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thx1138
02-08-2008, 03:04 PM
TAKING CARE OF OUR TROOPS "THE AMERICAN WAY". Ugh




Veterans not entitled to mental health care, U.S. lawyers argue
Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Veterans have no legal right to specific types of medical care, the Bush administration argues in a lawsuit accusing the government of illegally denying mental health treatment to some troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

The arguments, filed Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, strike at the heart of a lawsuit filed on behalf of veterans that claims the health care system for returning troops provides little recourse when the government rejects their medical claims.

The Department of Veterans Affairs is making progress in increasing its staffing and screening veterans for combat-related stress, Justice Department lawyers said.

But their central argument is that Congress left decisions about who should get health care, and what type of care, to the VA and not to veterans or the courts.


A federal law providing five years of care for veterans from the date of their discharge establishes "veterans' eligibility
for health care, but it does not create an entitlement to any particular medical service," government lawyers said.

They said the law entitles veterans only to "medical care which the secretary (of Veterans Affairs) determines is needed, and only to the extent funds ... are available."

The argument drew a sharp retort from a lawyer for advocacy groups that sued the government in July. The suit is a proposed class action on behalf of 320,000 to 800,000 veterans or their survivors.

"Veterans need to know that in this country the government thinks all their benefits are mere gratuities," attorney Gordon Erspamer said.

"They're saying it's completely discretionary, that even if Congress appropriates money for veterans' health care, we can do anything we want with it."

The issue will be joined March 7 at a hearing before U.S. District Judge Samuel Conti, who denied the administration's request last month to dismiss the suit.

While the case is pending, the plaintiffs want Conti to order the government to provide immediate mental health treatment for veterans who say they are thinking of killing themselves and to spend another $60 million on health care.

The suit accuses the VA

----of arbitrarily denying care and benefits to wounded veterans,
----of forcing them to wait months for treatment and years for benefits, and
----of failing to provide fair procedures for appealing decisions against them.

The plaintiffs say that the department has a backlog of more than 600,000 disability claims and that 120 veterans a week commit suicide.

In his Jan. 10 ruling that allowed the suit to proceed, Conti said federal law entitles veterans to health care for a specific period after leaving the service, rejecting the government's argument that it was required to provide only as much care as the VA's budget allowed in a given year.

A law that President Bush signed last week extended the period from two to five years.

In its latest filing, however, the Justice Department reiterated that Congress had intended "to authorize, but not require, medical care for veterans."

"This court should not interfere with the political branches' design, oversight and modification of VA programs," the government lawyers argued.

They also said the VA "is making great progress in addressing the mental health care needs of combat veterans." Among other things, they cited a law passed in November that required the department to establish a suicide-prevention program that includes making mental health care available around the clock.

The VA has hired nearly 3,800 mental health professionals in the last two years and has at least one specialist in post-traumatic stress disorder at each of its medical centers, the government said.

Since June, government lawyers said, the VA has had a policy that all veterans who seek or are referred for mental health care should be screened within 24 hours, that those found to be at risk of suicide should be treated immediately, and that others should be scheduled for full diagnosis and treatment planning within two weeks. A new suicide-prevention hot line has been responsible for "more than 380 rescues," the lawyers said.

Erspamer, the plaintiffs' lawyer, was unimpressed.

"Nowhere do I see any explanation of what kind of systems they have in place that deal with suicidal veterans," he said.

"There's no excuse for not spending the money Congress told them to spend on mental health care and leaving $60
million on the table when people are going out and killing themselves."


E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.













Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.

~Aldous Huxley~

Wombat
02-08-2008, 03:25 PM
C##ts...

elvis_p
02-14-2008, 09:39 AM
A short list:

Regarding actions taken and not taken under Bush’s watch, here’s a short list compiled of my various postings around the internets tubes:

() Bush has threatened to veto the Labor-HHS bill. A bill “which includes $23.6 million for the military veterans that comprise a quarter of America’s homeless population in the Homeles Veterans Program.”

() A Government Accountability Office report released in September found that “wounded warriors are still getting the runaround” from the Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs.

() In the 2004 budget funding for veteran’s health care and benefit programs was cut by nearly $25 billion over the next ten years. The Bush administration’s latest budget proposes a slight increase to the budget for veterans care in 2008 with cuts in 2009 and 2010, before freezing funding levels.

() A recent report found that one in four homeless people in America are veterans, including more than 400 who fought in Afghanistan and Iraq.

() A Pentagon survey of reservists in 2005-2006 found troops “strained by extended tours in Iraq” who say the government is providing little help when they are denied their old jobs when they return home. It also details “increasing discontent among returning troops in protecting their legal rights after taking leave from work to fight for their country”

() In 2006 the Congress cut funding for a Veterans Center whose focus is war-related brain injuries, an injury the military describes as a signature wound of the Iraq war.

() In mid-2006, the “largest loss of personal data in U.S. government history.” occurred, affecting 26.5 million veterans.

() MANY actions from 2003/04 that require follow-up: In January 2003 the Bush administration announced it was cutting off access to its health care system for approximately 164,000 veterans. The Administration also was pushing a cut of $1.5 billion in military housing/medical facility funding, despite the fact that UPI & The Washington Post reported “hundreds of sick and wounded U.S. soldiers including many who served in the Iraq war are languishing in hot cement barracks here while they wait - sometimes for months - to see doctors.”

() In October of 2003, the Bush administration announced its formal opposition to a proposal to give National Guard and Reserve members access to the Pentagon’s health-insurance system, “jeopardizing the plan’s future and angering supporters.” A recent General Accounting Office report estimated that one of every five Guard members has no health insurance. (I was unable to determine how many U.S. National Guard are currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan - anyone?)

() In June 2003, the Bush administration announced that it wants to roll back recent modest increases in monthly imminent-danger pay (from $225 to $150) and family-separation allowance (from $250 to $100) for troops getting shot at in combat zones.

() President Bush’s 2004 budget proposed a $1.5 billion reduction in funds to military family housing/medical facilities - a 14% cut.

() According to the Children’s Defense Fund, one million children living in military and veteran families are being denied child tax credit help in President Bush’s 2003 tax cut. More than 260,000 of these children have parents on active military duty.

chefmike
02-14-2008, 10:15 AM
Good post. It's amazing how chickenshit chickenhawks like shrubya et al are so eager to use US citizens as cannon fodder for their farce of a war, only to cast them away like garbage after they've served their country(if they were lucky enough to survive the needless carnage.)

Eventually shrubya will be roasting on a spit in hell next to ronnie reagan.

PS: I don't believe in all that heaven and hell BS but it's a comforting thought that scum like those two will suffer for their crimes against humanity.

thx1138
02-26-2008, 07:27 PM
More broken promisies - never trust a bush http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=44548&sectionid=3510203