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Ed Palmer
03-31-08, 04:01 PM
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY UPDATE 02: An enlisted service member killed in battle and posthumously awarded the Silver Star for heroism is rendered lesser honors at Arlington National Cemetery than an officer who dies in a car crash the day after being commissioned. That statement took officials at several veterans' organizations by surprise. But it is true: Burial honors at Arlington, the nation's most storied military cemetery and home of the Tomb of the Unknowns, are accorded strictly by rank, not by the circumstances of death. "That is the custom that has been prescribed," said Jack Metzler, the superintendent at Arlington for the past 17 years. Most enlisted troops receive "standard honors" - military pallbearers, a firing party led by a noncommissioned officer, a bugler and, on request, a chaplain. All others receive variations on "full honors," which also include a horse-drawn caisson, a band and, if requested, escort troops. The only enlisted troops who may receive full honors are those in the highest enlisted grade, E-9. Medal of Honor recipients, regardless of rank, also rate the caisson in addition to standard honors. The two types of funerals are dramatically different. The issue has been raised that Honors rendered should be rendered fairly, based on actions, not rank and the present custom is due for a change.

Metzler said there are two reasons why this cannot or should not be done. The biggest roadblock, he said, is the limited availability of assets for full-honors funerals. Each service provides its own troops for funerals at Arlington. But these ceremonial troops also must support presidential and other official functions in the Washington area. Arlington has two caisson units; each can do four of the stately funerals per day. It takes time to do the "turnaround" from one funeral to the next, Metzler said. For example, the horses must be watered and inspected after each ceremony. Also, the band isn't always available, as other official functions beckon - although, Metzler said, "only a handful" of people opt to wait until the band is available. The average wait for a funeral at Arlington is five weeks; cemetery workers work to limit the wait to two weeks for Iraq and Afghanistan war dead, Metzler said. Arlington averages about 27 funerals a day, five days a week, he said; none are held on Saturdays or Sundays. There has been an increase of about one funeral per day since the start of the Iraq war, but most of the burials involve the World War II generation. "The ability to have more full-honors funerals for everyone, all day long, isn't there," Metzler said. "It's the caissons. It's the chapel. It's the traffic."

An equally important, and more contentious, reason for not rendering honors based on the circumstances of death rather than rank is having to decide who rates full honors and who does not, Metzler said. "Where do you draw the line? Someone will come back and say, 'My loved one had a Bronze Star with a "V" device, and it was awarded three times. Is that the equivalent of a Silver Star?' I would think that it would be difficult to implement." As of 18 MAR, only 473 of the 4,443 service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan through 1 MAR (i.e. 10.6%) had been buried at Arlington, with highs of 117 burials in 2005 and 2007, and a low of 48 in 2003, Metzler said. Most were enlisted members, most were killed in action, and the highest decoration most received was the Bronze Star with "V" device for valor, Metzler said, adding that he has no way to check the precise number of awards earned by individuals buried at Arlington. The Army is responsible for operations at Arlington. Army Secretary Pete Geren and Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey did not respond through a spokesman to a request for comment. Several veterans' groups also declined comment. But Joe Barnes, executive secretary of the Fleet Reserve Association and a co-chairman of the Military Coalition, an umbrella group of more than 30 military associations, said "rendering burial honors based on rank "s not a slight against anyone. This decision is out of respect for the few who were accorded the opportunity and responsibility to lead". [Source: Marine Corps Times William H. McMichael article 26 Mar 08 ++]

Ed Palmer
03-31-08, 04:03 PM
VET CEMETERY CALIFORNIA UPDATE 03: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has named the national cemetery to be constructed near Bakersfield, Calif., the "Bakersfield VA National Cemetery." The new cemetery is located on a 500-acre site donated by Tejon Ranch, a 426-square-mile agricultural and industrial complex along Interstate 5 in Kern County. It will serve approximately 200,000 veterans in central California who are not currently provided burial space by a nearby national or state veterans cemetery. VA anticipates construction of the first phase of the entire 500-acre development plan to begin in the summer of 2008. In OCT 07, VA awarded approximately $2.3 million to Huitt-Zollars, Inc., of Irvine, Calif., for a master plan and design of the project's first phase. Initial construction will prepare a 20-acre burial area to ensure that veteran burials can take place before all of the Phase I facilities are completed In addition to burial areas, Phase I will consist of approximately 50 acres, including: roadways, an entrance area, an administration and public information center, a maintenance complex with buildings, a maintenance yard and parking, a flag assembly area, a memorial walkway and two committal service shelters. Other infrastructure improvements will include grading, drainage, fencing, planting, an irrigation system and utilities. Interment areas will include approximately 5,700 full-casket gravesites, 4,000 pre-placed crypts, 500 in-ground cremated burial sites and 3,000 columbarium niches for cremated remains.

Veterans with a discharge other than dishonorable, their spouses and dependent children are eligible for burial in a national cemetery. Other burial benefits for eligible veterans include a burial flag, a Presidential Memorial Certificate and a government headstone or marker - even if they are not buried in a national cemetery. More than 3.4 million Americans, including veterans of every war and conflict - from the Revolutionary War to the current war in Iraq - are buried in VA's national cemeteries. Interested parties can locate points of contact and available space information at http://www.cem.va.gov/cem/cems/listcem.asp#CA & http://www.cem.va.gov/cem/scg/lsvc.asp on the following California National and State veteran cemeteries:
. Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery San Diego CA
. Golden Gate National Cemetery San Bruno CA
. Los Angeles National Cemetery Los Angeles CA
. Riverside National Cemetery Riverside CA
. Sacramento Valley VA National Cemetery Dixon CA
. San Francisco National Cemetery San Francisco CA
. San Joaquin Valley National Cemetery Santa Nella CA
. Veterans Memorial Grove Cemetery Yountville CA
. Northern California Veterans Cemetery Igo CA

Information on VA burial benefits can be obtained from national cemetery offices, from the Internet at http://www.cem.va.gov or by calling VA regional offices at 1(800) 827-1000. Information about the Bakersfield VA National Cemetery is available by calling the VA Memorial Service Network in Oakland at (510) 637-6270. [Source: VA News Release 26 Mar 08 ++]

iamcloudlander
03-31-08, 04:23 PM
Ed you are on the ball about the cemetary in Bakersfield Ca as they just told us about it last week on the news. I live in Bakersfield and up until now the vets around here either had to go to LA to be buried or just use one of the local cemetaries. We have a group of vets here that try to attend any funeral for a vet and they give a better service to all vets regardless of rank or awards than you mentioned in your post a bout Arlington. They are all volunteers to Keep up the good work Semper Fi