This week, as
the nation honored our veterans,
the press also focused attention
on what the federal government
should be doing. A number of
editorials and op-eds focused on
how to improve veterans' health
care:
Editorial Support for Advance
Appropriations for VA Medical
Care
A
Philadelphia Inquirer editorial
indicated support for
President-elect Obama's campaign
promise to reform veterans
health care funding. "What
veterans organizations want, and
which makes considerable sense,
is to have Congress pass the
VA's budget a year in advance,
as it does with funding for some
other programs. ... it would be
a valuable tool in improving
care for the 7.8 million
veterans enrolled in the VA
health system and others who are
bound to join it in economic
hard times."
Washington Times Op-ed: Congress
Should Pass Veterans Health Care
Budget Reform Act
The Washington Times published
an
opinion piece by DAV
National Commander Raymond
Dempsey, who wrote, "While
fixing the economy will
certainly be a dominant issue
for both President-elect Obama
and the 111th Congress, we hope,
on this Veterans Day, that
health care for our wounded
warriors will also be a top
priority." He went on to argue
specifically for VA finance
reform. "Congress should
appropriate funding for the VA
health care system one year in
advance of when the funds are
actually needed." The
year-in-advance appropriation is
similar to the funding mechanism
Congress uses to fund low-income
housing and energy assistance.
It has received bipartisan
support, including recently from
President-elect Obama and Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.).
Huffington Post Op-ed:
Highlights Needs for Women
Veterans and Family Caregivers
In addition to ensuring that VA
has timely and predictable
funding to adequately care for
our nation's veterans, DAV
National Legislative Director
Joseph Violante laid out in a
Huffington Post opinion piece
the challenges facing family
caregivers and women veterans.
"The Department of Veterans
Affairs system, a relic of a
male-dominated military past, is
simply unable to adequately
treat the influx of women...Only
eight percent of all VA medical
centers across the country have
a full-time female program
manager. Sufficient female staff
is vital to meeting the
specialized needs of women
veterans, particularly the 19
percent of women veterans
surveyed by the VA between
2002-2006 who say they had
experienced military sexual
trauma."
Illinois Rep. Phil Hare Op-ed
Calls for VA Health Care Funding
Reform
Rep. Phil Hare (D-Ill.), member
of the House Veterans' Affairs
Committee, penned an
opinion piece for
Springfield Illinois' paper, The
State Journal-Register,
discussing the work still to be
done to provide adequate health
care to our veterans. In
addition to being the sponsor of
mandatory funding legislation,
Rep. Hare has joined in support
of new legislation introduced in
September that would,
"...authorize appropriations for
VA health care one year in
advance of the start of the
fiscal year."
About the Stand Up for Veterans
Initiative
Stand Up for Veterans is an
initiative of the Disabled
American Veterans, an
organization of 1.4 million
disabled veterans who are
focused on building better
lives for disabled veterans
and their families. The
initiative seeks to find
public policy solutions for
all veterans, particularly
those returning from Iraq
and Afghanistan, who have
incurred devastating
injuries and disabilities,
including traumatic brain
injury, post-traumatic
stress disorder and other
psychological wounds of war.
Please visit
http://www.standup4vets.org/
to learn more about this
effort.
Stand up for veterans. They
stood up for us.
|