for better studies. “The Department of Veterans Affairs should fund and conduct studies of interventions that evidence suggests may hold promise for treatment of CMI. Specific interventions could include biofeedback, acupuncture, St. John’s wort, aerobic exercise, motivational interviewing, and multimodal therapies,” the report says.

    Related stories:

    VA reopens Gulf war veterans' files

    Gulf War illness tied to chemical exposure

    Study says Gulf War syndrome doesn't exist

     

    Don’t miss the latest health news on NBCNews.com

     

     

    48 comments

    “VA has ignored the problems of Gulf War veterans for more than two decades.” They have forgotten about us Vietnam veterans, altogether.

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    Explore related topics: featured, military, veterans, veterans-affairs, desert-storm, gulf-war-syndrome
  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    3:28pm, EST

    PTSD may be overdiagnosed, but PTSD deniers are 'wrong,' psychologists say


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Why do some people reject the existence of PTSD?

    The topic is touchy. Even asking the question is slammed as irresponsible.

    “Why on Earth would you try to put out something that states combat PTSD isn't a true affliction? Or even try to debunk it? Or to put questions into the minds of society? In the first 155 days of 2012, we lost 154 men,” Amy Cotta, an author and the mother of a Marine wrote in an email to NBC News. Her message arrived minutes after she learned NBC News was seeking to interview a PTSD denier.

    Despite exhaustive scientific studies that have explored the symptoms, causes, diagnoses, and prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder, hardcore skeptics remain.

    They exist within the military, where some leaders openly call PTSD a mental weakness, according to mental health advocates. David Weidman, who did two tours in Afghanistan and was diagnosed with PTSD, said all of his senior non-commissioned officers advised him not to seek treatment, instead suggesting he “just put your head down and keep going” in order to maintain any chance at a promotion.


    They exist within the veteran community. Kevin R.C. “Hognose” O’Brien, who operates a blog called “WeaponsMan” and identifies himself as “a former Special Forces weapons man,” wrote in July that PTSD was a “quack” diagnosis, “invented” to clump “any odd and many normal behaviors.” He added: “If a vet is wound up tight? PTSD! If he or she is calm? Hypercontrolling due to PTSD! Lose weight, gain weight, maintain weight, those are all PTSD markers. Get in fights? PTSD, natch. And avoid fights? Well, clearly it's .... are you starting to get the idea?” O’Brien declined to be interviewed for this story.

    And they exist within medicine. In late September, Washington, D.C. psychiatrist Dr. Joseph Tarantolo authored an op-ed piece titled: “PTSD, The Grand Scapegoat.” In it, Tarantolo described PTSD as a “pseudo-diagnosis” and held that “the PTSDer gets an enormous amount of pseudo-sympathy.” On Friday, Tarantolo’s voicemail message said he was out of the country on vacation.

    To Afghanistan veteran Weidman, most people who so stridently dismiss PTSD have simply failed to read the available scientific literature on the subject and are, he said, “uneducated.”

    But Weidman acknowledged that different people possess varying degrees of mental “resiliency,” underscoring the slippery nature of diagnosing anxiety disorders. That means, he added, that if an entire platoon collectively endures the same moment of extreme combat violence, not every platoon member will ultimately feel the symptoms of post-traumatic stress. According to the Mayo Clinic, those signs can include “flashbacks, nightmares and severe anxiety, as well as uncontrollable thoughts about the event.”

    “There are people who can experience something who have no side effects. It could be that person (who ends up being a denier),” said Weidman, a student at Penn State-Lehigh Valley. “Or it could be the person who is extremely uneducated and chauvinistic, who says a guy who gets diagnosed with PTSD ‘is not being a man.’ You’re going to have a perfect storm within the individual who’s going to be that outlier, who says: ‘It doesn’t exist.’

    “Or, it could be the person who actually has post-traumatic stress, who is not seeking help, who is more living up to society’s ideal male image of being strong and being resilient,” he added. “Those people going to make even more noise.”

    Mental health experts say the occasional repudiation of PTSD is merely an extension of the larger societal taint associated with anxiety or mood disorders.

    Click here for more military-related coverage from NBC News.

    “It comes back down to the stigma of mental illness,” said Jean Teichroew, spokeswoman for the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. “Military members also are afraid to speak out because it’s seen as a weakness. The VA has programs to try to combat that, too. But when you have a sergeant who doesn’t think you should be afraid of a bomb going off near you or seeing a dead body, that’s another issue.”

    Still, the rate of diagnosed PTSD cases among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is higher than the rate of cases associated with men and women who served in past conflicts. That abrupt spike has sparked an ongoing debate within American and British academia as to how common PTSD truly is among military personnel and veterans.

    “The suffering of people with PTSD is very real whether we label it an ‘anxiety disorder’ or not. As for the skeptics, some of them may believe that a proportion of veterans without the disorder may report symptoms to secure service-connected disability compensation payments for PTSD,” said Harvard University psychology professor Richard J. McNally. He has penned more then 320 publications on anxiety disorders, including PTSD.

    “According to (Department of Veterans Affairs) data reported late last spring, 45 percent of all veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan have applied for service-connected disability compensation, and 31 percent have secured it already. This figure includes all forms of medical problems, however, not just PTSD," McNally said. "The percentage of veterans of World War II and Vietnam who obtained disability compensation is 11 percent and 16 percent, respectively.”

    In 2011, the VA listed the three most common service-connected disabilities among veterans receiving federal compensation that year: tinnitus (ringing in the ears) at 10.9 percent, hearing loss at 7.5 percent, and PTSD at 5.3 percent.

    Is PTSD being over-diagnosed in post-9/11 veterans?

    “Yes. I think it is,” said Simon Wessely, vice dean of academic psychiatry at King’s College in London. “I think that despite the formal criteria, there is a confusion sometimes (about) the normal emotional responses to war — my father still has nightmares about his World War II service in Royal Navy and he is 87, but he doesn't have PTSD.

    “I also think that, for example, depression often gets under diagnosed, and substance misuse also,” Wessely said. “Our evidence also shows, for example, that quite often the triggers for what becomes labeled as PTSD is not combat exposure but actually a reflection of problems back home. It is important that we remember that not every mental health problem in theater is PTSD."

    Despite the loose diagnoses or cases of outright PTSD fraud, to those in medicine and the military (post and present) who deny PTSD altogether, Wessely offers three final words: “They are wrong.”

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    • Panetta orders review of ethical standards amid misconduct allegations 
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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    247 comments

    It is difficult enough in our very judgmental society dealing with any mental illness. Obviously anything to do with symptoms like PTSD is going to make it harder for individuals to reach out if they think people will accuse them of not being man enough. Especially when there are those who are pre …

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    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, military, va, world-war-ii, vietnam, mental-health, korean-war, veterans-affairs, featured, ptsd, anxiety, combat-stress, commentid-military, veterans-post-traumatic-stress-syndrome, combat-anxiety, ptsd-deniers, ptsd-fraud, stimga
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    12:00pm, EDT

    'I can't afford to live like this': VA weeks, months late paying student veterans

    Courtesy of Ashley Metcalf

    Ashley Metcalf, who served in Iraq then enrolled in college, is leading a push to compel the VA to pay back wages owed to dozens of student veterans like himself.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Student veterans hired by the Department of Veterans Affairs to help fellow ex-service members transition into college have routinely waited four to six weeks — and, in one case, four months — for unpaid wages, prompting eviction worries and mounting debt, according to a survey of program members obtained by NBC News.

    Ashley Metcalf, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan — and the student veteran who organized the survey of other VA "work-study" employees at 18 campuses — said he’s been living on credit cards since June and was forced to obtain an emergency loan because the VA has failed to compensate him for about 100 hours he's logged in the VA program. 


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    “How can this happen? If I was working for McDonald’s and they said they’re not going to pay me for 10 weeks, I’d have a lawsuit,” said Metcalf, an Air Force veteran now enrolled at the University of Colorado Denver.

    “We’re not asking for a raise or for extra benefits. We’re just asking the VA to do what it said it would do: pay us on time,” Metcalf said. “Coming back home, trying to figure out mentally how to transition into college life and then not getting paid? It’s way too much of a stress for people who are possibly already on edge.”


    According to the VA website, the “work-study allowance” is available through the post-9/11 GI Bill. Student veterans employed by the program earn the minimum wage from the VA for devoting hours to specified, on-campus jobs such as “providing assistance to veteran students with general inquiries about veteran benefits,” the site says, adding: "VA will pay you each time you complete 50 hours of service."

    A voicemail left Monday by NBC News with the VA media relations office prompted an emailed response Wednesday from a VA spokesperson: "VA will review any issues with the work-study to ensure payments are delivered in a timely manner. To allow more timely payments to work-study students, our regional processing offices recommend that employers submit time records to the work-study coordinator once 50 work hours have been accrued. In some cases, time records are submitted after a student has accrued 100 or more hours."

    But Metcalf’s survey found VA work-study employees at five campuses who reported waiting one month to two months for payments — and a student in North Dakota who was not compensated for four months. (Among the 18 schools represented in the survey were Texas A&M, Florida State and the University of Kentucky). Survey participants also revealed that a number of student veterans have quit their work-study jobs due to the chronic payment delays, hamstringing veteran-services departments at some campuses. 

    Related: New 'military friendly' colleges list aims to weed out 'the noise,' 'bad actors'
    Related: US colleges doing more for homecoming veterans, but gaps remain
    Related: Thousands of veterans failing in latest battleground: college
    Related: Company accused of deception turns GIBill.com over to Veterans Affairs

    “I usually have 100 hours logged before I get paid for 50. For any other job I would find this to be a reason to quit,” one student veteran replied to the survey. “It is mind boggling to think that I work 50 hours, submit my form and have to wait almost a month to get paid for it. I'm married with a kid on the way. Please just pay me already!!!” wrote another.

    A second dominant survey theme: rising anger over the VA's lack communications — and its failure to provide basic answers as to why faxed time sheets take weeks or months to process and pay. Many survey respondents described numerous unreturned voice mails and unanswered e-mails from VA officials.  "God answers my prayers faster than the VA answers my phone calls," complained one student veteran. 

    Tomorrow, Neal Boyd would have marked his one-year anniversary with the VA work-study program. Instead, he resigned the post one month ago. An Iraq War veteran, Boyd was named to the Danville Area Community College Board of Trustees in April as the panel's student representative. (The school, in Danville, Ill, has about 120 students enrolled via military benefits). On Aug. 1, Boyd applied with the VA to renew his work-study contract for the fall semester. He then invested about 70 hours in his assigned job — helping veterans find employment. 

    Two months later, Boyd has not received a reply from the VA about his contract renewal — or any money. In September, his college learned of the problem and hired Boyd, adding him to the school's payroll and allowing him to retain his job while letting him simultaneously step away from the VA's work-study program. 

    "I’d be in the same boat (as the other unpaid student veterans) if I didn’t have such a great school," Boyd said. "When I would call the VA (for an answer), I wouldn’t get anybody, just a recording saying they were busy processing time sheets. At this point, I'm no longer interested in the VA work-study contract."

    While the GI Bill covers veterans' tuition fees, many other living expenses remain. That's where the work-study money is supposed to help students like Ashley Metcalf stay financially safe while attending a full load of college classes and devoting 20 hours a week to guiding other enrolled veterans from the battlefield to the classroom. 

    "People are relying on this money. This is ridiculous," Metcalf said of the results gathered by his survey. "I knew that somebody had to step up and do something."

    For a personal view of the financial strain caused by the payment delays, Metcalf opened his personal books. In addition to his full tuition coverage, he receives $1,464 in monthly GI benefits. From that check, he pays $600 for rent. The remaining $864 must cover a month's worth of groceries, household items, clothing, school supplies, bills, gas for his car, and parking fees in downtown Denver where his college is located. While the GI Bill also allots $500 for college books, that doesn't cover the true cost each semester — just one of Metcalf's fall classes required $300 in book purchases. 

    Courtesy of Ashley Metcalf

    Ashley Metcalf served in the Air Force for 12 years, spending time in Iraq. He's being forced to return to service in January because the VA has been months late in compensating him for college work the agency hired Metcalf to perform.

    "I’m running short every month (due to unpaid wages; he's supposed to receive $600 every 30 days). I know the VA has numerous veterans issues that are being handled now — mental health and people being homeless. But I have to pay rent. We had another guy (in the work-study program) who almost got evicted," Metcalf said. 

    At the University of Colorado Denver, about 900 student veterans are enrolled — 13 of those are employed by VA's work-study program, aiding fellow veterans in tracking their GI benefits and merging into college life, Metcalf said. Amid the VA compensation snags, the bursar's office at UCD created emergency loans — $1,500 per semester — for student veterans, he added. 

    "I had to take one of those loans because I don't know when I'm going to get paid," said Metcalf, who also serves as president of the UCD student veteran organization. "I just can't wait any longer for the money." 

    And with the draw down in Afghanistan causing more service members to leave the military and enroll directly in college — in part due to the weak job market — Metcalf expects the work-study payment holdups to worsen. That means, he predicts, additional students will quit their work-study posts in college veteran-services departments, which will, in turn, reduce on-campus help for former troops who are trying to carve out success in college.

    Metcalf, who spent six years on active duty in the Air Force and another six as reservist, also has reached a career crossroads. 

    "I'm going back into the (Air Force) Reserves in January," he said. "I can’t afford to not work. And even though it’s a requirement that I be a full-time student to stay on the GI Bill, I can’t afford to live like this." 

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    263 comments

    I am a vet and in the process of eviction because of my monthly housing allowance has stopped.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, college, military, va, veterans-affairs, veterans, featured, draw-down, student-veterans
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    12:15pm, EDT

    A country song about PTSD: 'All you've got left are these pieces'

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Everything you see in the music video happened to Marine-turned-country-singer Stephen Cochran: Pushing the girl away, boozing into oblivion, the gun on the blanket. It all went down last year. 


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    Courtesy of Stephen Cochran

    Stephen Cochran, a former Marine recon scout and now a country-music singer, has penned a new song about PTSD - combat-related symptoms that almost claimed his life in 2011.

    Even the actor who portrays Cochran is, himself, a former Marine and Iraq veteran who knows of post-traumatic stress, who has wrangled with identical demons. The actor was not acting.

    The only on-screen tweak from reality was the type firearm shown. In his dimmest hour, behind a locked door in his Nashville home, exhausted, alone, and telling himself: “I’m done,” Cochran rested a loaded shotgun against his bed.

    “I was just trying to get the nerve. I had it planned out,” Cochran told NBC News. “I didn’t know what was wrong with me. I was tired of taking all these pills. I was going through a breakup. Couldn’t write anymore. Watching everything fall apart. I was ready to check out.”


    Then: salvation, and a surreal rescue scene worthy of an epic ballad. His dog, Semper Fi, began scratching relentlessly at his door, bloodying her paws. Next, Cochran’s ex-fiancé unexpectedly entered the house, simply to retrieve a forgotten item, he said. She saw the anxious dog. She expected the worst. She barged into the bedroom, spotted the gun and physically restrained Cochran. 

    But from anguish came inspiration. Amid an existence long blurred by PTSD — the residue of Afghanistan firefights, Marine buddies lost in combat, and his own nearly fatal injury — one question blazed in Cochran's head. He jotted it down: “How do you paint a picture back in focus?”

    “It was the only way I could describe trying to put your life back together, literally trying to do the impossible,” he said.

    Around that single thought, Cochran penned an entire song, “Pieces,”an ode to the blackness from which he was aching to escape, a tale of reconnecting the scattered fragments of his shattered world, and a message of solidarity for his military brothers and sisters. The single — part of a CD with the same title — will be released in this country on Nov. 11. The song already has charted in Europe.

    Watch on YouTube

    “It’s not just my story. So many of us think about (suicide) because you just get so tired, so tired of being the crazy guy. Or of hearing: ‘He’s weird.’ Or of hearing: ‘We can’t hire you because we really don’t know what post-traumatic stress is and you might come back and kill us all.’

    “I really wrote it as my own healing, for what I was going through,” added Cochran, 33, who teamed with fellow musician Trevor Rosen to complete the song. It took them only 15 minutes.

    But after playing it at several veterans’ benefits, Cochran heard from service members up and down the chain of command how they, too, connected with the lyrics. That feedback has turned “Pieces” into the soundtrack of the singer’s ongoing crusade.

    “We have an epidemic of suicides in the military right now. At this point, we are physically losing both of these wars in the United States of America, not overseas.

    Related: First opera about Iraq War reaches out to veteran suffering from PTSD

    “If we want to stop our suicides, we need a complete overhaul in our ‘warrior’ terminology in this country, in the way we train our families (how to relate with homecoming veterans). That’s what I want to start with ‘Pieces,’ and the video. I want to get a bridge between our civilian population and the veterans. And I want to reach into the rooms of some of these guys and girls — who are just sitting in the dark and watching TV all day like I did — and let them know: You’re not alone.”

    Perhaps the most ironic thread of Cochran’s story coils back to the days of his first, true musical success. In 2007, one year after retiring from the Marines, he scored a country hit with “Friday Night Fireside,” the culmination of a childhood dream for a guy raised in Nashville. The accompanying video was voted No. 1 by Great American Country fans for five straight weeks.

    courtesy of Stephen Cochran

    After his the light-armoured vehicle crashed in Afghanistan, Stephen Cochran fractured vertebrae and suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2004. Told he would never walk again, an experimental procedure by VA surgeons restored his steps.

    Two years later, Cochran became the national spokesman for research and development at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — his thank you for a successful, experimental surgery performed by VA surgeons who repaired his broken back. In 2004, Cochran had splintered several lumbar vertebrae when the vehicle in which he was riding through southern Afghanistan slammed into gaping hole that once held an anti-tank mine. He couldn’t feel or move his legs for months, and was told by doctors that he’d never take steps again. He walked.

    The former Marine reconnaissance scout, part of the U.S. force that first knocked the Taliban out of Afghanistan’s Helmand Province, next teamed up with the VA to become its national co-chair for voluntary service. In that role, Cochran toured America, urging veterans to seek help for combat stress, “to let them know you don’t have to suffer in silence,” recalled Rosetta Fisher-Oliver, the VA’s chief of voluntary service for Tennessee and for parts of Kentucky and Georgia.

    In 2011, Cochran recorded the music video “Hope” for the VA to try and cement his get-help pleas to fellow troops. What few knew: Cochran was losing his own hope.

    “We worked on that video together, and the week he was supposed to make the video, I tried to get in touch with him, just to check to see that he was going to be on time,” said Fisher-Oliver.

    She was unable to reach him, however, because Cochran was by then seeking treatment — after reaching the brink of suicide in his bedroom.

    “Here’s a person who’s trying to get the message out and he’s still struggling with issues too,” she said. “He later told me: ‘I almost wasn’t here.’ ”

    Cochran now acknowledges that he carried “almost dual personalities” during that time. In front of fellow veterans and fans, he sang, smiled, shook hands and signed autographs. “But I also had to deal with this monster I have inside my head and inside my gut, all day.” At home, his family and his then-fiancé, he admitted, took the brunt of his mood swings and emotional detachment.

    courtesy of Stephen Cochran

    After breaking his back in Afghanistan, Cochran was greeted by a fellow Marine. He later regained the ability to walk.

    “You’re screaming out: Please help me understand what I’m going through, because I have no clue! That’s why you see the high number of divorces in the military,” Cochran said. “I told my fiancé: ‘I don’t know what I’m dealing with so the best thing for you to do is just leave and you’ll thank me later.' ”

    She left.

    But in what could have been Cochran’s final minutes, she came back, and burst into his bedroom.

    After Cochran artfully turned that horrid moment into a song, he met the man picked to portray his downward spiral in the “Pieces” video: Daniel Dean, a Nashville songwriter and actor. He also looks a bit like Cochran. He seemed like a logical choice.

    In talking with Dean, though, Cochran learned that the man was a Marine sniper who did three tours in Iraq. And they both had lived for years with the lingering anxieties that often remain for veterans who log months of combat exposure.

    “He told me: 'This is my story, too,'” Cochran remembers. “That dude lived that.”

    They also agreed with the concept that “Pieces” would be not just the first music video to delve so deeply into PTSD. It would break ranks with dozens of other standard, country-music videos about the U.S. military — mini movies that often include battle scenes that, some critics say, glorify war.

    “Stephen does country music and so do I, and there’s a lot of military songs and a lot of them are pretty much B.S.” Dean said. “You’ve got the Toby Keith type stuff and that’s all right for what it is. But very rarely does a song hit a military person the way this one does.

    “Just because it’s real. It’s one of the things I doubt you’ll hear any of the other country stars singing about. It’s (usually) more of the patriotic angle. Most military members aren’t songwriters like Stephen and I. So, I guess that lets us be able to sing things that you can’t say or can't deal with.” 

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    60 comments

    Such an inspirational song. I served twice in Afghanistan with an army ranger platoon attached to the 173rd Airborne Brigade for scout purposes. The first deployment was not as bad as the second. I was involved in the capture of the Wenat Valley, where we encountered a lot more resistance than we ex …

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    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, military, marines, va, veterans-affairs, featured, country-music, ptsd, pieces, toby-keith, post-traumatic-stress, military-suicides, stephen-cochran, daniel-dean
  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    4:07pm, EDT

    VA struggling to calculate lost wages for wounded vets, GAO report shows

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Disabled veterans — many already beset by bungled health-care benefits or by a lack of health insurance — are facing still another bureaucratic log jam: a year-plus lag in simply calculating how much each vet is losing in wages specifically due to their long-term wounds.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    According to a report issued Monday by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, an initiative by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to revise its disability-ratings schedule has become alarmingly bogged down. The GAO put Congress on alert that lawmakers may need to step in to jump start the effort.

    In 2009, VA recognized a critical need to overhaul how it rates the disabilities of former service members, including an entirely fresh analysis into the amount of earnings that non-working, disabled veterans are losing in today’s economy. That ratings schedule hasn’t been fully rewritten since 1945.


    There's good and the bad here, according to the GAO:

    The positive: “The current revision effort takes a more comprehensive and empirical approach than VA’s past efforts,” the GOA reported. “VA has hired full-time staff to revise the rating schedule’s medical information and plans to conduct studies to evaluate veterans’ average loss of earnings in today’s economy.”

    The not so positive: “This change, in part, has resulted in VA falling behind schedule. As of July 2012, VA is over 12 months behind in revising criteria for the first categories of impairments.”

    After digging deeper into the red-tape tangle, GAO experts found that VA hasn’t figured out how to churn out more timely research “on the impact of impairments on earnings,” and that the agency doesn’t have a solid plan (specific benchmarks or updated deadlines) as to how to finish the project.

    Related: President Obama orders VA to expand suicide prevention services
    Related: VA won't cover costs of service dogs assigned for PTSD treatments
    Related: For service members pondering early retirement, costs can pinch home budget
    Related: Vets rely on patchwork safety net during hard financial times

    And given the massive work overload already afflicting VA, the agency urgently needs a written strategy to plot out the potential effects any disability-schedule changes will have on operations, “including impacts on an already strained claims workload,” the report said.

    Modernizing the disability-compensation schedules would ultimately make VA leaner, the GAO said, just as costs are mounting to financially care for thousands of disabled U.S. troops.

    “It is important that VA update and maintain its rating schedule to reflect current medical and labor market information to avoid overcompensating some veterans with service-connected disabilities while under-compensating others,” the report said.

    Last year, VA spent roughly $40 billion on disability compensation for 3.4 million veterans, MilitaryTimes reported. 

    This sentence in the report may (or may not) provide solace to those veterans who are unable to hold down jobs: “VA agreed with the recommendations and noted plans to address them,” according to the report’s authors. 

    In the meantime, however, the GAO suggested that Congress may want “to consider various options to modernize VA's disability benefits program ... and, if necessary, propose relevant legislation for congressional consideration.”

    For example, the report said, a new bill might impel the creation of “explicit quality of life payments” to veterans who have service-connected disabilities. 

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    47 comments

    I would like to see the following plan implemented that would revitalize the economy, stick it to the bankers who caused the mess and help those in the most unfortunate of circumstances because they were wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan: 1) Congress should pass and the president should sign a law sei …

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    Explore related topics: featured, military, veterans-affairs, disabled-veterans, lost-wages, disability-ratings-schedule
  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    9:21am, EDT

    Veterans rely on patchwork safety net during hard financial times


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    For many of the hundreds of thousands of veterans awaiting a decision from the Department of Veterans Affairs on disability and pension claims, the agency's backlog can lead to a period of financial hardship during the transition back to civilian life.

    Ron and Karen Sanquist experienced this first-hand when Ron, a National Guardsman who had been deployed to Iraq in 2009 and Afghanistan in 2006, was released from active duty.

    While cobbling together work in construction and at a call center — both of which severely reduced his National Guard pay — Ron filed a claim for post-traumatic stress disorder that resulted from his combat experience  during his deployments. The disability benefit would have helped the Sanquists afford their $3,000 in rent and monthly bills, but the backlog of claims meant the family would have to wait months for a decision.


    Ron lost his position at the call center after requesting leave to fulfill his National Guard duties. Bills then began to pile up as the family of five missed rent, utility and insurance payments, among other expenses. The situation worsened in May when Ron, 39, was diagnosed with a heart murmur for which he'd need emergency surgery, guaranteeing that he'd be out of work and unable to job hunt for several weeks.

    Desperate not to fall further behind, Karen turned to the patchwork safety net for veterans and their families experiencing financial hardship, an occurrence that happens more frequently than the public realizes, according to those who assist veterans and service members during hard times.

    As of Aug. 25, there were 899,000 compensation and pension claims pending, two-thirds of which have been in the system for more than 125 days. In the Portland, Ore., area, where the Sanquists live, there are nearly 12,000 claims pending, far fewer than other major metropolitan areas in the West; Los Angeles, San Diego, Seattle, Oakland and Phoenix are seeing twice that figure. While two-thirds of the claims processed in Portland have taken more than 125 days, the percentage spikes to more than 90 percent in Los Angeles and Oakland.

    In a statement to NBC News, the Department of Veterans Affairs said that 1 million claims had been completed in the previous two fiscal years, and that the agency is on target to finish an additional 1 million in 2012.

    "Still, too many veterans and their families have to wait too long to get the benefits they have earned and deserve which is unacceptable," the statement said.

    VA is aiming to complete claims within 125 days with 98 percent accuracy by 2015 as it transitions to a digital processing system. The technology will be implemented in 16 regional offices this year and reach an additional 56 regional offices by the end of 2013. VA called the technology a "lasting solution" that will eliminate the backlog.

    Karen told NBC News that her experience with VA was very positive, but that the nearly yearlong delay in receiving a decision on Ron's disability benefit still took a toll. "The waiting period is scary because you don’t know if it’s going to be two months or if it’s going to be another year." 

    To survive the wait, Karen used what was left of the couple's savings and applied for assistance from several nonprofit groups and veteran service organizations. Ron's unit gave the couple a month's rent, as did the American Legion. ReserveAid covered another month's rent as well as lapsed medical insurance payments. USA Cares paid a garbage bill and Operation Homefront sent a $250 Wal-Mart gift card.

    In July, the Sanquists began receiving disability payments for Ron's PTSD as well as his heart surgery, which was deemed service-connected. The process was expedited since the Sanquists were experiencing hardship, and the first sum included back payment for the months required to award the claim.

    As Ron looks for a position that will allow him time to finish his last semester of school in animation and graphics afforded by the GI Bill, the family's finances remain shaky. "It's definitely one month at a time," Karen said.

    Some families aren't as lucky as the Sanquists.

    Barry Walter, state director of veterans services for the Illinois Veterans of Foreign Wars, said that though the "backlog adds to an already desperate situation," many families don't seek help until it's too late and their home is already in foreclosure, for example. The stigma of needing financial aid, particularly for veterans, can prevent them from coming forward early in the process.

    However, veterans often aren't aware that they are eligible to receive emergency financial assistance from the county or state as well as organizations like VFW. In Illinois, counties have veterans assistance commissions that provide aid for expenses like unexpected dental or medical bills and utility shut-off notices. Some states also offer emergency grants to veterans, but Walter said that many don't know of those resources.

    VFW's national program, Unmet Needs, awards one-time grants of up to $2,500 to families in hardship. Since 2004, more than $4.4 million has been given out to 3,200 military families. Veterans are qualified to receive assistance up to 36 months after an honorable discharge. The Illinois VFW also runs its own assistance fund and spent $38,000 in 2011, the majority of it to help veterans with expenses like rent and groceries.

    Walter said that he receives about one inquiry a day from veterans seeking aid. The calls come from young veterans who have just returned and can't find work, veterans nearing retirement age who have been laid off, and even the elderly who now need a pension increase for medical expenses or nursing home care. They are all affected by the backlog, Walter said. He'll tell them about the VFW's programs, but he'll also refer them to organizations like the Salvation Army, Lutheran Services, Easter Seals and Catholic Charities, which can provide help.

    The American Legion, also a veterans service organization, operates a temporary financial assistance fund for military families with children at home. An average of a half million dollars is allocated each year for food, clothing, shelter and utilities. Requests can be granted in as little as 24 hours and the average claim takes less than a week to process, according to Jason Kees, family support network coordinator for the American Legion. 

    Kees told NBC News that the fund is run through a separate endowment and that requests exceed the available aid. As a result, the organization dips into its own funding to make up the difference.

    Kees said that the public's lack of awareness adds to the challenges of getting enough resources to families in need.

    Once a community realizes a veteran is struggling, Kees said, "the outpouring of love and support is fabulous." But all too often, the public doesn't realize military families need help because of the perception that the war in Iraq is over and the fighting in Afghanistan is winding down.  

    Karen Sanquist said that the emergency aid her family received was a "blessing," but that she wished more people knew about the available services.

    "It was wonderful hearing these people say, 'There’s a light at the end of tunnel but until you get there, make sure you don’t get so far behind that you get in trouble."

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

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    91 comments

    Thank you Editori, Ron is one of the lucky ones, but we did have to prove everything, we did go to tons of dr apts, and we had some very hard times over the last year. If it was not for his heart issues, we would still be waiting. We have been able to work with some great people, but I do know that  …

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  • 27
    Aug
    2012
    6:22pm, EDT

    36,000 veterans on track to get high-demand education, training


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    The Department of Veterans Affairs announced Monday that it has approved more than 36,000 applications for a training and education program designed for unemployed veterans.

    Veterans Retraining Assistance Program (VRAP) was created as part of the Veterans Opportunity to Work (VOW) to Hire Heroes Act of 2011 and provides up to 12 months of training in more than 200 jobs skills.


    Veterans who receive the benefit must enroll in a VA-approved program at a community college or technical school and train for a high-demand occupation. The Department of Labor has defined those fields to include positions like petroleum technician, paralegal, preschool teacher, radiation therapist and locomotive engineer.

    VA has received 51,000 applications and approved 36,000; the program's goal is to train 99,000 veterans in the next two years.

    Veterans who have been approved for VRAP are encouraged to enroll as soon as possible to start training full-time in a VA-approved program of study offered by a community college or technical school.  The program of study must lead to an associate degree, non-college degree, or certificate for a high-demand occupation as defined by DOL.

    “The tremendous response illustrates how important this program is in providing veterans the opportunity to find employment in a high-demand field,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki, in a statement released by the agency.

    To be eligible for the program, a veteran must be between 35 and 60, unemployed and have received an honorable discharge, among other requirements.

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

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    39 comments

    Thank you, President Obama, for treating our fighting men and women with the care and respect they deserve.

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  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    3:26pm, EDT

    VA blasted for spending millions on conferences


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    The Department of Veterans Affairs is being investigated by the Office of the Inspector General for allegedly spending millions on two human resources conferences held in Orlando last year.

    In initial findings provided to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, the OIG alleged that VA spent between $3 million and $9 million on the two gatherings, at which employees may have received "improper gratuities, including alcohol, gift baskets, concert tickets, embroidered pillow cases, stretch limousines, helicopter rides, and spa treatments."


    Among the expenditures were $3,000 for two photographers; $84,000 for VA-branded promotional items, including pens, highlighters and hand sanitizers; and $52,000 for videos featuring a character in the likeness of Gen. George S. Patton. The video also includes interviews with VA staff members who discuss the importance of understanding the needs and experiences of veterans.

    "This parody should never have been produced and this misuse of taxpayer funds is completely unacceptable," VA said in a statement issued to NBC News, referring to the use of the Patton character. "This event took place over a year ago and we have already adopted new rules that reflect our continuing commitment to safeguarding taxpayer dollars."

    On Wednesday, two members of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs released a letter sent Aug. 16 to VA Secretary Eric Shinseki demanding to know exactly how much the department had spent on conferences since 2009. 

    In a February 2011 hearing, a VA official said the department budgeted $20 million for the expenditures, but testimony given in November indicated the VA spent "a little over $100 million," according to the letter. VA later said in a post-hearing response that an "accurate, reliable figure on the number of conferences (held in the past several years) is not available."

    "If (the) $100 million figure is accurate, it raises questions of excessive conference spending in a tight fiscal climate," wrote authors Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., who is the chairman of the committee, and Rep. Bob Filner, D-Calif.

    Related: GSA head resigns after lavish training conference

    Miller and Filner noted that even if VA spent $20 million last year, the two conferences in Orlando would amount to 45 percent of those costs.

    In early August, the president signed into law a provision that asks VA to report conference expenditures in excess of $20,000 to Congress.

    VA said in its statement that the agency is cooperating with the investigation and that it has stripped implicated employees of their purchasing authority.

    “If the results of the IG investigation are upheld," Miller said in a statement, "this represents an egregious misuse of funds meant to provide for the care of America’s veterans."

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    143 comments

    So what's with these government "conferences" spending millions on trips to exotic locales and in luxury hotels? This nonsense has been going on for decades and needs to be stopped completely.

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  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    5:00pm, EDT

    VA office stacked 37,000 files on cabinets after running out of storage

    VA Office of Inspector General

    Claims storage filing area at the VA Regional Office in Winston-Salem, N.C.

    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    The Department of Veterans Affairs has been dogged for years by complaints that the claims process is painfully slow. Now, a recent inspection by the VA Office of Inspector General shows exactly how difficult it can be to physically manage the volume of those cases.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    At the VA's Winston-Salem Regional Office in North Carolina, an estimated 37,000 claims folders had been stored on top of file cabinets, according to the Inspector General's report released last week. Those piles had been stacked two feet high and two rows deep. The file cabinets were so close to each other that drawers could not be opened completely. More files had been stored in boxes on the floor and stacked along the wall.

    Related: 110-year-old widow of WWI veteran gets big VA pension boost

    A load-bearing study found that the weight of the files exceeded the floor's capacity by 39 pounds per square foot.


    "The excess weight of the stored files has the potential to compromise the structural integrity of the sixth floor of the facility," said the Inspector General report. "We noticed floors bowing under the excess weight to the extent that the tops of file cabinets were noticeably unlevel throughout the storage area."

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com

    Inspectors found that the filing system had created an "unsafe environment" for employees; one worker suffered a minor shoulder injury in 2011 when folders fell from a filing cabinet. The filing system also put the records at risk, potentially exposing them to fire and water damage as well as loss and misplacement.

    The inspection of the office was conducted in May as part of a nationwide effort to evaluate regional offices.

    The Winston-Salem Regional Office, with 680 employees, serves more than 770,000 veterans in North Carolina. The state is home to six military installations, including Fort Bragg and Camp Lejeune, which rank sixth and eighth, respectively, in the largest number of discharges in the country. 

    Related: Panetta to Congress: Transition system for veterans is 'overwhelmed'

    Staff at the office began having trouble storing files in 2005 when that location, as part of a national initiative, started collecting and processing disability claims prior to a service member's discharge. The office was one of two regional centers in the country to handle such cases, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. Staff tried to transfer or retire 50,000 files in recent years, as well request more storage space. The office was denied extra room because of a lack of money and few external storage options.  

    Courtesy Winston-Salem Regional VA Office

    Filing cabinets at the Winston-Salem Regional VA Office in a photo provided to NBC News on August 14, 2012.

    In June, after learning that the floor load exceeded capacity, the office removed all folders sitting on file cabinets and placed them on separate floors. The office also intends to purchase a high-density file system for the basement, which will cost an estimated $405,000.

    "We are on track to comply with (the report's) recommendations," the Department of Veterans Affairs said in a statement to NBC News.

    VA is working with the Department of Defense to create an integrated electronic medical record that could be used between both agencies, but it will not launch until at least 2017.

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

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    185 comments

    That's what happens when you start one war after another without thinking about all the consequences (or rather about not caring about all the consequences as long as your buddies in the military industrial complex get their billions in defense contracts). Wars have a human cost and we better think  …

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  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    7:11pm, EDT

    Government gobbledygook: It's dying a slow, painful death

    Center for Plain Language

    The Center for Plain Language assessed 12 federal agencies' compliance with the Plain Writing Act of 2010, which took effect last year.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    The federal government got a mixed report card Thursday for its compliance with the law that says it has to write clearly and simply.

    The Agriculture Department has met 93 percent of the requirements of the Plain Writing Act, which went into effect in October, according to a study by the Center for Plain Language. It was the only government agency to get an "A" from the nonprofit Washington think tank.

    The Department of Veterans Affairs, on the other hand, is still mired in battological periphrasis, earning the only F after having met only 10 percent of the requirements. 

    The Center for Plain Language, a nonprofit Washington think tank, gave out two grades to each of 12 federal agencies. The first rated compliance with measurable goals in the Plain Writing Act; the second reflected the center's assessment of how well each agency has followed the "spirit" of the law.

    M. Alex Johnson M. Alex Johnson is a breaking news and projects reporter for NBCNews.com. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

    On each measure, the Agriculture Department led the way, earning one of only two B grades on the "spirit" measure, in addition to the only A for compliance.


    "We are confident that there has been a USDA sea-change on plain writing" since the law took effect, the center said.

    The Department of Health and Human Services got the other B for compliance from the center, which gave it high marks for trying diligently to simplify all those frustrating federal benefit forms. The report praised senior management at HHS for "modeling" plain language and for introducing agencywide training programs in clear writing.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Some federal agencies have embraced the Plain Writing Act, and others haven't," Rep. Bruce Braley, D-Iowa, who sponsored the anti-gobbledygook bill, told reporters Thursday.

    Read the Center for Plain Language's full assessment of each department

    But "we still have a long way to go to make government forms and documents simpler and easier for taxpayers to understand," said Braley, who has introduced similar legislation to simplify the language of government regulations.

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    Take the VA. It ranked last, drawing an "F" in both categories, indicating that the Center for Plain Language detected no effort to clean up its writing, as characterized by this passage from the VA's Statement of Regulatory Priorities, published in January (.pdf):

    Pursuant to section 6 of Executive Order 13563 "Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review" (Jan. 18, 2011), the following Regulatory Identifier Numbers (RINs) have been identified as associated with retrospective review and analysis in the Department's final retrospective review of regulations plan. Some of these entries on this list may be completed actions, which do not appear in The Regulatory Plan. However, more information can be found about these completed rulemakings in past publications of the Unified Agenda on Reginfo.gov in the Completed Actions section for that agency. These rulemakings can also be found on Regulations.gov.

    (Those links aren't clickable in the electronic document, by the way, making it even more difficult to get at the information.)

    "Unless federal agencies are held accountable, they won't implement the changes required by the Plain Writing Act," Braley said. "... Until these grades are all A-plus, we're going to keep holding bureaucrats' feet to the fire."

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    98 comments

    See, if the government makes a law for themselves, it's only for show. If they don't do it, so what? If we, the citizens, don't follow the convoluted law written, watch out! They will come after us.

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    Explore related topics: featured, writing, language, veterans-affairs, commentid-featured, agriculture-department, bureaucracy, gobbledygook, plain-writing
  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    6:19pm, EDT

    Nonprofit groups announce $30 million campaign to help veterans


    Follow @msnbc_us
    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    A group of nonprofits and charities dedicated to helping veterans announced Wednesday a campaign to raise $30 million to assist former service members. 

    Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, a nonprofit with 200,000 members nationwide, unveiled a Veteran Support Fund that will direct donations to itself and four other organizations. The initiative was staked by six entrepreneurs and philanthropists whose founding gifts totaled $1.1 million.


    The partner organizations are Operation Mend, which gives medical support to critically injured veterans; Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, which provides coping and trauma resources to survivors of deceased service members; Operation Homefront, which offers emergency financial aid to wounded warriors and families of service members; and the National Military Family Association, which advocates for benefits and programs to support military families.

     

    "Supporting veterans isn’t charity, it’s an absolute necessity and an investment in our country’s future," Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of IAVA, said in a statement. "After ten years of war, our nation’s military families are strained, nonprofit services are maxed out and our veterans’ community is severely under-resourced."

    Jim Knotts, president and CEO of Operation Homefront, told msnbc.com that the increased funding will help the organization provide emergency assistance, like food, transitional housing and money for car repairs, to more families. Last year, Operation Homefront met more than 5,000 emergency requests and provided transitional housing for 80 families.

    Knotts said that while the organization's fundraising has been strong in recent years, he is concerned that donations will dwindle as service members return from Afghanistan.

    "A lot of people are thinking that we’re out of Iraq and we’ll be out of Afghanistan so our need to support the military will end soon," he said. "But it will be a 50-year campaign to support this generation of wounded warriors ... Even military families who remain will have ongoing needs as a result of 10 years worth of war."

    IAVA said the initiative will be a "centralized platform where Americans can support and donate to a consortium of effective and trusted best-in-class veterans’ organizations."

    Charity Navigator, which evaluates select charities and nonprofits, has awarded three- and four-star ratings to Operation Homefront, National Military Family Association and Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors.

    Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketing and chief financial officer for Charity Navigator, said that donating to a veterans organization or charity can be an emotional decision.

    "Supporting our troops, their families and the veterans are issues that tug at everyone’s heart strings," Miniutti told msnbc.com. "Oftentimes, donors give to these types of charities solely with their heart. They fail to stop and use their head too and vet the charities to ensure that they are financially healthy, accountable and transparent and produce real results."

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    18 comments

    GREAT IDEA! And, here is the link: http://iava.org/veteran-support-fund

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, military, veterans, charity, veterans-affairs, rebecca-ruiz
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