|

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

Be sure to get all four
VA Watchdog dot Org
RSS feeds --
Daily VA
News Flashes
House CVA
Veterans' News
Senate CVA
Veterans' News
VA Press
Releases

Download
your
free copy of the
2007 VA benefits
handbook here...

|
Social Bookmarking
THINK-TANKERS ECHO WHITE HOUSE AND PUSH DOLE-
SHALALA AGENDA -- Many existing veterans
organizations
have reacted with coldness or hostility to the
changes. Some
don't want any change, others don't like the idea
of different
treatment for this new generation of wounded
soldiers.

The think-tankers are now helping to push the
very dangerous Dole-Shalala agenda.
Basically, the article below is blowing big
smoke, and it's the kind of thing we can expect to see a lot of.
For more about the Dole-Shalala Commission, use
the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=dole+shalala&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.aei.org/publications/filter.all,pubID.27045/pub_detail.asp
Story below:
Learn
More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Congress Should Show Real Support for Military,
Veterans
By Norman J. Ornstein
There has been no mantra more employed in Washington, D.C., over the past
four years than "We support our troops." But some of those most eager to
employ that mantra also have sat by passively while our troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan suffered through years of inadequate supplies of body armor,
helmet liners and armored vehicles.
The excuse, or rationale, of the Defense Department--that we did not have
enough companies to produce the body armor in a timely fashion--should
have been met with continuing howls of outrage by lawmakers, as well as
demands that the situation be changed immediately. If we could mobilize
overnight to make massive quantities of planes, tanks and bombs to prepare
us to fight the Nazis, there is no earthly reason we could not find a way
now to produce appropriate equipment for every man and woman we send into
combat zones. The spectacle of "hillbilly armor"--troops scrounging in
junk yards to improvise protection, not to mention of private citizens
having to join together to get helmet liners for our soldiers because our
government could not or would not do so, is an embarrassment.
Partly as a result of the inadequate equipment available for our troops,
we have had a large number of wounded veterans coming back from Iraq and
Afghanistan with debilitating injuries, ranging from loss of limbs to
serious head trauma. Of course, another factor has been the remarkable
advances in emergency medicine and battlefield triage--many, many soldiers
who in previous wars would be returning in body bags are coming back with
serious injuries, but alive.
Article continues below:
MONEY TALKS NEWS
VIDEOS -- MONEY-SAVING TIPS FOR YOU
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
|
As the Walter Reed debacle showed, our agencies
have not been prepared for the surge in wounded warriors; the system of
care and compensation has been simply dysfunctional, caught in unwieldy
bureaucracies, competition and overlap between the departments of Defense
and Veterans Affairs, and limited or nonexistent accountability.
To President Bush's credit, after the story broke, he responded to the
scandal quickly, appointing a commission headed by former Sen. Bob Dole
(R-Kan.) and former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala. He
could not have chosen better. Dole and Shalala represent the best of
public service, two smart and sensible people who want to solve problems
in common-sense ways, finding consensus but looking first to do something
achievable and workable, not just something to score points. Both also
bring substantive knowledge, credibility and political skills to the
table.
So it was no surprise that the Dole-Shalala commission behaved in a
fashion unlike most Washington commissions. They did their work
efficiently and quickly, and they focused on an immediate-action agenda,
not a 100-point, 200-page report that would end up sitting on the shelf.
Instead, they had six core recommendations that include major change, but
all of it achievable quickly, given some political will.
Many of their recommendations involve executive action. If the first
response by the White House was cool, the fact is that after a bit of
prodding, the administration has come through in a major way and is moving
to do a lot to streamline the care and compensation system for wounded
vets. But the recommendations also need action by Congress, and that has
been a tougher slog. Among other things, Congress has to act to streamline
the whole system of disability payments, making special accommodations for
those wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, act to extend care and support to family members, alter the
relationship between the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments to make
the system work, and ensure that Walter Reed Army Medical Center can
operate at full effectiveness with first-class professionals for the next
several years.
The Veterans' Affairs committees in both chambers have paid lip service to
the goals of the commission, and both have bills pending, but they have
not pushed to implement these changes. A major part of the reason is that
many existing veterans organizations have reacted with coldness or
hostility to the changes--some don't want any change, others don't like
the idea of different treatment for this new generation of wounded
soldiers.
But the fact is that wars are different, circumstances change, and as
Dole, a wounded World War II warrior himself, has said, there are
compelling reasons to act in ways that reflect the new environment.
Nothing in the commission recommendations will bring adverse changes to
injured or disabled veterans of other wars.
It is time for Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii) and Rep. Bob Filner (D-Calif.),
the chairmen of the Senate and House committees, to get off the dime and
move the bills to implement the commission's recommendations--if only to
show that Washington can respond with something resembling dispatch to
show real, not just rhetorical, support for our troops.
Norman J. Ornstein is a resident scholar at AEI.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes (click here)
Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage
email Larry
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page) |

VA Watchdog Stuff
cups, hats, shirts
click here to
support the site

|