The Nation's #1 Independent Veterans Web Site
                                                   Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage


                  VA NEWS FLASH
from Larry Scott at VA Watchdog dot Org -- 09-06-2007 #3
 







 

Tired of Going Around in Circles with the VA? Not Getting the Benefits You Earned? We Will Fight to Obtain ALL Possible VA Benefits. Admitted to U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans' Claims. Nationwide Practice.

DILLEY LAW FIRM
CALL TOLL-FREE
1-800-460-0111

click for more info

 

 



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...

 

 

 


 

Bookmark this page: 

Printer Friendly Page

"THEY'RE STALLING ME UNTIL I DIE" -- Vietnam veteran

John Atkins, who has late-stage leukemia, fights his

last battle -- VA paperwork.

 

 

For more about leukemia, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=leukemia&op=and

For more about pain, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=pain&op=and

Story here... http://www.oregonlive.com/
news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/new
s/1188962730233570.xml&coll=7

Story below:

-------------------------

'They're stalling me until I die'

John Atkins, who has late-stage leukemia, fights his last battle -- paperwork

MARK LARABEE
The Oregonian



As he shifts his weight over his cluttered desk and hoists himself on his feet, John D. Atkins lets out a wail.

The pain in his back is so great that tears well up in his eyes and his hands shake. Breathing hard, he turns and stumbles, reaching for a cane that lies across his double bed.

Eventually, from the dresser he grabs a miniature bottle of Cutty Sark scotch from among a dozen pill bottles. Then he smiles.

The 60-year-old Vietnam veteran said he self-medicates when doctor-prescribed morphine pills aren't doing the trick.

Atkins, a Lake Oswego resident and former U.S. Marine with late-stage leukemia, is one of more than 400,000 military veterans fighting for financial help from the Department of Veterans Affairs. Although he receives monthly disability payments, Atkins has been in a paperwork dispute with the VA for almost three years over whether he should receive thousands more to pay for home nursing care.

"They're stalling me until I die," he said. "I've accused them of that many times."

R.C. Hammond, a spokesman for U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., said that 500 to 750 veterans contact the senator's office for help each year and that 80 percent of the complaints are about delays in claims processing. In Atkins' case, the Veterans Benefits Administration -- the arm of the VA that deals with pension and disability payments -- assured Smith's office in March that the terminally ill vet's application would be expedited.

But the money hasn't come yet, and Atkins now faces eviction as his landlord, a nurse in the Navy Reserve, has been deployed to a hospital in Germany. He's signed his life insurance over to his best friend, to whom he owes $40,000. And he's maxed out all seven of his credit cards.

Rachelle Hershinow, spokeswoman for the Veterans Benefits Administration in Portland, said the agency is trying to work through the admittedly confusing red tape. "It's pretty complicated," Hershinow said, speaking with The Oregonian after Atkins gave her permission to talk about his case.

But it seems relatively simple to Atkins. While he gets blood transfusions every six weeks to stave off the terminal cancer attacking his bone marrow, he fights the government for benefits he believes are long overdue.

"I won't quit," Atkins said of his battle with the government. "I'm not going to roll over, throw all four up in the air and say 'I'm done.' "

Back pain crippling

Vietnam firefights didn't kill Atkins, though he says he was wounded twice in battle: once when a mortar exploded and once when he was stabbed with a bayonet. He came home from the war in 1967 on a stretcher after being knocked off his feet by colitis.

Chronic back pain -- caused, he says, from lifting heavy boxes as a young Marine at Camp Pendleton, Calif. -- keeps him off his feet most of the time. Atkins attributes his own leukemia to Agent Orange, the notorious jungle-thinning defoliant that sickened thousands of Vietnam veterans. He's now housebound for the most part.

Over the years, the physical and financial strain took the best out of four marriages. Three ended in divorce and the other ended when his third wife died of leukemia. In 2002, he went to jail for assaulting a police officer who had come to his home during a domestic dispute. Atkins makes no excuses for it but said he had a flashback when the officer approached him.

The VA agreed in January 2005 that Atkins' illnesses were connected to his military service. Among other things, he became eligible for "special monthly compensation," which pays for things such as home nursing care. He already receives $2,560 a month in disability benefits but argues he deserves another $6,000 or more to pay for home nursing care.

The agency, he said, has stonewalled his request. On the back porch of the Lake Oswego home where he rents a bedroom, Atkins leafs through a file folder of paperwork, letters and forms that detail the back and forth over his claim.

Bureaucratic notices from the VBA ask him to clarify his needs. The paperwork is not in layman's terms and rarely includes a phone number or name of a caseworker.

In a March 7 letter to the agency, Atkins' frustration with the paperwork shuffle shows. He put his needs bluntly: "I am unable to fend for myself -- cook, clean, shower or wipe my own butt."

Red tape, of course, is legendary within the VA. It's a constant complaint among veterans across the country.

As of last week, there were 400,786 veterans waiting for the Veterans Benefits Administration to process their claims for monetary compensation, VA spokesman Terry Jemison said. Those claims, represent the agency's "most complicated types of financial cases," he said, ranging from veterans seeking decisions on service-connected disability or pension payments to survivors seeking death benefits.

At some point, Atkins enlisted the help of Sen. Smith to light a fire under the VA.

On March 14, Smith received a letter from Gerard F. Lorang, then-director of the VA regional office in Portland, about Atkins' claim. Noting that Atkins' cancer is terminal, Lorang told Smith that Atkins' claim would be expedited.

Lorang has since retired, and Atkins has yet to receive any money.

Hershinow, the VBA spokeswoman, explained that before Atkins' service connection was established, he was getting monthly pension checks that included money for home nursing care. In 2005, when his illnesses were linked to his military service, he started getting paid under a different program, which gave him more money but eliminated a line item for nursing care. Under the newer arrangement, Atkins may also be eligible for additional payments for nursing care, Hershinow said, but the money "has to be requested very specifically by the veteran," Hershinow said.

Atkins did just that. On March 16, he filed a form asking for nursing aid and assistance.

Hershinow said she can't explain the delay since then. "I honestly wish I had an answer for you," she said. "I understand the frustration."

Hershinow said Atkins canceled, then rescheduled, a medical appointment the VA set for him to double-check whether he is entitled to nursing care. Last week she promised to review the file to make sure the visit was necessary. On Tuesday, Atkins said he was told he is, in fact, required to see four doctors on Sept 21.

Hammond, Sen. Smith's spokesman, said Oregonians regularly voice concern about veterans getting the runaround.

"One veteran getting caught up in red tape is too many," Hammond said. "We are constantly helping people machete though the red tape of the federal government."

While Atkins praises the general quality of the health care he's received at the VA hospital in Portland, he's determined to get square with the benefits side of the agency before the back pain or cancer get the best of him.

"I've thought about suicide a hundred times, but it's the coward's way out," he said. "You can't win a fight if you don't stand up and fight."



Mark Larabee: 503-294-7664;
 marklarabee@news.oregonian.com

-------------------------

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  PGP key on request

Send this page to a friend:    

(go back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page)







 

Has Uncle Sam turned his back
on your request
for VA benefits?


Contact LEGAL HELP FOR VETERANS for assistance with the benefits you deserve.
click for more info

 

 



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








 

 

   
Google
 
Web www.vawatchdog.org


FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such materials available in an effort to advance understanding of veterans' issues. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the included information for educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml   If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.