RAO Bulletin
15 October 2008
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THIS BULLETIN CONTAINS THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES
== VA Presumptive POW Diseases [01] ---------- (Updated List)
== Veteran Legislation 2008 ----- ( S.3023 Omnibus Bill Passes)
== Traumatic Brain Injury [04] ---------------- ( Rating Changes)
== COLA 2009 [04] ------------------------------ (5.9% Projected)
== Combat Vet Health Care [03] ------ ( Combat Vet Eligibility)
== SBP Paid Up Provision [06] ------------------- ( SBP Counter)
== Arlington National Cemetery [04] ----- ( New Media Policy)
== 110th Congress Schedule [01] --------------- ( At a Standstill)
== YMCA Memberships ------------------- ( New DoD Program)
== Tuberculosis ------------------------------------------ ( Overview)
== Tuberculosis [01] ---------------------------- ( Philippine Alert)
== Medicare Part D [27] ------------- (2009 Plan Reassignments)
== Mobilized Reserve 7 OCT 08 ---------------- (6,299 Increase)
== Medicare Premiums 2009 [04] ------------------------ (Frozen)
== VA Health Care Funding [16] ---------------- (Ending Delays)
== Tricare Uniform Formulary [26] --------- (BAP Mtg Results)
== Continuing Resolution ------------------------------ (What it is)
== CT Vet Property Tax --------- (Disability Verification Letter)
== VA Claims Backlog [19] ------------------ (Changes Coming)
== Purple Heart ---------------------------------- (POW Eligibility)
== TRS [10] ----------------------------------- (Permanent Benefit)
== CA Vet Legislation -------------------------- (Recently Signed)
== Medicare Fraud [10] ----------- (Detection Efforts Beefed Up)
== Military History Anniversaries ----------- (October Summary)
== Military ID Cards [02] --------------- (New Requirements)
== NDAA 2009 [07] ------------------------------------ (Approved)
== Vet Spouse Federal Employment ----------- (Who’s Eligible)
== VA Fraud [13] ---------------------------------- (Pittsburgh PA)
== Tomb of the Unknowns [01] ----- (Replacement Alternative)
== Arlington National Cemetery [03] -------- (Expansion Plans)
== Filipino Vet Inequities [10] ------------- (One-Time Payment)
== Tricare Reserve/Guard Buy In [01] ----------------- (SA 5281)
== VFW Finance Officer Indicted ---- ($120,000 Embezzlement)
== VA Benefits Advisory Committee ------------- (Membership)
== GI Bill [29] ----------------------------- (Change Preparations)
== GI Bill [30] --------------------- (Private Sector Involvement)
== DOD Disability Eval System [11] --- (Army Not Complying)
== Social Security Fund Depletion [07] --- (Action Needed Now)
== Credit Card Late Fees --------------------- (Tripled in 10 years)
== Credit Card Late Fees [01] --------------------- (How to Avoid)
== VA Clothing Allowance ----------------------------- (Overview)
== Veteran Legislation Status 13 OCT 08 ---- (Where we Stand)
== Editor’s Note [1] -------------------- (RAO’s Computer Status)
VA PRESUMPTIVE POW DISEASES UPDATE 01: The Department of Veterans
Affairs presumes that specific disabilities diagnosed in certain veterans
were caused by their military service. If one of these conditions is
diagnosed in a former POW, VA presumes that the circumstances of his/her
service caused the condition, and disability compensation can be
awarded. This includes DIC education and CHAMPVA for spouses of veterans
rated 100% or surviving spouses late-veterans that died from discussed
medical problems. Disabilities may be presumed under the circumstances
described and for the conditions listed as follows:
(1) Imprisoned for any length of time, and disability at least 10
percent disabling:
• psychosis
• any of the anxiety states
• dysthymic disorder
• organic residuals of frostbite
• post-traumatic osteoarthritis
• heart disease or hypertensive vascular disease and their
complications
• stroke and its residuals
(2) Imprisoned for at least 30 days, and disability at least 10 percent
disabling:
• avitaminosis
• beriberi
• chronic dysentery
• helminthiasis
• malnutrition (including optic atrophy)
• pellagra
• any other nutritional deficiency
• irritable bowel syndrome
• peptic ulcer disease
• peripheral neuropathy
• cirrhosis of the liver
[Source: County of Humboldt Veterans Service office 12 Oct 08 ++]
VETERAN LEGISLATION 2008: After months of delay, the Senate
passed
an omnibus veterans’ benefits bill on 16 SEP that includes bigger
benefits for veterans and their families, expanded home loans and a
variety
of other programs. The bill, S.3023, had passed the Senate Veterans’
Affairs Committee in June but lingered in limbo because of disputes over
dozens of details. With congressional leaders aiming to end this
legislative session of Congress soon, passage of the Senate bill was
essential
for any hope of passing a compromise bill in conjunction with the
House this year. The Senate passed the bill by voice vote and with no
debate. Sens. Daniel Akaka (D-HI), chairman of the veterans’ committee,
and
Richard Burr of North Carolina, the committee’s ranking Republican,
said the bill passed by the Senate includes a host of compromises and
includes the following provisions:
- It would order VA to simplify what it tells veterans when it denies
benefits claims or asks for more information.“Notification letters to
veterans about the status of their claims have become increasingly long,
complex and difficult to understand,” Akaka said. “These notification
letters must be simplified. They should use plain and ordinary language
rather than bureaucratic jargon. Veterans should not be subjected to
confusing information as they seek benefits.”
- It would temporarily extend an increase in veterans’ home loans
through the end of 2011. The temporary measure allows loans of up to
$730,000, but it is due to expire at the end of 2008. Akaka said extending
the
loan limits for several more years “would enable more veterans to
utilize their VA benefit to purchase more costly homes.”
- It would apply the maximum loan limit to home refinancing, and let
homeowners refinance with a veterans’ loan if they have 5% equity in
their homes instead of the current 10% requirement.
- It would require more federal help for service members who have
problems with employment and re-employment rights. Under the bill, the
Labor
Department would investigate more complaints and federal agencies
would provide more assistance. The bill calls for mandatory training for
federal human resources workers in the Uniformed Services Employment and
Reemployment Rights Act. Burr said every employer should obey the law,
but the federal government has a particular responsibility to be a
model employer. “The federal government should make sure that not a single
returning service member is denied proper reinstatement to a federal
job,” Burr said. “Unfortunately, this is not happening yet.”
- It would grant spouses of severely injured disabled veterans up to 20
years after the veterans are discharged to use education benefits,
twice the time currently allowed.
- It would prevent the Department of Veterans Affairs from making
changes in its disability rating schedule without first notifying
Congress.
Burr said the current ratings system is “riddled with outdated criteria
that do not track with modern medicine,” especially in the areas of
combat stress and traumatic brain injuries. VA has been working on
several studies that could lead to an overhaul, but many veterans and
lawmakers remain concerned that a change could result in lower benefits.
Burr
said the bill would “make sure these studies do not get put on a shelf
to collect dust” by requiring a report to Congress on the findings and
what action is planned by VA.
[Source: NavyTimes Rick Maze article 19 Sep 08 ++]
TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY UPDATE 04: The Dept. of Veterans Affairs
announced changes to its schedule for rating disabilities for Traumatic
Brain Injury (TBI), the "signature wound" of Iraq and Afghanistan.A VA
press release noted, "Traumatic brain injuries result in immediate effects
such as loss or alteration of consciousness, amnesia and sometimes
neurological impairments." In some cases "prolonged or even permanent
problems with a wide range of impairment in such areas as physical, mental
and emotional/behavioral functioning may occur." People with TBI may
experience headache, sleep difficulties, decreased memory and attention,
slower thinking, irritability, and depression. 22,000 veterans presently
are being compensated for TBI, including 5,800 Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans. Those already receiving compensation for TBI injuries can be
reevaluated under the new rating schedule criteria. The VA stressed,
however, that veterans with the "most severe" forms of TBI would not
receive much, if any, extra compensation because the current rating
schedule
provides adequate compensation in such cases. The rating schedule
change mainly has the potential to affect those with mild or relatively
moderate TBI who may have been assigned low or modest ratings in the past.
Under the new rules, TBI ratings will be based on the degree of
"cognitive impairment" and other "residuals" of TBI. These may include
mild to
severe loss of memory, attention, concentration, judgment, motor
activity, visual spatial orientation, ability to communicate and other
functions. The rating schedule goes into effect in late October. Because
of
the complexity of each individual evaluation, it's not possible to
assert that a particular person or particular condition would receive a
particular rating increase. [Source: MOAA Leg Up 26 Sep 08 ++]
COLA 2009 UPDATE 04: The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of the
U.S.
Department of Labor reported 16 SEP that the Consumer Price Index for
All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) decreased 0.4% in August, before seasonal
adjustment. The August level of 219.086 (1982-84=100) was 5.4% higher
than in August 2007. The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers(CPI-W) decreased 0.5 percent in August, prior to
seasonal adjustment. The August level of 215.247 (1982-84=100) was
5.9%higher than in August 2007. Using seasonally adjusted data the BLS
found
that energy prices were down 3.2% from July and food prices were up 0.6%.
Energy prices continue to have the most effect on the CPI. If the
September CPI-W remains unchanged from the August CPI-W, the December COLA
would be 5.9%. This would be the highest COLA since the early 1980s. SEP
08 CPI data are scheduled to be released on 16 OCT at 0830 EST and can
be viewed at www.bls.gov/cpi. [Source: MOAA News Exchange 24 Sep 08
++]
COMBAT VETERAN HEALTH CARE UPDATE 03: The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) utilizes the Department of Defense (DOD) “Combat Zones”
listing of designated hostile fire or imminent danger pay areas in
establishing whether or not veterans’ are eligible for this category of
health
care. Although DOD Hostile Fire or Imminent Danger pay existed prior to
11 NOV 98, only proof of such pay after 11 NOV 98, is acceptable.
The
table provided at
http://www.va.gov/healtheligibility/Library/pubs/CombatOperations
should assist in the determination of combat veteran eligibility. The
following definitions are applicable in determining combat veteran status:
a.) Combat Veteran. A combat veteran is a veteran who served on active
duty in a theater of combat operations during a period of war after the
Persian Gulf War or in combat against a hostile force during a period
of hostilities after November 11, 1998.
b.) Combat Zones. Combat zones are designated by an Executive Order
from the President as areas in which the United States (U.S.) Armed Forces
are engaging or have engaged in combat. An area usually becomes a
combat zone and ceases to be a combat zone on the dates the President
designates by Executive Order.
c.) Minimum Active Duty Service Requirement. The minimum active duty
service requirement is the shorter of the following two periods: (1) The
full period for which they were enlisted, called or ordered to active
duty, or (2) Twenty-four months of continuous active duty. NOTE: There
remain categories of veterans who are expressly excluded by statute from
the minimum active duty service requirement; e.g., veterans who were
discharged or released from active duty for a disability incurred or
aggravated in line of duty, those discharged or released from active duty
under an early out or hardship discharge, etc.
d.) Hostilities. Hostilities refers to conflict in which the members of
the Armed Forces are subjected to danger comparable to the danger to
which members of the Armed Forces have been subjected in a theater of
combat operations during a period of war. To determine whether a period
of hostilities is within the scope of this special authority, VA relies
upon the same citation and criterion used to determine eligibility for
VA Readjustment Counseling Service contained in 38 U.S.C., Section
1712A(a)(2)(B), as it applies to veterans in service after November 11,
1998. More specifically, criteria used to determine whether a veteran’s
service meets the qualifications required by statute include:
(1) Receipt of an expeditionary medal or other DOD authorized combat
related medal. Note: A certificate of award, or presentation of a
medal,
in and of itself, will not suffice for VA health care eligibility
verification purposes without the submission of supporting documentation
(such as DD 214, Proof of Receipt of Hostile Fire or Imminent Danger Pay,
proof of exemption of Federal tax status for Hostile Fire or Imminent
Danger Pay after November 11, 1998), other military service records or
orders indicating combat service.
(2) Service in a location designated by an Executive Order as a combat
zone;
(3) Receipt of DOD Hostile Fire or Imminent Danger pay or combat pay
tax exemption for serving in the area subject to hostilities; or
(4) Other factors as may be defined in policy and regulation by the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
e.) Hostilities or Imminent Danger Pay. Hostile fire pay is defined as
pay to anyone exposed to hostile fire or mine explosion, while imminent
danger pay is paid to anyone on duty outside the United States area
who is subject to physical harm or imminent danger due to wartime
conditions, terrorism, civil insurrection, or civil war.
f.) Medals. Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Armed
Forces Expeditionary Medal; Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal
(does not include Global War on Terrorism Medal); Kosovo Campaign Medal;
Southwest Asia Campaign Medal; and other DOD-authorized combat related
medals.
[Source: VHA Directive 2008-054 Addendum A 9 Sep 08 ++]
SBP PAID UP PROVISION UPDATE 06: As of this month, SBP payments
ended
for retirees who are at least age 70 and have paid 30 years (360
cumulative months) of SBP premiums. This affects 137,000 retirees, who
will
see their retired pay go up in the November checks. The net increase in
the check won't be quite as much as the premium, because retired pay
is taxable, whereas the SBP premiums were deducted before taxes. In
December, DFAS will display an "SBP Counter" on a retiree's Retiree
Account
Statement. It will show the total months of SBP premiums paid to date,
so individuals can better project when their premiums will end.
[Source: MOAA Leg Up 10 Oct 08 ++]
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY UPDATE 04: Army Secretary Peter Geren
recently signed a new media policy for Arlington National Cemetery that
calls for the creation of an oversight board to include representatives
from the cemetery, the Army and the media. Media coverage of
funerals at
Arlington became an issue in April, when the Washington Post ran a
column about how the media was kept so far away from the funeral of a
Marine killed in Iraq that reporters could not hear the service.
Under the
new policy, family members will have three options for media coverage
of their loved-ones' funerals: No coverage, visual coverage, or
visual
coverage and limited audio coverage. [Source: NAUS Weekly Update 8 Oct
08 ++]
110TH CONGRESS SCHEDULE UPDATE 01: The House stands adjourned until 11
a.m. on Saturday, 3 JAN 09. The Senate remains open but only plans
to
conduct pro forma sessions until the General Election is completed.
During a pro forma session, the Senate is called to order for literally
about 30 seconds, but no business is conducted. The Senate Majority
Leader called the pro forma sessions to prevent the President from using
his Constitutional authority to appoint people to his administration
when Congress is adjourned. They are scheduled to reconvene for normal
business on Nov. 17. Indications are that legislators - election
winners
and losers alike - may be called back to work in mid-November.
Starting in January, we'll have to get new bills introduced on our key
issues
and work to get our legislators to renew their cosponsorships. [Source:
NAUS Weekly Update 8 Oct 08 ++]
YMCA MEMBERSHIPS: The Department of Defense announced 1 OCT that
families of deployed members of the National Guard and Reserve, active
duty
service members on independent duty and their families, and active duty
service members and their families assigned to selected bases would be
eligible for fully funded family memberships at participating YMCAs in
their local community. The new program, which is effective
immediately, was unveiled in a signing ceremony presided by Under
Secretary of
Defense for Personnel and Readiness David S.C. Chu. Also signing the
document was Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs Thomas F.
Hall and the Executive Director of the Armed Services YMCA, retired
Navy Rear Adm. Frank Gallo. The YMCA memberships for
Guard and Reserve
families will be available while the service member is deployed for a
minimum of six months. The deploying service member will also be
eligible for three months pre- and post-deployment membership to help
promote
family participation. Active duty families assigned to
independent
duty stations, such as recruiting and ROTC assignments and not currently
receiving support from the service component will also be eligible for
memberships at participating YMCAs. Single service members are
eligible for fitness center memberships up to $50 a month.
Active duty
families at selected bases will also be eligible for YMCA memberships as
part of a pilot program.
Memberships will be issued on a first come, first
served basis
with 300 to 450 family memberships available per joint base location.
The selected bases are: Lackland AFB/Randolph AFB/Ft. Sam Houston TX;
Langley AFB, Va.; McCord AFB/Ft. Lewis, Wash.; Ft. Carson CO; Pearl
Harbor/Hickam AFB HI; Naval Weapons Station, Charleston S.C.; McGuire
AFB/Ft.
Dix/ Lakehurst Naval Air Engineering Station, N.J.; Anacostia NAS
/Bolling AFB, Washington, D.C.; Ft. Myer/Henderson Hall, Va.; Elmendorf
AFB/Ft. Richardson, Alaska; and Andrews AFB/Naval Air Facility D.C., Md.
Additionally, 32 hours a month of gratis respite child care will be
available for families of deployed National Guard and Reserve and
geographically dispersed active duty service members in 10 states with
YMCA
child care programs preapproved by DoD. Respite Child
Care is
currently available at participating YMCAs in Indiana, Maryland, Montana,
North
Carolina, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and
Washington. DoD is working with the Armed Services YMCA on ways to expand
the
number of YMCA child care programs eligible to offer respite care in
order to meet this critical need. Participating YMCAs have
agreed to
cap their monthly fees and waive all joining fees so there is no cost
for service members and their families for membership. Some classes may
have fees associated with them and if so, the service member will be
responsible for those costs. Signing up for the program requires a
YMCA/DoD eligibility form, a copy of deployment orders and military ID.
The
YMCA/DoD eligibility form is available at
http://www.miltaryonesource.com/.
A completed eligibility form, a copy
of deployment orders (where applicable) and the military ID are all
that are needed for the local YMCA to process memberships. [Source:
DoD
News Release 3 Oct 08 ++]
TUBERCULOSIS: Tuberculosis (TB) is a contagious disease. Many years
ago, this disease was referred to as "consumption" because without
effective treatment, these patients often would waste away. Today, of
course,
tuberculosis usually can be treated successfully with antibiotics.
Like the common cold, it spreads through the air. Only people who are sick
with TB in their lungs are infectious. (Active TB). When infectious
people cough, sneeze, talk or spit, they propel TB germs, known as
bacilli, into the air. A person needs only to inhale a small number of
these
to be infected. Left untreated, each person with active TB disease will
infect on average between 10 and 15 people every year. But people
infected with TB bacilli will not necessarily become sick with the
disease.
It is also possible to have the TB bacilli in your system, but it is
under the control of your immune system and is not currently active so
you are not infectious (Latent TB). The immune system "walls off" the TB
bacilli which, protected by a thick waxy coat, can lie dormant for
years. When someone's immune system is weakened, the chances of becoming
sick are greater. Statistically:
- Someone in the world is newly infected with TB bacilli every second.
- Overall, one-third of the world's population is currently infected
with the TB bacillus.
- 5-10% of people who are infected with TB bacilli (but who are not
infected with HIV) become sick or infectious at sometime during their
life. People with HIV and TB infection are much more likely to develop TB.
Most challenging for health officials are new forms of
multi-drug
resistant tuberculosis and complicated cases in which the patient has
other conditions, including diabetes and HIV/AIDS. First and foremost,
people have to have health-seeking behavior. If you think that you, or
someone you know, may be infected, seek treatment as soon as possible.
People infected with tuberculosis disease may experience any of the
following signs and symptoms:
- Cough for more than 2 weeks
- Nausea / weakness / fatigue
- Rapid weight loss
- Fever and/or night sweats
- Chest pain
- Hemoptysis - the coughing up of blood. The blood may appear as
pinkish froth, mucus with a bloody streak or clot, or pure blood.
Hemoptysis
may be the result of forceful coughing or a sign of a serious
respiratory illness.
If you are experiencing any of the above signs and symptoms of
tuberculosis, see your doctor immediately.
Ask your doctor or nurse if you have other questions about latent TB
infection or TB disease. For more information on the signs and symptoms
of TB refer to
http://www.cdc.gov/features/tbawareness/.
[Source: CDC website www.cdc.gov Oct 08 ++]
TUBERCULOSIS UPDATE 01: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major public
health concern in the Philippines. According to the World Health
Organization (WHO), the Philippines has the ninth highest number of
tuberculosis
cases in the world and the second highest in southeast Asia. Globally,
there were more than nine million new cases and about 1.7 million deaths
from the disease in 2006; the WHO estimates there are more than 14
million people living with TB, which kills 75 Filipinos each day,
according to the Department of Health. TB ranked sixth amongst the 10
leading
cause of morbidity and mortality in Philippines. [Source: ACS Manila
Newsletter Oct 08 ++]
MEDICARE PART D UPDATE 27: The official numbers have not yet been
released, but it appears that well over one million low-income people with
Medicare will be randomly reassigned to a new Part D drug plan for
2009 because their current plan will no longer qualify for a full premium
subsidy. An analysis revealed that, nationwide, there will be a total
of 308 [prescription drug plans] qualified to serve low-income Medicare
beneficiaries in 2009, almost 200 fewer than in 2008. These almost-200
plans covered approximately 1.3 million individuals who will now need
to be reassigned. That number is up from 1.2 million individuals who CMS
reassigned in 2008 and 250,000 individuals in 2007. In New York State
alone, over a quarter million low-income people, most of whom used to
receive stable, comprehensive drug coverage under Medicaid, are enrolled
in plans with premiums that are rising above the benchmark used to
calculate the premium subsidy. Over 150,000 are in five plans that were
assigned new low-income enrollees for the first time in 2008, but will be
losing them to competing plans at the end of the year. About one-third
of these people are getting bumped from one plan to another for the
second time. That means that, in New York alone, for the second year in a
row, tens of thousands of low-income people with Medicare will find
themselves in a new plan, with a new list of excluded or restricted
drugs. Anyone who managed to receive prior authorization for their
medicines
when they started a new plan last January will have to go through the
same bureaucratic nightmare with the new company this January.
This year’s plan is not required to transfer records to
next
year’s plan and next year’s plan is not required to look at the medication
history of its new enrollees. This is nuts. The lives being dealt around
to insurance companies like cards at a poker table include the most
vulnerable people who receive Medicare. They are more likely to have a
mental illness or a cognitive impairment, such as dementia. They are more
likely to be widowed and live alone, without the benefit of a
caregiver who could help them choose a plan that covers their drugs. An
appeals
system that regularly frustrates experienced advocates, including
trained lawyers, is an insurmountable challenge for people who will learn
at the pharmacy counter in January that their diabetes or blood pressure
medicine is not covered under the new plan.
There are some simple short-term solutions that the next
administration can enact to lessen this problem (the Bush administration
has
already refused to take these steps):
- The benchmark used to determine the maximum premium subsidy should be
calculated on the basis of the real cost of providing prescription
drug coverage.
- The excess subsidies that Medicare private health plans use to buy
down their drug premiums should not be used to depress the maximum
premium subsidy.
- If the benchmark were calculated based on the real cost, it would
raise the subsidy level, increase the number of full-subsidy plans and
reduce the number of low-income people facing reassignment.
- People should be reassigned to the plan that covers the highest
number of their drugs with the fewest restrictions.
- Computer-savvy consumers can use Medicare.gov to pick the plan that
best suits their needs. Low-income people with Medicare who have
difficulty navigating the plan selection process deserve the same care and
attention when the government picks their plan for them.
These are helpful solutions, but they are band-aids at best.
Instability is built into the privatized structure of Part D. Low-income
people
with Medicare need the same choice that all people with Medicare
deserve—a stable, affordable drug benefit under Original Medicare.
[Source:
Asclepios Weekly Medicare Consumer Advocacy Update 9 Oct 08 ++]
MOBILIZED RESERVE 7 OCT 08: The Army, Air Force and Marine Corps
announced the current number of reservists on active duty as of 7 OCT 08
in
support of the partial mobilization. The net collective result is 6,299
more reservists mobilized than last reported in the Bulletin for 10
SEP 08. At any given time, services may mobilize some units and
individuals while demobilizing others, making it possible for these
figures to
either increase or decrease. The total number currently on active duty
in support of the partial mobilization of the Army National Guard and
Army Reserve is 94,117; Navy Reserve, 6,205; Air National Guard and Air
Force Reserve, 12,101; Marine Corps Reserve, 7,790; and the Coast Guard
Reserve, 734. This brings the total National Guard and Reserve
personnel who have been mobilized to 120,947including both units and
individual
augmentees. A cumulative roster of all National Guard and Reserve
personnel, who are currently mobilized, can be found at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Oct2008/d20081007ngr.pdf
. [Source: DoD
News Release 857-08 8 Oct 08 ++]
MEDICARE PREMIUMS 2009 UPDATE 04: Medicare has announced that the
JAN
09 Part B premiums and annual deductible ($135) will remain at the
current 2008 rates. This one-time relief from annual premium increases was
possible because of an accounting change that shifted a piece of the
Medicare budget from Part B (doctor visits) to Part A (hospital
treatment). However, income thresholds for imposing higher, means-tested
premiums will rise about 3.7% (from $82,000 to $85,000 for an individual).
That will ease the impact of the continuing phase-in of means-tested
premium increases for certain higher-income Medicare-eligibles.
Individuals
with adjusted gross incomes above $85,000 ($170,000 for a married
couple) will still see a Part B premium increase in 2009. Also, the Part A
(hospital care) annual deductible will be $1,068, an increase of $44.
That covers beneficiaries’ costs for the first 60 days of a
Medicare-covered hospital stay, with patients facing daily co-pays beyond
that
point. Following are the Part B 2009 premiums showing income thresholds
for
individuals & couples, Part B Monthly Premium to be paid, and
Beneficiary Share of total Part B Cost:
- Under $85,000 Under $170,000 $96.40 25%
- $85,001 - $107,000 $170,001 - $214,000 $134.90 35%
- $107,001 - $160,000 $214,001 - $320,000 $192.70 50%
- $160,001 - $213,000 $320,001 - $426,000 $250.50 65%
- Above $213,000 Above $426,000 $308.30 80%
[Source: MOAA News exchange 8 Oct 08 ++]
VA HEALTH CARE FUNDING UPDATE 16: The chairs of the House and Senate
Veterans’ Affairs committees have introduced legislation, to be taken up
next year, to ensure timelier and fully funded budgets for the VA
health care system. Proponents say passage of the Veterans Health Care
Budget Reform Act (H.R. 6939 and S. 3527) also might lead to a gradual
reopening of VA health care to thousands of priority group 8 veterans.
These are veterans with no service-connected ailments and, by government
standards, adequate income. Priority group 8 enrollments were stopped in
2003. The thrust of the VA health budget reform bill, however, is to
approve VA health care funds a year in advance and end a disturbing
pattern by Congress of passing VA budgets months after the budget year
begins 1 OCT. These two- and three-month delays have forced VA hospitals
and clinics to operate with funds frozen at previous year levels,
creating supply and staff shortages, hiring freezes, and delays in
equipment
purchases. The health care budget reform bill would put the VA health
care budget under an “advance appropriation” schedule. If it were in
effect this year, Congress would be passing a VA health budget now to take
effect OCT 09. Part 2 of the package would improve the level of VA
health care funding by requiring the department to use a new actuarial
model that quite accurately can project the per capita cost of providing
health care to the VA’s enrolled-patient population. The GAO would be
tasked with verifying the accuracy of VA health care cost projections each
year. Therefore, if the VA proposed a health budget short of
requirements, the White House would feel the political heat and would have
to
explain both to Congress and to veterans why health services were being
targeted for reductions.
This legislation is an innovation from the Partnership for
Veterans
Health Care Budget Reform (PVHCBR), a group of eight veteran-service
organizations: AMVETS, the Blinded Veterans Association, Disabled
American Veterans, Jewish War Veterans, the Military Order of the Purple
Heart, Paralyzed Veterans of America, the American Legion, VFW, and
Vietnam
Veterans of America. In introducing their plan as a bill, Rep. Bob
Filner (D-CA) chair of the House committee, called it a “historic new
approach to guarantee that our veterans have access to comprehensive,
quality health care.” Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-HI), Senate committee chair,
said
it would end VA budgets that are “untimely and unpredictable.” A
bipartisan group of cosponsors came forward in both chambers. Joining
Akaka
were Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-ME), Tim Johnson (D-SD), Mary Landrieu
(D-LA), Russ Feingold (D-WI), Ted Stevens (R-AK), Lisa Murkowski (R-AR),
and John Thune (R-SD). Cosponsors with Filner in the House were Reps.
Walter Jones (R-NC), Michael Michaud (D-ME), and Phil Hare (D-IL). The
veterans’ group partnership choose a new path toward VA health care budget
reform after Congress declined year after year to back a law that
would mandate full funding of the VA health care system for every veteran
needing care. Lawmakers argued it would limit congressional
prerogatives. It also would expand VA entitlements in violation of the
pay-as-you-go budget rule that the cost of any new entitlement be offset
by a cut
in another entitlement account or by raising taxes.
One proponent of VA budgeting reform is Bob Perrault, who
served as
director of three VA medical centers before retiring from the Veterans
Health Administration in 2004 as its top business officer. Perrault
says that in every year he can remember as the director of those medical
centers, congressional delays in passing a VA health care budget
resulted in disruptive shortages and inefficient spending patterns. “We’d
stopped buying equipment. We’d stopped doing maintenance just to try to
maintain [staff] as long as we could,” Perrault says. Patient waiting
lists would grow, and dedicated staff got blamed for management lapses,
when the real culprit was Congress. Until VA health budgets are reformed,
even veterans’ advocates say it isn’t practical to swing open the
doors of VA health care again to priority group 8 veterans. If that
happens, says Peter Dickinson, a consultant to Disabled American Veterans
and
former staff member on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, “we could
be in danger of returning to the days of ’03 and ’04, when more than
300,000 veterans waited six months or longer to get an appointment.”
Ironically, this year, a day before the new fiscal year began, Congress
passed and the president signed into law the Consolidated Security,
Disaster Assistance and Continuing Appropriations Act (H.R. 2638). It
raised
VA spending to $94.35 billion in fiscal 2009 NDAA, an increase of
$6.75 billion or 7.7%. Two-thirds of that increase, $4.1 billion, is for
health care. This won praise from veteran service organizations.
Proponents say passage of the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform Act next
year
could make legislative performances — like this one on behalf of
veterans — the rule rather than the exception. [Source: MOAA Observation
Post
Tom Philpott article 10 Oct 08 ++]
TRICARE UNIFORM FORMULARY UPDATE 26: On 17 SEP the Beneficiary
Advisory Panel (BAP) met to provide comments to the Department of Defense
(DoD) Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee’s (P&T Committee)
recommendations on formulary status, pre-authorizations, and the effective
date for
a drug’s change from formulary to non-formulary status. Moving a drug
to non-formulary status means it will still be available to
beneficiaries, but usually at a higher price. It may also require
medication
authorization. Current and new drugs were reviewed. The BAP's
recommendations
were:
• Self-monitoring blood glucose system test strips (SMBGS): SMBGS
recommended for the Uniform Formulary were: Accu-chek Aviva, Precision
Xtra,
Freestyle Lite, and the Ascensia Contour. All others were designated
as non-formulary. Under this recommendation, beneficiaries who currently
use designated non-formulary SMBGS will be given a free formulary
SMBGS meter of their choice. All of the BAP members felt the
implementation
time of 120-days was inadequate and voted against it.
• Overactive Bladder Drugs: Oxybutynin patch (Oxytrol) was designated
to move from non-formulary to formulary status. Two drugs were
designated to be moved to the non-formulary status: tolterodine IR
(Detrol) and
trospium IR (Sanctura) following a 90-day implementation period.
• Newly Approved Drugs: Two drugs, Desvenlafaxine (Pristiq) used to
treat depression and Nisoldipine geomatrix (Sular geomatrix) for the
treatment of hypertension, were designated as non-formulary with a 60-day
implementation period. These medications were only recently introduced,
so relatively few beneficiaries are taking them.
The recommendations will be submitted to the Assistant Secretary of
Defense (Health Affairs) for final decision.
DoD will notify all beneficiaries currently taking the medications
being moved to the third tier so they and their doctors can consider
alternative medications available at the lower copay. Information on
alternative medications can be found via www.tricareformularysearch.org. A
doctor who believes it is important for a patient to take the third-tier
medication can provide "medical necessity" justification to Tricare. If
approved, the patient will continue receiving the medication at the
lower copay. For a complete list of formulary medications, go to:
http://www.tricareformularysearch.org/dod/medicationcenter/default.aspx.
For additional information on this or other BAP meetings, refer to
http://www.tricare.mil/pharmacy/bap/.
[Source: NMFA Government & You
E-News 7 Oct 08 ++]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION: None of the 12 annual appropriations bills
have been enacted into law this year so Congress has provided a Continuing
Resolution (CR) for the President to sign. A CR is a type of
appropriations legislation used by the United States Congress to fund
government
agencies if a formal appropriations bill has not been signed into law
by the end of the Congressional fiscal year. The legislation takes the
form of a joint resolution, and provides funding for existing federal
programs at current or reduced levels. The national government's budget
calendar runs from 1 OCT thru 30 SEP of each year. Each federal
department, agency and program is authorized to spend congressionally
specified amounts of money. That money cannot be spent, however, unless it
is
explicitly appropriated for a given purpose. For example, an agency
might be authorized to spend $2 billion on a program, but it does not
actually have that money to spend until it is appropriated for that
program.
Each year, the Congress must pass and the President must sign 12
separate appropriations bills by 1 OCT to fund all of the national
government's departments, agencies and programs for the following year. If
the
Congress and President fail to pass all of the appropriations bills,
there will be some agencies and programs that do not have the money
appropriated to them that they are authorized to spend. In other words,
there will be no money to spend on some legally established programs and
national government functions. In most instances, the Congress and the
President will agree to a Continuing Resolution which temporarily funds
the programs and agencies for which appropriations bills have not been
passed. A CR must be passed by both houses of Congress and signed by the
President. Generally, a CR funds agencies or programs for a month or
two at the same funding level as the previous year. The main purpose of
a CR is to keep the government running long enough for the Congress and
President to work out an agreement on all 12 appropriations bills.
[Source: EANGUS Minuteman Update 25 Sep 08 ++]
CT VET PROPERTY TAX: Governor M. Jodi Rell announced 30 SEP that she
has directed the Connecticut Department of Veterans Affairs and the
Office of Policy and Management to help ensure disabled service-connected
veterans receive their annual property tax abatement benefits. Governor
Rell was notified today by the United States Department of Veterans
Affairs (USVA) of a change the federal government made in the procedure
when it comes to disabled veterans filing the proper tax abatement
paperwork with their tax assessors’ office. Upon receiving this background
today from the USVA on the change in the filing procedure, Governor Rell
immediately notified town assessors and their respective mayors and
first selectmen. She said the state Department of Veterans Affairs
(DVA)
and the Office of Policy and Management will work closely with the
USVA and local tax assessors to ensure that disabled service-connected
veterans receive their required annual tax abatement documentation and
have time to file it with their local municipality. Governor Rell will
also be contacting the USVA to protest the short notice given to disabled
veterans and tax assessors regarding how the federal government
verifies veteran disability ratings for local tax purposes.
In a change to past procedure, disabled
service-connected veterans
must now individually request a letter from the USVA verifying their
service-connected disability which in turn must be submitted to their
local tax assessor. Previously, the USVA automatically issued VA Form
20-5455, “Statement from Benefit Payment Records,” annually to all
eligible disabled veterans. Effective 1 JUL 08, the USVA converted to a
new
payment records system which will no longer allow the traditional VA Form
20-5455 to be issued. Disabled Connecticut veterans must now request a
disability verification letter from the USVA’s Regional Office in
Newington by emailing their name and claim number to
pctc.vbahar@va.gov or
by faxing a signed request to (860) 665-7654. Disabled veterans who do
not have convenient access to email or a fax machine may also provide
their name and claim number through the Connecticut DVA Veteran
Information Line at 1-866-928-8387. Disabled
veterans may also visit one of the Connecticut Department of Veterans’
Affairs (CTDVA) district offices in Bridgeport, Newington, Norwich,
Rocky Hill or West Haven for assistance. CTDVA staff will be able to
submit requests for disability verification letters to the USVA on behalf
of
disabled veterans.
Governor Rell and the Office of Policy Management (OPM) are
notifying each local tax assessor of this change in USVA procedure and
documentation and asking that tax assessors allow disabled veterans
additional
time to submit their disability verification letters this year. Most
municipalities require documentation for tax abatement purposed to be
submitted by 1 OCT. OPM will also help field questions from local
assessors and resolve issues on behalf of disabled veterans. “In
this tough
economy, we must all work together to ensure our veterans obtain all the
financial benefits they have so richly earned,” said Governor Rell.
“Working with our Federal partners, hopefully we can develop a more
streamlined system that reduces the annual documentation requirements for
disabled veterans, the USVA and our local tax assessors.” [Source:
Norwalk Plus magazine article 30 Sep 08 ++]
VA CLAIMS BACKLOG UPDATE 19: Lawmakers have high expectations
that
they can reduce the backlog and processing time for veterans’ benefits
claims through a combination of new procedures, including two pilot
projects. The Veterans Benefits Improvement Act of 2008, which passed
Congress on Saturday and is being prepared for submission to the White
House
for President Bush’s signature, pushes the Department of Veterans
Affairs to use electronic filing and processing of claims to try to
improve
the speed of claims decisions, reduce the disparity in decisions
involving similar issues and cut the number of claims decisions that end
up
being overturned. The bill also creates a new authority to provide a
temporary disability rating for some veterans who have severe and
multiple disabilities that are not fully healed. Stabilized and
unstabilized
disabilities that have an impact on employment could be considered in
assigning the temporary rating that would be used to provide disability
compensation during the first year after leaving the military.
One of the pilot projects ordered by the compromise bill
requires
special, expedited treatment for disability claims where the veteran had
the help of a veterans’ service officer to prepare the paperwork. This
one-year test would be carried out in at least 10 regional offices. A
second pilot project, to run over three years in at least four regional
offices, would have processors and veterans use a checklist when
submitting claims in an effort to bring more organization and uniformity
to
the claims process. The bill also gives VA one year to develop a
program using information technology to process claims that would allow
veterans to file applications and to track the progress of their claim
online. Several provisions in the bill were drawn from a claims
modernization bill sponsored by Rep. John Hall (D-NY) and Sen. Hillary
Clinton
(D-NY) that attempts to improve training for VA workers who are processing
claims and to change how employees are evaluated. Hall said processing
a first-time claim by a disabled veteran can take 180 days and even
longer if a veteran appeals the initial decision. The long processing time
is part of the reason there is a backlog of about 400,000 claims
awaiting a decision by VA.
Over the last two years, members of the House and Senate veterans’
affairs committees have tried to push VA to process claims more quickly
while also complaining about the rate of mistakes in claims and
evidence that similar claims are decided differently between VA regional
offices. In the report accompanying the benefits bill, the two committees
say they want a process that is perceived as fair by veterans, but
realize “it is unreasonable to expect states to have exactly the same
average
compensation or percentage of veterans receiving compensation.” The
bill requires a report — due one year from now — that looks at variances
in benefits between regional offices and between veterans of different
states to determine whether the differences are justified. [Source:
NavyTimes Rick Maze article 2 Oct 08 ++]
PURPLE HEART: Congressman Bob Filner announced on 7 OCT that the
Purple Heart will be presented posthumously to all prisoners-of-war who
die
in captivity. The revised policy allows retroactive award of
the
Purple Heart to qualifying prisoners-of-war since 7 DEC 41. Posthumous
award will be made to the deceased service member's representative, as
designated by the secretary of the military department concerned, upon
application to that military department. The legislation that makes
this
possible is Filner’s bill, Honor Our Fallen Prisoners of War Act, passed
by Congress in 2006. The Department of Defense announced its
complete
implementation 6 OCT. “The law now presumes that the death of all
service members who die in captivity was the result of enemy action or the
result of wounds incurred in action with the enemy during capture and
imprisonment,” said Congressman Filner. “Before passage of my bill,
prisoners of war who died during imprisonment of wounds inflicted by an
instrument of war were eligible for posthumous Purple Heart recognition,
but those who died of starvation, disease, abuse, freezing or other
causes during captivity were not. There should be no false distinction
indicating more courage or more sacrifice by some prisoners of war over
others,” said Filner. The Honor Our Fallen Prisoners of War Act had over
200 co-sponsors and broad bi-partisan support in Congress. In
addition, many major Veteran Service Organizations supported the bill,
including the American Legion, the Military Order of the Purple Heart, and
the
American Ex-Prisoners of War. The Senate bill was introduced by
Senator Barbara Boxer. “The inspiration for my bill came from
Wilbert
‘Shorty’ Estabrook, who was imprisoned for more than three years during
the
Korean War, and Rick and Brenda Tavares. Brenda’s uncle, Corporal
Melvin Morgan, died in Korea of starvation and beatings in 1950 at the age
of 20,” said Filner. Each military department will publish application
procedures and will ensure that they are accessible to the general
public. Family members with questions may contact the Services: Army
Military Awards Branch (703) 325-8700, Navy Personnel Command Retired
Records
Section (314) 592 -1150, Air Force Personnel Center (800) 616-3775,
and Marine Corps Military Awards Branch (730) 784-9340. For
further
information, media representatives should contact Eileen Lainez, (703)
695-3895,
eileen.lainez@osd.mil. [Source: Filner Press Release 7 Oct 08
++]
TRS UPDATE 10: Eligible families of activated National Guard
and
Reserve members will continue to save up to $300 in annual deductibles now
that a Tricare “demonstration” program is a permanent benefit.
Eligible family members of Guard and Reserve personnel activated for more
than
30 days under federal orders in support of a contingency operation are
made eligible for Tricare Standard and Tricare Extra, which have
annual deductibles. While they may be eligible to enroll into
Tricare Prime
or Tricare Prime Remote for Active Duty Family Members, which have no
deductibles, many may choose to stay with Tricare Standard or Extra.
Introduced as one of the first Tricare healthcare enhancements after
Sept. 11, 2001 to assist the increasing number of National Guard and
Reserve service members activated to support the Global War on Terrorism,
the
benefit waiving annual deductibles has been a demonstration project
for over seven years. “The demonstration has worked well and the
benefit
is not changing,” said the Deputy Director of TRICARE Management
Activity, Maj. Gen. Elder Granger. “We simply want to make sure our Guard
and Reserve families know this is a permanent benefit now that final
federal regulation has been published.”
Guard or
Reserve families often meet annual deductibles
under their commercial plans before they get activated. Waiving the
Tricare Standard and Extra deductibles means eligible families will not
have
to pay additional deductibles under Tricare. The annual deductible for
Standard and Extra is $300 for families. The published regulation also
contains provisions that make it easier for Reserve and Guard members
to continue to see their family physicians by potentially increasing the
amount that can be paid to out-of-network health care providers.
Since eligibility for Tricare benefits is determined by the services, to
ensure family members are eligible for the Tricare Reserve Family
Benefit, activated Reserve and Guard members should visit their local
military
ID card issuing facility and update their information in the Defense
Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS). [Source: Tricare
News
Release No. 08-99 2 Oct 08 ++]
CA VET LEGISLATION: Secretary Johnson on 30 SEP 08 praised Governor
Schwarzenegger for recognizing the needs of today's veterans by signing
the following legislation that acknowledges their many contributions to
our nation:
- SB 1675 by Senator Dave Cox (R-Fair Oaks) provides that a Resolution
of Issuance approved by the Veterans’ Debenture Finance Committee may
give the Department of Veterans Affairs the discretion to structure the
terms and conditions of any issuance of Revenue Bonds for the CalVet
Home Loan Program.
- SB 1401 by Senator Joe Simitian (D- Palo Alto) requires the
Department of Veterans Affairs and the Military Department to develop
plans to
reach out to Guard members or veterans returning to California from
combat and assist them in obtaining a screening for Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury.
- AB 3083 by the Assembly Committee on Veterans Affairs requires the
Department of Health Care Services (DHCS), in conjunction with the
Department of Mental Health (DMH), to seek all available federal funding
for
mental health services for veterans. The bill also extends mental
health services provided by the Adult and Older Adult Mental Health System
of Care Act to include veterans, and requires counties to provide
mental health services to veterans to the extent such services are
available
to other adults. The bill defines a serious mental disorder or
illness (SMI) to include bipolar disorder and post-traumatic stress
disorder
(PTSD), and requires DMH to include services for veterans within target
population service standards.
- SB 1353 by Senator Gloria Negrete McLeod (D-Montclair) authorizes a
state employee who is a member of the National Guard or Reserves to
receive specified compensation benefits for four additional years, if
ordered to serve on and after September 11, 2001, as a result of the War
on
Terrorism.
- SB 1534 by Senator Jim Battin (R- La Quinta) authorizes uniformed
public safety personnel in California to wear decorations or medals
authorized by the Military and Veterans Code, the U.S. Armed Forces, the
National Guard or the Military Reserve or Naval Militia on and around
Veterans Day and Memorial Day.
- AB 190 by Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D- Los Angeles) authorizes,
after local approval, veterans whose vehicles display one number of
military special-recognition license plates to park in metered parking
spaces without charge.
- AB 2049 by Assemblymember Lori Saldaña (D-San Diego) requires the
Superintendent of Public Instruction to convene a task force to review and
make recommendations regarding the Interstate Compact on Educational
Opportunity for Military Children and to report to the Legislature by 1
JAN 09.
- AB 3065 by the Committee on Veterans Affairs enables veterans who
have retired from active military service, were honorably discharged from
active duty with a service-connected disability or honorably discharged
from active duty to apply for state civil service promotional
examinations.
- SB 1495 by Senator Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) allows a taxpayer to
retain the disabled veteran’s property tax exemption in the case of a
partial loss of the taxpayer's home due to a misfortune or calamity,
and a full or partial loss due to a major disaster for which the governor
has declared a state of emergency.
- AB 2171 by Assemblymember Paul Cook ( R-Yucca Valley ) which begins
the process towards the construction of the Purple Heart Memorial in
State Capitol Park in Sacramento .
- SB 1455 by Senator Dave Cogdill (R-Modesto), which authorizes the
creation of the Gold Star Family License Plate and allows a family member
of a member of the U.S. Armed Forces killed on active duty to apply for
the plate containing a gold star and the words "Gold Star Family."
As
a token of the state's appreciation for their sacrifice, the bill
provides a special waiver of fees for Gold Star Families.
[Source: VA DVA Veteran News 30 Sep 08 ++]
MEDICARE FRAUD UPDATE 10: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services announced 6 OCT it is ramping up efforts to detect fraud that
costs
the agency millions in fake billing for home health services and
durable medical equipment never delivered. CMS officials said the agency
is
launching a national recovery audit contractor program that will track
businesses whose billing for Medicare services trends higher. CMS also
is taking additional steps in specific states where fraud is the most
rampant. "Because Medicare pays for medical services and items without
looking behind every claim, the potential for waste, fraud and abuse is
high," CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems said in a statement. "By
enhancing our oversight efforts we can better ensure that Medicare dollars
are being used to pay for equipment or services that beneficiaries
actually received while protecting them and the Medicare trust fund from
unscrupulous providers and suppliers." Durable medical equipment
suppliers, who provide such equipment as oxygen supplies or power
wheelchairs,
have faced increasing heat as lawmakers search for areas of Medicare's
budget to trim and Senate Republicans make fighting Medicare fraud
their major healthcare focus.
CMS estimates that $1 billion of the $10 billion it made in
payments for durable medical equipment from APR 06 to MAR 07 were
improper, in
part due to fraud, according to a recent Government Accountability
Office report. Both the GAO and the Health and Human Services inspector
general have urged CMS to beef up its fraud detection efforts on the
equipment industry. Durable medical equipment suppliers, represented by
the
American Association of Homecare, agree with CMS' announcement Monday,
a spokesman said. During a three-year demonstration program in six
states, the recovery audit contractors that CMS now plans to use
nationwide recovered $900 million in overpayments. The agency also plans
to
verify with beneficiaries delivery of home health services or durable
medical equipment for which Medicare was billed and keep an even closer
eye
on durable medical equipment suppliers in Florida, California, Texas,
Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina and New York as well as home health
agencies in Florida. In those states, equipment suppliers' claims will
be scrutinized more closely, and CMS will make unannounced visits to
ensure the companies are in business. [Source: Congress Daily Anna Edney
article 6 Oct 08 ++]
MILITARY HISTORY OCTOBER ANNIVERSARIES: Significant October Events
in
Military History are:
1781 - British troops under General Lord Charles Cornwallis surrendered
to General Washington at Yorktown, Virginia, effectively ending the
American Revolution.
1775 - The US Navy was established.
1901 - The first British Navy submarine was commissioned.
1944 - Battle of Leyte Gulf
1950 - The invasion of North Korea started.
1952 - Battle of Hill 598 began, Korean War
1957 - The Soviet Union launched Sputnik I, first man-made earth
satellite.
1962 - The U.S. began its blockade of Cuba to compel the Russians to
remove long-range missiles aimed at the U.S.
1964 - The Chinese exploded their first atomic bomb.
1965 - The Battle of the La Drang Valley, Vietnam War.
1968 - The Bombing of North Vietnam ended.
1969 - Battle of Loc Ninh, Vietnam War
1971 - Operation Jefferson Glenn, the last major operation in which US
ground forces participated in Vietnam
1973 - Egypt and Syria launched military offensive against Israel
1983 -Terrorist attack on Marine Barracks, Beirut
1983 - Operation Urgent Fury, Grenada
1993 - Battle of Bakhara Market, Mogadishu, Somalia
2000 - Bombing of the USS Cole by Al-Queda terrorists
2001 - Operation Enduring Freedom began in Afghanistan
2001 – War on Terror Began
[Source: VetJobs Veteran Eagle Oct 08 ++]
MILITARY ID CARDS UPDATE 02: Homeland Security Directive 12 now
requires retirees and family members seeking to renew or replace a
military
identification card to provide two types of ID. Retirees and family
members needing identification cards must have two of the following types
of current identification -- one of which must include a photo:
• Driver’s license or ID issued by a state or outlying U.S.
commonwealth or possession ID card issued by federal, state or local
government
agencies or entities.
• School ID card with a photograph
• Voter’s registration card
• U.S. military ID card
• U.S. passport
• Certificate of U.S. citizenship
• Certificate of naturalization
For persons younger than 18, who are unable to present a document
previously listed, they may bring:
• School record or report card
• Clinic, doctor or hospital record
• Day-care or nursery school record
The above listing is not all inclusive. A list of acceptable documents
can be found at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/form/I-9.pdf. [Source:
VetJobs Veteran Eagle Oct 08 ++]
NDAA 2009 UPDATE 07: Defense spending and authorization measures
have
been cleared by Congress and are on their way to the President for
signature. Last week, Senate leaders were looking at a list of
300-plus
amendments when the FY2009 Defense Authorization Bill (S. 3001) came to
the floor for action. A flap over pork barrel spending forced Senate
leaders to drop almost all amendments to the FY 2009 Defense
Authorization Bill in order to get it passed. The measure was pushed
through the
Senate by unanimous consent on 27 SEP. The bill authorizes $531.4 billion
in base Defense Department spending, along with an additional $68.6
billion in emergency war spending, and:
• Authorizes a 3.9% across-the-board pay raise for military personnel;
• Authorizes fiscal 2009 active-duty end strengths for the Army and
Marine Corps of 532,400 and 194,000, respectively, an increase of 7,000
soldiers and 5,000 Marines from 2008 authorized levels;
• Authorizes an increase of 2,110 full-time support soldiers for the
Army National Guard above the Administration’s request;
• Authorizes $124.8 billion for military personnel costs in fiscal
2009, including costs of pay, allowances, bonuses, death benefits, and
permanent change of station moves;
• Requires payment of previously authorized bonuses to the survivors of
members who die on active duty and to individuals who are retired or
separated for combat-related disabilities;
• Authorizes new accession and retention bonuses for psychologists and
other mental health professionals;
• Authorizes $25 billion for the Defense Health Program, which includes
the $1.2 billion necessary to prohibit any increase in TRICARE fees in
2009;
• Prohibits for 1 year the increase of any premium, deductible, and
copayment under TRICARE;
• Increases the cap on benefits under the Extended Health Care Option
program for all qualified families from $2,500 per month to an annual
cap of $36,000;
• Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to establish programs, including
tuition assistance, to assist spouses of active-duty service members in
obtaining education and training required for a degree, credential, or
professional licensure in order to expand their employment and
portable career opportunities;
• Authorizes pilot programs to evaluate the need for more flexibility
in military career progression that would allow service members to leave
active service for up to three years, retain health care coverage, and
return with the same grade and years of service;
• Requires the Secretary of Defense to establish a task force on
suicide prevention;
• Provides $55 million in Department of Defense (DOD) supplemental
impact aid for schools;
• Requires the Secretaries of Defense and the Veterans’ Affairs to
continue the operations of the Senior Oversight Committee to oversee
implementation of Wounded Warrior initiatives and requires that they
establish jointly a center of excellence in the mitigation, treatment, and
rehabilitation of traumatic extremity injuries and amputations, as well as
a center of excellence in prevention, diagnosis, mitigation, treatment,
and rehabilitation of hearing loss and auditory system injuries;
• Fully funds Army and Marine Corps readiness and depot maintenance
programs to ensure that forces preparing to deploy are trained and their
equipment is ready;
• Supports the President’s budget request for the Army’s Future Combat
Systems and recommends provisions to improve program management and
oversight; and,
• Requires the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs and the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, to
develop a strategic plan to enhance the role of the National Guard and
Reserve, taking into account the report of the Commission on the National
Guard and Reserve and the recently introduced National Guard Empowerment
Act and State-National Defense Integration Act of 2008.
[Source: AUSA Legislative Newsletter 29 SEP 08 ++]
VETERAN SPOUSE FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT: In SEP 08 President Bush issued
an
order granting federal agencies the authority to bypass competitive
hiring regulations to appoint spouses of military service members to
civilian government jobs. "It shall be the policy of the United States to
provide for the appropriately expedited recruitment and selection of
spouses of members of the armed forces for appointment to positions in the
competitive service," Bush's executive order stated. The order allows
agency heads to make noncompetitive appointments to the following
groups of people:
- Spouses of military service members who are on active duty under
orders that authorize a permanent change of station move assuming the
spouse is moving, too.
- Spouses of totally disabled retired or separated members of the armed
forces.
- Widows or widowers (who have not remarried) of service members killed
on active duty.
The order follows Bush's proposal in his State of the Union address in
January that Congress work to expand benefits for military families.
"Our military families ... endure sleepless nights and the daily struggle
of providing for children while a loved one is serving far from home,"
Bush said. "We have a responsibility to provide for them. So I ask you
to join me in expanding their access to child care, creating new
hiring preferences for military spouses across the federal government, and
allowing our troops to transfer their unused education benefits to their
spouses or children." [Source: GOVExec.com Tom Shoop article 29 Sep 08
++]
VA FRAUD UPDATE 13: A Pittsburgh woman pleaded guilty 29 AUG to
stealing her dead mother's VA benefits for more than two years. Laurie
Davin
withdrew more than $38,000 from her mother's bank account from FEB 05
to OCT 07 She pleaded guilty to theft of government property before
U.S. District Judge David S. Cercone. According to the prosecution, Ms.
Davin's mother, Helen Lang, was receiving the dependency payments on
behalf of her husband. But Ms. Lang died on 3 FRB 05, and the payments
should have stopped. Under what is known as the "Death Match" project,
investigators with Veterans Affairs inspector general's office found that
money was still being deposited to Ms. Lang's account. When confronted,
Ms. Davin told investigators that she was having financial problems and
that her mother had lived with her for 10 years and contributed toward
household expenses. The woman also said she was trying to sell her
home, support her daughter in college and was working two jobs at the
time. She also had recently for filed bankruptcy. Ms. Davin had power of
attorney over her mother's account and used an ATM card to make 144
withdrawals before she stopped. Judge Cercone set sentencing for 15 DEC
08.
[Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Paula Reed Ward article 16 Sep 08 ++]
VA FRAUD UPDATE 14: Three Lowell MA residents residing in the same
household are facing federal charges that they bilked disabled vets living
at the Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital in Bedford MA
out of thousands of dollars through identity fraud. Wilfredo
Hernandez,
41, has been indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit fraud,
identity fraud and access-device fraud, as have his 60-year-old mother,
Gladys
Hernandez, and his 27-year-old girlfriend, Jessica Rivera. The
Hernandezes were both released on a $10,000 unsecured bond 29 SEP after
their
initial appearance in federal court. Rivera will appear before the
court 9 OCT. Federal investigators allege that Wilfredo Hernandez,
who
worked at the Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital in Bedford as
a custodian for about 20 years, and Rivera, a nurse's assistant for
about seven years, stole credit-card information, bank-account numbers
and blank checks from a handful of veterans. They then shared the
stolen
information with Gladys Hernandez before using it to pay bills and
purchase goods online and by telephone, the indictment says. They also
allegedly made out the stolen checks to other family members, who would
then hand over that amount in cash.
The trio's indictment lists four veterans who were allegedly
targeted. They are permanent residents of the hospital "due to the
extensive
nature of their disabilities," the indictment says. The trio
initiated
the fraud in AUG 07, when they used one veteran's information to apply
for a credit card with Capital One, the indictment says. There appears
to have been no further activity until 5 OCT 07, when Wilfredo
Hernandez allegedly accessed the Sovereign Bank account of a second
veteran to
initiate a $350 payment toward his cell-phone bill. That veteran's
bank accounts were then targeted six more times over the next two months
for another $2,430. Federal officials say the trio used that money as
cash or applied it toward cell-phone and cable bills. A third veteran's
credit card was also used in NOV/DEC 07 to purchase $1,758.96 worth of
products from cable shopping channels QVC and Home Shopping Network, the
indictment says. The trio allegedly targeted the Ocean Bank account
of the fourth veteran once, in PCT 07, attempting to initiate an
electronic payment of $4,947 to the CMD Wholesale clothing company.
The
thefts were uncovered in JAN 08, when relatives of the veterans reported
the
unusual bank activity to the hospital, the indictment says. The case
was then investigated by officials from the Veterans Administration and
U.S. Secret Service. If they are convicted, the Hernandezes and Rivera
face up to 15 years in prison, along with three years of supervised
release and a $250,000 fine. [Source: Lowell sun Alexandra Mayer-Hohdahl
article 30 Sep 08 ++]
ALS UPDATE 05: On 23 SEP 08 the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA)
announced that all veterans with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
would become presumptively compensable for the illness. This would
apply
to all veterans with 90 days or more of continuously active service in
the military regardless of when or where they served. VA will provide
disability pay, lifetime health care and death benefits. The 10-year
cost for death and disability benefits is projected at $505,839,000,
said Tom Pamperin, the deputy director of the compensation and pension
service at the Veterans Affairs Department. That figure does not include
health care costs. VA Secretary Peake based his decision primarily
on a
NOV 06 report by the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of
Medicine (IOM) on the association between active-duty service and ALS.
The
report, titled Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis in Veterans: Review of the
Scientific Literature, analyzed numerous previous studies on the issue
and concluded, ‘there is limited and suggestive evidence of an
association between military service and later development of ALS.’
Studies
indicate veterans are twice as likely to develop ALS as people with no
history of military service. "This is a disease that progresses
rapidly, once it is diagnosed. There simply isn't time to develop the
evidence
needed to support compensation claims before many veterans become
seriously ill. My decision will make those claims much easier to
process,
and for them and their families to receive the compensation they have
earned through their service to our nation."
ALS, also called Lou Gehrig's disease, is a
neuromuscular disease
that affects about 20,000 to 30,000 people of all races and ethnicities
in the United States, is often relentlessly progressive, and is almost
always fatal. It causes degeneration of nerve cells in the brain and
spinal cord that leads to muscle weakness, muscle atrophy, and
spontaneous muscle activity. Currently, the cause of ALS is unknown,
and there
is no effective treatment. The new interim final regulation applies to
all applications for benefits received by VA on or after 23 SEP 08, or
that are pending before VA, the United States Court of Appeals for
Veterans Claims or the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit on that date. VA will work to identify and contact veterans
with
ALS, including those whose claims for ALS were previously denied,
through direct mailings and other outreach programs. The government
expects
416 new cases among veterans in 2009, and a total of about 700 a year
qualifying for the benefits. In some cases their survivors will quality
for death benefits. The death and disability benefits alone are
expected to cost about $23 million in 2009. For more information on VA's
disability compensation program, go to www.va.gov or call 1-800-827-1000.
[Source: New York times Dennis Grady article 23 Sep 08 ++]
TOMB OF THE UNKNOWNS UPDATE 01: U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI),
Chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, reacted today to a joint
report from the Departments of the Army and Veterans Affairs on
alternatives to replacing the Tomb Monument at the Tomb of the Unknowns at
Arlington National Cemetery. The report was required under the
National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, due to an amendment
co-sponsored by Akaka and Senator Jim Webb (D-VA). Among other
findings, the
report which is available at
http://veterans.senate.gov/public/media/unknown_soldier_letter.pdf
outlines several possible means of repairing and preserving, rather than
replacing, the now-weathered monument at the tomb. Akaka said, "Many of
our most treasured American symbols, from the Liberty Bell to the
original Star-Spangled Banner, are physically worn and weathered by time.
This does not diminish their value or significance. I am pleased
that
the Departments of Army and Veterans Affairs have determined a number
ways to repair this national treasure, rather than replacing it with a
replica. I urge them to pursue the best means of preserving the Tomb
for
future generations Americans". The Tomb of the Unknowns, located at
Arlington National Cemetery, is a monument to honor those servicemembers
who do not return from battle. It stands as a tangible tribute to
their
service, as well as a place for their families and others to
contemplate their absence. The Tomb Monument sits above the tombs
for the
unknowns from World War I, World War II, and the Korean Conflict.
Over
time, the Tomb Monument has aged to show signs of natural wear, including
developing a number of cracks. [Source: Sen. Akaka Press release 17
Sep
08 ++]
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY UPDATE 03: Arlington National Cemetery,
the final resting place for more than 340,000 soldiers, presidents and
other distinguished Americans, has moved a step closer to adding
thousands of grave sites. On 16 SEP Arlingtoin County officials
approved a
4.3-acre land swap with the federal government that will allow the
cemetery to add as many as 3,440 burial sites. The move is part of
expansion
plans set forth more than four decades ago that military officials say
will allow burials to continue until 2060. After that, plans are less
clear. The 4.3-acre portion will convert Navy Annex land west of the
Pentagon to grave sites. Arlington County's Southgate Road would have
divided the new cemetery space. The county will swap land that
includes the
road for a comparable piece of the annex that the county can use for a
potential history complex and for redevelopment along Columbia Pike.
The exchange is scheduled for 2011, although that timeline could change,
federal and local officials said.
George W. Dodge, president of the Arlington Historical
Society
said, "It's not just a cemetery now; it's a shrine. It's a shrine to valor
and the sacrifices American men and women have made. Given the space
constraints, there are only a finite number of days or years it can stay
open . . . so acreage becomes an issue. You can trace the history of
this country through all the interments there. It's like a walk through
history. If it's cut off at some point, you're going to lose that."
Soldiers from the Revolutionary War to the Iraq war have been buried on
the 624-acre grounds, including William Russell, a colonel from the
Virginia regiment who was present during the winter at Valley Forge.
Presidents William H. Taft and John F. Kennedy are there, as are North
Pole
explorers Robert Peary and Matthew Henson. Dirt dug from graves today is
moved nearby to help prepare future sites. Officials estimate that each
acre can accommodate 600 to 800 graves. In other expansion plans,
the
cemetery is building a wall along Route 110 that will hold 6,500
niches for cremated remains. A third project will add sites near Fort
Myer.
And what happens a half-century from now, when the land runs out? "It's
hard to say," said Kaitlin Horst, a cemetery official. "I don't know
that that's been discussed at this point. We're working on the three we
have now, and I guess we'll cross that bridge when we get to it."
[Source: Washington Post Michael Laris article 18 Sep 08 +]
FILIPINO VET INEQUITIES UPDATE 10: In a compromise that could end a
contentious debate over whether the U.S. still owes a debt to Filipinos
who served alongside American troops in World War II, the House
Veterans Affairs Committee approved a plan 17 SEP for a one-time payment
to
surviving veterans instead of an annual pension. But if veterans were to
take the payments spelled out in HR 6897 — $15,000 for U.S. citizens
and $9,000 for noncitizens — they would waive the right to ever receive
another pension for their World War II service if the federal government
were to someday pass a more generous bill. About 18,000 Filipinos
would qualify for payments under the bill, according to estimates prepared
by the Congressional Budget Office. Disagreement over the pensions and
how to pay for them has been the chief cause of deadlock on veterans’
benefits legislation. The Senate passed a benefits bill, S 1315, that
included the Filipino pensions, but there was no final vote on the
House’s bill, HR 760, because of complaints about a plan to grant special
pensions to Filipino Scouts and other veterans who worked with the U.S. in
World War II — $3,600 a year for single veterans and $4,500 for
married veterans. Some lawmakers and veterans’ groups said the $221
million
annual cost would be better spent on immediate needs for U.S. veterans
and their families, especially Iraq and Afghanistan combat veterans.
Rep. Bob Filner (D-CA), the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee
chairman and one of the staunchest advocates for providing pensions for
Filipino veterans, is the chief sponsor of the compromise bill. Rep. Steve
Buyer of Indiana, the committee’s ranking Republican, opposed the
initial pension bill and is the sponsor of the amendment calling for
veterans who accept the one-time payment to waive the right to receive
future
benefits for the same period of service. Filner said he is not happy
about the one-time payment, which would be provided only if money is
available. A lump-sum payment is “a more practical” way to pay the
benefit,
he said, but added: “It is clearly not the most just or equitable, and
for that I am disappointed.” Buyer still is not completely on board,
expressing concern that providing payments to Filipinos could lead
French, Italian and other nationalities who helped in World War II to also
seek benefits from the U.S. Committee aides, who asked not to be
identified, said House leaders have indicated support for the compromise,
allowing the House to vote on an issue that has delayed work on other
veterans’ legislation. Whether the one-time payment becomes law will
depend
on what happens in the Senate, where Sen. Daniel Akaka, the Senate
Veterans’ Affairs Committee chairman, has placed a high priority on
providing pensions to Filipinos who helped the U.S. military. Aides to
Akaka
said the senator has not endorsed the new House proposal. [Source:
ArmyTimes Rick Maze article 18 Sep 08 ++]
TRICARE RESERVE/GUARD BUY IN UPDATE 01: An amendment to the 2009
National Defense Authorization Act co-sponsored by Sens. Clinton (D-NY),
Smith (R-OR), Sessions (R-AL), and Graham (R-SC) has been made. It
would
authorize all Gray Area Retirees (Reserve Component retirees who have
not attained the age of 60) and their families, now only eligible to
receive Reserve Retirement Pay and TRICARE at age 60, to purchase TRICARE
Standard coverage at a premium equal to the full cost of coverage to
the Department of Defense as determined by the Secretary of Defense on an
actuarial basis. This coverage is to be made available no later than
1OCT 09. The Senate Armed Services Committee has included SA 5281 as a
managers’ amendment to S. 3001 (NDAA) which gives it an excellent
chance of being included in the Senate’s NDAA that will be sent to a
Joint
Conference with the House NDAA Reservist who would like to contact
their Senator on this issue can do by entering their zip code at
http://www.ngaus.org/tier2.asp?bid=11635
to access a preformatted
message that can be forwarded via email to their legislator. [Source:
NGAUS
Legislative Alert 16 Sep 08 ++]
VFW FINANCIAL OFFICER INDICTED: The former chief financial officer
of
the New Mexico state branch of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) is
accused of using a debit card to steal more than $120,000 from the
organization. Joe Salas has been indicted by a grand jury on 652 counts of
embezzlement and fraud. Authorities allege that Salas, who had been the
organization’s financial officer since 1997, had a debit card issued in
his name from the VFW’s account and used it for personal expenses.
Tires, gasoline, airline tickets, jewelry and other items were purchased.
Salas’ daughter, Claudine Sanchez, was indicted on 15 theft-related
counts. Authorities allege she received VFW checks from her father for
personal expenses. After learning of the allegations, a national VFW board
banned Salas from being a member anywhere in the country for the rest
of his life. The VFW was forced to close its state headquarters in
Albuquerque because of the stolen funds. The headquarters is now in
Ruidoso
and there is no office in Albuquerque. The organization also hasn’t
been able to issue as many youth scholarships or calling cards to troops
overseas. [Source: ArmyTimes AP article 17 Sep 08 ++]
VA BENEFITS ADVISORY COMMITTEE: A newly formed Benefits Advisory
Committee for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will help improve
VA's
compensation system, especially recommending ways to update and
improve the medical evaluations used for disability compensation. The
committee consists of knowledgeable and experienced veterans, advocates
and
experts in areas such as disability claims adjudication, vocational
rehabilitation, disability programs management, workers compensation,
rehabilitative medicine and mental health research who will provide advice
and counsel to the Secretary. Retired Army Lt. Gen. James Terry Scott
will chair the Advisory Committee on VA Disability Compensation and
Related Benefits. A partner at Watson & Associates of Coleman ,
Texas , he
served as chairman of the independent Veterans' Disability Benefits
Commission, one of several recent commissions to examine the needs of
today's combat veterans. The new 11-member VA panel will advise Secretary
Peake through periodic reviews of VA's disability evaluation regulations,
as well as make recommendations on legislative changes to VA benefits
that address the impact of veterans’ disabilities on quality of life,
the need for transition assistance and the potential for successful
rehabilitation. The committee is expected to hold a series of public
meetings and invite testimony. It will also submit periodic progress
reports, the first of which is expected within six months of its first
meeting. Meetings will be announced in the Federal Register.
Membership of
the VA Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans includes:
§ Lt. Gen. James Terry Scott (ret.) of
Coleman, Texas. Partner
at Watson & Associates, a financial services firm. He also teaches
political science at Howard Payne University in Brownwood, Texas. He
is a
member of the Board of Directors of CALIBRE Corp., a technical services
company based in Alexandria, Va.
§ Charles Battaglia of Alexandria, Va.
Member of the board of
directors for the Wounded Warrior Project. A retired naval officer,
he
previously served as executive director of the 2005 Defense Base Closure
and Realignment Commission and also as a senior staff member of the
U.S. Senate, serving in several positions.
§ Robert J. Epley of Waxhaw, N.C.
Independent consultant working
in the areas of strategic planning, training, performance management
and the operations of federal entitlement programs. Mr. Epley served
with VA for 31 years, most recently as director of the Compensation and
Pension Program.
§ Lt. Gen. Thomas Carney (ret.) of
Alexandria, Va. Member of
board of directors of CALIBRE Corp. He has been an independent
consultant
to numerous companies, include CALIBRE, since his retirement in June
1994. Previously, Carney was chief executive officer for the Library
of
Congress. He spent 31 years on active duty in the Army.
§ Maj. Daniel Gade of Athens, Ga.
Former associate director for
domestic policy for the White House's Domestic Policy Council, where he
was responsible for disability and health care issues, as well as
matters relating to active military personnel and veterans. As an
Army
officer, he was the first person in this position to be on active duty
since the post was created in 2001.
§ Robert Burke, PhD, of Bethesda, Md.
Associate professor and
chair of the Department of Health Services Management and Leadership, and
director of the Wertlieb Educational Institute for Long-Term Care
Management at George Washington University.
§ Bonnie Carroll of Anchorage, Alaska.
National director for
Tragedy Assistance Programs for Survivors (TAPS), the national veterans
service organization that provides peer support, grief and trauma
resources and information, casualty casework assistance and crisis
intervention for veterans and their families. An Air Force
reservist, she
previously served as the deputy senior advisor for programs in the
Ministry of
Communications, Coalition Provisional Authority, in Baghdad, Iraq, and
as the deputy White House liaison for VA.
§ Dr. Ronald Blanck of Fenwick Island, Del.
Vice chairman of
Martin, Blanck and Associates. Prior to joining the firm in June
2006,
Dr. Blanck served as president of the University of North Texas Health
Science Center at Fort Worth, Texas, from August 2000 until June 2006.
He is an Army veteran, finishing his career as the Surgeon General of
the Army and commander of the U.S. Army Medical Command.
§ Deneise Turner Lott of Jackson, Miss.
Administrative judge
with the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission since November 1988.
She is currently senior judge and is the first woman to hold that
position. She was engaged in private law practice with an emphasis on
disability claims before joining the commission as a staff attorney.
§ Edward R. Reese Jr. of Washington, D.C.
National service
director for the 1.3 million-member Disabled American Veterans. A
disabled
Army veteran of the Gulf War, Reese works at DAV’s National Service and
Legislative Headquarters in Washington.
§ Dr. Richard T. Katz of St. Louis.
Professor of clinical
neurology at Washington University School of Medicine with an appointment
to
the Barnes Jewish Hospital. He is a primary reviewer of several
different medical journals and has interests in evaluation of disability
and
assessment of pain.
[Source: VA Media Relations 17 Sep 08 ++]
GI BILL UPDATE 29: In the remaining 3½ months of the Bush
administration, the nominee to head the Veterans’ Benefits Administration
knows he
cannot put much of a dent in the backlog of benefits claims, nor
significantly reduce the time it takes for claims to be processed. But
retired Rear Adm. Patrick Dunne, nominated to be VA’s undersecretary of
benefits, said 17 SEP he will concentrate on setting the stage so things
work more smoothly for the next administration. Getting VA ready to pay
Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits when that program takes effect on 1 AUG 09, is
a top priority, Dunne said. Continuing to prepare for a future
paperless claims system and completing a review of disability ratings
issues
so the next administration could reform benefits are two other things
he’d like to get done in the remaining months of the Bush presidency.
Dunne, currently VA’s acting benefits director, appears to have strong
support among members of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee. But
congressional aides, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said getting
a
full Senate vote on the nomination could be difficult because of
concerns among some senators about veterans’ issues not directly related
to
Dunne. The aides would not name the senators. Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-HI),
veterans’ committee chairman, strongly endorsed Dunne. The committee’s
ranking Republican member, Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, also
endorsed Dunne, saying the nominee could help set in motion changes at VA
to help veterans in the future.
Dunne said harnessing technology to help process claims
and
allowing veterans to file electronic claims and to send e-mail to claims
processors are keys to a faster, more accurate system. But he said
technology is not a cure-all. “I intend to ensure that every Veterans
Benefits
Administration employee has the requisite training to be effective in
his or her job,” Dunne said. “Technology is not the magic wand that will
deliver benefits rapidly and accurately. Rather, we need a
well-trained work force that can effectively use those tools.” The issue
of
harnessing technology is creating a controversy over implementation of the
Post-9/11 GI Bill because VA is turning to an outside contractor to
develop a software program to process claims, make tuition payments
directly
to colleges and universities, and make payments for living expenses
and book allowances. Dunne said VA does not have a payment system
configured to handle such benefits, which is why it is turning to the
private
sector for help, adding that VA is preparing backup plans in case the
contractor is not ready by 1 AUG. Akaka said outsourcing benefits on a
permanent basis “would be ill-advised” and hopes VA plans to cancel the
contract as soon as it can. But Burr said he is comfortable with using
outside companies to process claims; he said his own experience in
helping constituents showed that government payment systems are far from
error-free. [Source: AirForceTimes Rick Maze article 18 Sep 08 ++]
GI BILL UPDATE 30: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced
today that it will rely upon its own workforce to set up the information
technology programs needed to implement the educational benefits of
the new Post-9/11 GI Bill. The Department's announcement came after VA
officials did not receive enough proposals from qualified private-sector
contractors to create an information technology program that implements
the new benefit. At no time did VA consider contracting out
responsibility for actually administering this educational assistance.
"Many
private contractors were apparently reluctant to offer proposals because
of external misconceptions as to the scope of the work involved. While
it is unfortunate that we will not have the technical expertise from the
private sector available to assist us in developing the information
technology solution, the VA can and will deliver the benefits program on
time," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake.
Patrick
W. Dunne, the Under Secretary for Benefits said, "The Post-9/11 GI Bill
is unusually complex, with payments being tailored to tuition costs
and going to both students and educational institutions. Some benefits
are determined by a school's zip code, and others by in-state rates for
tuition." Dunne said the Department would have been remiss if it had
failed to assess the ability of the private sector to assist VA to set up
the technology aspects of the program's implementation. The Post-9/11
GI Bill will provide educational assistance to veterans, military
members, reservists and National Guard members who have served since Sept.
11, 2001. By law, the new benefits are scheduled to start on Aug. 1,
2009. [VA News Release 10 Oct 08 ++]
DOD DISABILITY EVALUATION SYSTEM UPDATE 11: In JAN 08 Congress
ordered the Pentagon to drop its disability ratings rules and strictly
follow the VA’s criteria in assigning ratings to injured and wounded
service
members. In March, the Army said it would comply. All the other
services were to follow suit. The change in law was among the most
significant changes to emerge in the wake of 2007’s Walter Reed scandal.
Veterans’ groups hailed the change, having complained for years that the
military had shortchanged wounded combat veterans on their disability
ratings
and compensation. But seven months later, the Army still isn’t living
up to its promise, at least not when it comes to assessing troops
suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The VA ratings schedule
says
PTSD sufferers should receive a minimum 50% disability rating from the
rating agency and then be reassessed within six months to determine if
the initial evaluation should be changed for the longer term. But a
number of soldiers suffering from PTSD have been given disability ratings
of just 10%, and then separated from service without the required
follow-up assessment. Worse, the Pentagon seems to be gearing up for a
broader policy change that would take this approach to PTSD across all the
armed services, according to veterans’ advocates.
This should hardly come as a surprise — it is just the latest
in a
string of unconscionable decisions coming from the office of Pentagon
personnel chief David Chu. This is the same executive who sought to cut
combat pay for troops in the war zones and once proposed shunting off
the Defense Department’s obligations for military retirees onto the VA.
Over the past three years, he has advocated doubling and tripling some
of the health care fees paid by many military retirees. And just a few
weeks ago, Chu narrowed the definition of “combat related” to reduce
the number of disabled troops who might benefit under another provision
of the 2008 Defense Authorization Act, which says some disabled troops
do not have to return any severance pay they receive from the military
before they can draw disability payments from VA. Chu’s definition of
combat related is significantly narrower than the one already in use to
determine eligibility for a separate program for disabled retirees
called Combat Related Special Compensation.
Lawmakers had assumed defense officials would use the
definition
already in place and were stunned to find a new and narrower
interpretation. Indeed, Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., already has drafted an
amendment
to the pending 2009 defense authorization bill directing the Pentagon
to use the more generous definition of combat related for both programs.
A similar retroactive correction is needed to force the Pentagon to
live up to its legal responsibilities regarding the assignment of
disability ratings for all medical conditions — including PTSD. A central
theme coming out of the Walter Reed hearings was the need to get the
Defense Department and VA to share a single government standard in
assessing
disabilities. Congress’ intent was to make the VA standard apply across
the board. The Pentagon needs to comply with that direction. [Source:
ArmyTimes Editorial 17 Sep 08 ++]
SOCIAL SECURITY FUND DEPLETION UPDATE 07: Our Social Security system,
enacted in 1935, has certainly withstood the test of time. Having paid
benefits to over 100 million retired and disabled workers and their
families, Social Security has indisputably had a positive impact on our
society. It’s also indisputable, however, that the system has required
occasional adjustments to continue functioning well. The last time was in
1983, following a period of slow economic growth and very high
inflation that had drained the trust fund. Without the 1983 legislation,
timely benefit payments could not have been made starting in JUL 83. The
law
was changed in April, and just in time. According to Social Security’s
2008 trustees’ report, released in March, the program won’t face a
1983-type crisis for many years, but the program’s cash flow is projected
to move into the red in 2017, the first of several critical dates cited
by the trustees. While reasonable people can debate the significance
of 2017 or even 2041 (the projected date of trust fund exhaustion), the
underlying financial picture is not in dispute. Social Security needs a
course correction to continue fulfilling its mission.
Some people believe that concerns about Social
Security’s
financial soundness are entirely attributable to the baby boomers, who
began
claiming Social Security retirement benefits just this year, with
millions more to come over the next two decades. But the baby boomers are
only
part of the problem — and a temporary part. Long after all the baby
boomers have departed, Social Security’s income will cover only about
three-fourths of its cost. This permanent imbalance is partly attributable
to increasing longevity. As beneficiaries live longer, their total
expected benefits increases. Without action, Social Security’s income
won’t keep pace with these ever-increasing benefit obligations. Social
Security’s retirement age is part of the problem. While Social Security’s
financial soundness could be restored in many different ways, the
American Academy of Actuaries (AAA) believe that any solution package
should
include increases in the retirement age. The Social Security Amendments
of 1983 raised the normal retirement age from 65 to 67 over three
decades. But it’s frozen at 67 for all workers born after 1959. We
shouldn’t stop there. Holding the retirement age constant is a certain
prescription for future financial problems. Raising it to reflect
increasing
longevity would contribute to solving those problems. The AAA believes
that a financially sound Social Security system must accommodate future
increases in longevity. The most direct way to do that would be to
extend the currently scheduled increases min Social Security’s retirement
age. The time to enact this change is now.
Public policymakers sometimes wait until the last
minute to take
necessary action. But in the case of Social Security, waiting will limit
the available options — and tend to force solutions that emphasize
sudden changes that are more likely to involve tax increases. The last two
times Congress made significant changes to Social Security, in 1977
and 1983, the legislation included near-term and long-term provisions
involving both tax increases and reductions in the growth of benefits.
Regardless of the kinds of changes ultimately enacted into law, the sooner
policymakers act, the more options they will have. Tax increases could
be phased in more gradually, and reductions in benefit growth could be
spread across a much larger population of beneficiaries, making
individual reductions relatively smaller and less painful. Enacting
legislation sooner would also allow individuals sufficient time to modify
their
own financial planning — adjusting to changes in Social Security. The
AAA points out that delay will only make the changes ultimately
needed
to restore Social Security’s financial soundness less attractive, more
painful and more precipitous. Timely action can make the solutions more
acceptable to all concerned. The Academy is committed to continuing
its thought leadership in this area and stands ready to assist
policymakers in their efforts to return the Social Security program to
long term
financial soundness. For more information, contact Steve Sullivan,
Director of Communications, at Sullivan@ actuary.org or (202) 785-7889.
[Source: AAA Position Statement Aug 08 ++]
CREDIT CARD LATE FEES: If you think that using your credit card is
costing you more lately, you’re probably right. The credit card late fees
that credit card companies charge when you pay your bill past the due
date nearly tripled between 1994 and 2004, according to Money magazine.
During those same years, credit card company revenues declined due to
competition and financial markets that favored consumers, which forced
many companies to lower their interest rates. To compensate, credit card
companies found creative ways to increase other charges. Among the
worst are credit card late fees, because in addition to the charge itself:
• You could end up with a punitive increase in your interest rate.
• You could receive a demerit on your credit report that may affect
your other accounts.
Many companies now use a tiered penalty system that is based on your
monthly balance, so the more you owe, the bigger the late fee if your
credit card payment is late. In 1994, the average credit card late
fee
was $12.55. By 2004, the average credit card late fee had risen to
$32.65. And on top of that, your credit card company may exact further
punishment by jacking up your interest rate as high as 41%. Sometimes
hidden
in the fine print of your credit-card agreement is a feature called
"universal default," which allows your credit card company to raise your
interest rate even if you pay your bill on time. Here’s how universal
default works: if you are late with a payment to any creditor, other
creditors whose agreements with you include a “universal default” clause
can increase your interest rate even if your record with them is perfect.
Meanwhile, the credit card companies have made it harder for you to
avoid making late payments by steadily reducing the length of traditional
grace periods. In 1994, the average grace period for credit card bills
was 27 days. By 2004, that figure had shrunk to 20 days. [Source:
Sharon O'Brien - About.com Senior Living Guide 9 Sep 08 ++]
CREDIT CARD LATE FEES UPDATE 01: Credit card companies may be
advertise lower interest rates to lure new customers, but over the past
decade
credit card fees have nearly tripled. These six tips can help you save
money on your credit cards by avoiding credit card late fees.
1. Pay your bills twice monthly - With grace periods shrinking,
scheduling two bill-paying sessions every month can help you stay ahead of
the
game. Also, request a due date that is easy to remember and works well
with when you get paid and the due dates on your other bills
2. Automate your payment - An automatic payment will help you avoid
credit card late fees by making sure your payments are always on time. Be
sure to designate a monthly amount that will cover your minimum payment
and pay down a part of the principal. If you only pay the minimum
payment each month, you will never get rid of the debt.
3. Pay by Phone - If you usually send your credit-card company a check
by mail, consider paying by phone if your due date is getting close.
Although some credit-card companies charge a fee for payments made by
phone, typically $15 or less, that’s usually cheaper than paying the
credit card late fee.
4. Talk to Your Credit-Card Company - If you’re charged a credit card
late fee by your credit card company, but you usually pay on time, call
and complain. Many credit companies will waive credit card late fees at
least once for customers with good payment records.
5. Read the Fine Print - Checking out all of the conditions and
restrictions associated with your card will help you avoid credit card
late
fees. In particular, find out if your credit card is subject to
"universal default". If it is, consider switching to a card that doesn’t
have a
universal default clause as part of its agreement.
6. Add Up the Cost and Resolve to Be Debt-Free - Sometimes when people
get in a cycle of late payments, they stop thinking about the extra
cost. If you often pay credit card late fees, add up how much those fees
cost you in a year. You may be surprised at how much money you could put
into savings if you weren't giving it away to credit card and other
finance companies for late fees. The best way to avoid credit card late
fees and other credit card charges is to pay off your balance every
month, and to make sure the payment is on time. That may be easier said
than done, but living debt-free is a worthwhile goal you can achieve with
careful planning, patience, and consistent effort.
[Source: Sharon O'Brien - About.com Senior Living Guide 9 Sep 08 ++]
VA CLOTHING ALLOWANCE: In accordance with PL 110-111Veterans, who
because of a service-connected disability, wear or use a prosthetic or
orthopedic appliance (including a wheelchair) which tends to wear out or
tear clothing, and veterans, who because of a service-connected skin
condition use a medication that causes irreparable damage to outer
garments, are eligible for payment of an annual clothing allowance. The
allowance as of 1 DEC 07 for 2008 was $677 per year. It is recommended
that
you mark your calendar and apply for your 2009 allowance by 1 JUN 09 to
allow ample time for VA to process it and avoid missing the 1 AUG
cutoff date. To qualify for annual payment, eligibility must be
established
as of 1 AUG of the year for which payment is claimed.
1. Qualifying appliances would include an artificial limb, rigid
extremity brace, rigid spinal or cervical brace, wheelchair, crutches or
other appliance prescribed for the claimant’s service-connected
disability.
Soft and flexible devices, such as an elastic stocking are not
included.
2. Qualifying medications would include any medication, prescribed by a
physician for a service-connected skin condition, which causes
permanent stains or otherwise damages the veteran’s clothing.
If you have previously submitted a claim for disability compensation,
send your application on VA FORM
21-8678 May 03 to the Prosthetic and Sensory Aids Service (121), at
your local VA Medical Center. If you have not made application for
disability compensation, send the form to the VA regional office nearest
your
home. The form can be downloaded from
www.vba.va.gov/pubs/forms/21-8678.pdf, you can ask VA to send
you one, or you can pick one up at your
VA clinic. If your support device wasn't issued by VA, you will need to
get your VA doctor to do a certification for you that the support is
necessary for you. [Source: VFW Post 11447 & www.va.gov Sep 08 ++]
HAVE YOU HEARD: A farmer's three daughters leave one night for dates
with their new boyfriends, one an Airman, the other a Soldier, and the
third a Sailor. The girls all bring their dates home that night, and
the next morning, the farmer wakes up bright and early at 05:30 to cook
breakfast and meet the boys his daughters have brought home.
- The Marine comes down at 5:45, clean, pressed, and spit-shined, eats
two eggs, an apple, and a glass of milk, says, "Thank you for
breakfast, sir", and leaves.
- The Airman comes down looking fairly squared-away at 06:30, eats
three eggs, two slices of bacon, two pieces of toast, and has a glass of
orange juice. He says, "Thanks for the chow" and walks out the front
door.
- At 10:00, the farmer gets tired of sitting inside, so heads to the
back yard to do some chores, when the Sailor comes dashing out of the
house, dress white top stained, neckerchief missing, one shoe in one hand
and a scorched old cup of coffee in the other, and yells "Later!" on
his way out of the yard and down the street.
His daughters come down a short time later, and he asks them all for
accounts of their evenings. The girl who'd been out with the Airman
says, "He was a perfect gentleman. He bought me dinner and a couple
of
drinks, gave me a hundred dollars to buy myself something nice, and
retired at 22:00 to the spare bedroom to sleep". The girl who'd been
out
with the Soldier said, "He was a nice guy, we each paid for our own meals,
and he tried to sneak a kiss off me. He was sort of drunk, so I let
him sleep in my bed, while I took the floor, but, he did give me fifty
dollars to buy myself something nice". The third daughter, looking
ragged and worn down, talking about her date with the Sailor, says, "That
asshole! He came over last night smelling like booze, and finished a
bottle of whiskey he'd brought with him. He passed out on my bed
last
night after repeatedly trying to get my pants off, and this morning he
borrowed a hundred bucks 'til payday."
VETERAN LEGISLATION STATUS 13 OCT 08: Refer to the Bulletin’s House
&
Senate attachments for or a listing of Congressional bills of interest
to the veteran community that have been introduced in the 110th
Congress. Support of these bills through cosponsorship by other
legislators
is critical if they are ever going to move through the legislative
process for a floor vote to become law. A good indication on that
likelihood is the number of cosponsors who have signed onto the bill. A
cosponsor is a member of Congress who has joined one or more other members
in
his/her chamber (i.e. House or Senate) to sponsor a bill or amendment.
The member who introduces the bill is considered the sponsor.
Members
subsequently signing on are called cosponsors. Any number of members may
cosponsor a bill in the House or Senate. At
http://thomas.loc.gov you
can also review a copy of each bill’s content, determine its current
status, the committee it has been assigned to, and if your legislator is
a sponsor or cosponsor of it. To determine what bills, amendments
your
representative has sponsored, cosponsored, or dropped sponsorship on
refer to
http://thomas.loc.gov/bss/d110/sponlst.html. The key to
increasing cosponsorship on veteran related bills and subsequent passage
into
law is letting our representatives know of veteran’s feelings on
issues. At the end of some listed bills is a web link that can be
used to
do that. You can also reach his/her Washington via the Capital Operator
direct at (866) 272-6622, (800) 828-0498, or (866)
340-9281 to
express your views. Otherwise, you can locate on
http://thomas.loc.gov who
your representative is and his/her phone number, mailing address, or
email/website to communicate with a message or letter of your own making.
Refer to
http://www.thecapitol.net/FAQ/cong_schedule.html for future
times that you can access your representatives on their home turf.
[Source: RAO Bulletin Attachment 13 Oct 08 ++]
Editor’s Note: This is provided for anyone considering replacing their
computer and/or avoiding the problems I have encountered up to this
time. It is also an update on the RAO’s ability to continue
publishing
the Bulletin:
As noted in my 1 OCT message there was no 1 OCT Bulletin due
to my
HP computer’s failure. I took it to Best Buy to determine the
problem
and they sent it to HP promising to have the problem identified and the
estimated cost for repair back to me in 3-4 days. After 7 days of me
calling them I was told the motherboard in my $2000 laptop was bad and
it would cost $872 to repair it. Also, my one year manufacturer’s
warranty was no good because I took it in for repair one year and one day
after I purchased it and regardless the manufacturer’s warranty was only
good in the country in which I purchased it (i.e. Philippines). I
declined the repair and requested they expedite the return of the
computer. This took another 5 days vice the 2 days they said.
I was able to
establish they had not sent it to the HP manufacture but instead sent it
to one of their Best Buy local shops which had a HP representative in
it. Thus, they refunded $45 of the $85 I paid to have it evaluated.
I
received about 500 messages from subscribers with recommendations on
how to proceed.
- Most advised not replacing my XP system with VISTA. I decided VISTA
is inevitable and continuing to avoid it will only lead to problems in
the future. I had XP installed in my last VISTA computer and
although
I was eventually operational it lead to many problems. Plus I was
not
able to burn a recovery CD because of the bastardized XP installation
on top of VISTA.
- Many relayed various methods of obtaining my lost files. My
external hard drive had most of my Word files but none of the 9000 Outlook
files nor my Eudora address book data. These are buried somewhere in
my
hard drive.
- Many offered some form of reimbursement for my cost in restoring
things. I appreciate the offers but it is the RAO/Bulletin’s policy
not to
accept donations.
- Many suggested I use a Desktop vice a Laptop because of the heat
problems that, in my opinion, caused the failure. That is not
realistic
because I travel between the U.S. and the R.P and need the capability of
putting out the Bulletin from either location. Also, I find there
does
not seem to be a heating problem in my new HP laptop with has double
the RAM and greater processing speed.
- About 50 of the messages advised against dealing with Best Buy for
various reasons. These I took to heart and switched to Circuit City.
After some consternation I decided to buy a new HP Pavilion dv1000us
4GB RAM 15.4” screen unit with a 3 year warranty for $1285. This is
a
very nice computer. Since I was not provided with MS CDs when I purchased
my last computer I also bought a special military edition of MS 2007
Office Standard with Word/Excel/PowerPoint/Outlook for $79 at the March
AFB BX to install vice the $300 Best Buy/Circuit City wanted. This is
good for downloads to 3 computers and is still in stock if anybody wants
to pick one up. I had Circuit City transfer my old hard drive data to
the new computer. That night I discovered the new computer’s hard
drive was defective. The next day they replaced it with another new
computer and downloaded everything into it. I took it back a second
time and
they were able to locate and download 8000 of my 9000 missing outlook
files.
I then decided to install the Norton 360 Version 2.0
Upgrade/PC
Jumpstart Service online. Big mistake. For $139 I allowed them
to take
control of my computer online and they did the installation along with
cleaning up whatever was in my hard drive that was making VISTA so slow
for Word use. After they were done Word under VISTA was almost as fast
as under XP. However, in the process they deleted all my Eudora
email
addee files with the add/delete/COA changes I had installed over the
last 2 weeks. When I called them back I went through 4 layers of
technicians who were unable to restore this data. However, in the
process
they took my hard drive back to what was in my data base after they
installed Norton but before they cleaned things up. This resulted in a 3-4
seconds delay after typing something in before I could shift my cursor
to another line item or function. Because of the weekend and
Canada’s
Thanksgiving holiday (Norton’s location) on the 13th, I had to wait for
a callback from a 5th level tech to proceed with locating the missing
data and resolve the VISTA speed issue. Murphy took over with the brush
fire in Riverside CA which burned my TWC server’s fiber optic lines
and keep me offline for another 3 days. Upon attempting to reactivate
neither my modem nor my wireless would operate. This led to 15 hours
of
telephone troubleshooting by Norton (Canada), HP (Philippines), and the
states which included one conference call. Finally on the afternoon of
the 16th I was able to return online and proceed with putting out this
Bulletin. Fortunately I was able to put it together before Norton got
involved. [10/14/08]
Lt. James “EMO” Tichacek, USN (Ret)
Director, Retiree Assistance Office, U.S. Embassy Warden & IRS VITA
Baguio City RP
PSC 517 Box RCB, FPO AP 96517
Tel: (951) 238-1246 in U.S. or Cell: 0915-361-3503 in the Philippines.
Email:
raoemo@sbcglobal.net Web:
http://post_119_gulfport_ms.tripod.com/rao1.html
AL/AMVETS/DAV/FRA/NAUS/NCOA/MOAA/USDR/VFW/VVA/CG33/DD890/AD37 member
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