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REPAYMENT OF ENLISTMENT BONUS PROBLEM DOESN'T
APPEAR TO BE MUCH OF A PROBLEM -- Only a handful
of
cases have been found in which a wounded soldier
was asked
to repay a bonus, and those turned out to be
clerical mistakes.

When the story about wounded troops having to
repay enlistment bonuses, I wrote that this was nothing but an error.
Story here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfNOV07/nf112807-1.htm
Now, we know it was nothing but an error.
There is a lesson here: In our haste to
cast the government in the worst possible light, we often overlook the
most obvious explanation...it was just a clerical error and not the "evil
gubmint" trying to hurt veterans.
Lesson learned, everyone?
Story here...
http://ap.google.com/
article/ALeqM5jucBoOrnNQVPJgnjoeJAjCbVArcAD8TB5T880
Story below:
-------------------------
Outrage on Vets Bonuses May Be Excessive
By BEN EVANS
WASHINGTON (AP) — A wounded Iraq war veteran came forward last month to
say the Pentagon asked him to repay a large chunk of his enlistment bonus,
and Congress was outraged.
Lawmakers condemned the practice, and more than 250 signed on to sponsor
legislation designed to right the wrong. They promised to rein in the
heartless government bureaucrats who dared to implement a policy that
could snatch soldiers' money away like this.
Problem is, there doesn't appear to be much of a problem.
Only a handful of cases have been found in which a wounded soldier was
asked to repay a bonus, and those turned out to be clerical mistakes.
Article continues below:
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Only a handful of cases have been found in which
a wounded soldier was asked to repay a bonus, and those turned out to be
clerical mistakes.
But Iraq is such an emotional issue that initial reports of mistreated
veterans put many in Congress into a state of high dudgeon.
"It's just a disgrace," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., estimating that
the policy affected hundreds of veterans in his state alone.
"Unthinkable," said Sen. Jeff Sessions, an Alabama Republican.
It "shocks the conscience," said Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y. "This
policy is outrageous and should be reversed immediately."
Those watching such developments say the problem appears to have been
wildly overstated.
"We're six years into a war. The military's been paying enlistment bonuses
for a while, and we would have heard a lot about it" if it were happening,
said Joe Davis, a spokesman for Veterans of Foreign Wars. "There are other
issues that are more important for the Congress to be taking up."
The Pentagon says it has received just two complaints on the issue since a
"wounded warrior" hotline was set up this summer.
Pentagon policy and practice for at least 20 years has been to fully pay
enlistment bonuses to soldiers forced to leave the military early for
reasons beyond their control, such as a combat injury, according to Bill
Carr, deputy undersecretary of defense.
Administrative lapses have occurred, however.
Most recently, Jordan Fox, an Army sniper from Mount Lebanon, Pa., who was
partially blinded by a roadside bomb in Iraq, was mistakenly sent a letter
asking him to repay $2,800 of his enlistment bonus. A similar case,
involving a veteran whose bonus payments were cut off, was found by a
presidential commission formed earlier this year to recommend improvements
in veterans' care.
In both instances, the Pentagon said the problems were administrative
errors that would be corrected.
Fox, it turned out, would not be asked to repay his bonus.
Despite that, lawmakers have rushed to respond.
A bill was introduced in the Senate on Monday with sponsors including
Clinton and fellow presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. In the
House, members stepped up by the dozens after hearing Fox's story to sign
on as co-sponsors of a similar bill introduced in October by Rep. Jason
Altmire, D-Pa.
Susan Hosek, an economist at the Rand Corp. think tank who was the
presidential commission's research director, said the commission was
satisfied with the Pentagon's response.
"It certainly didn't rise to the level of an important issue in our work,"
Hosek said of the panel, headed by former Sen. Bob Dole and former Health
and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala. "If it had, we would have made
sure that it was highlighted in our report ... we literally only heard
about it once that I know of."
The commission did not mention the issue in its final report, but did
discuss it with Defense Department officials and suggested that the policy
be worded more explicitly. The Pentagon implemented the revised wording in
September.
Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of
America, which pushed for the legislation, acknowledged that his group
knows only of a few complaints. But he said the legislative effort will
keep the Pentagon on its toes and highlight the bureaucratic hassles that
veterans face when they return home.
"I would rather have them focus on the fact that the Veterans Affairs
budget is late. I would rather have them focus on traumatic brain injury,"
he said. "But in general, this kind of problem does raise awareness that
the bureaucracy for everyone is still too difficult."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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