PDA

View Full Version : H.r. 952


Messenger
06-13-09, 11:08 AM
H.R. 952
Press Releases regarding pending legislation. It is not law as of yet but it has made it to the point of being considered and possibly voted on at a latter date.


As per http://johnhall.house.gov/newsroom.asp?ARTICLE3615=14389 (http://johnhall.house.gov/newsroom.asp?ARTICLE3615=14389)
Friday, June 12, 2009


- COMBAT Act removes burden of proof for veterans with physical and mental war wounds -
- Hall's legislation to now be considered by U.S. House of Representatives -


Washington, DC – This week the full House Veterans' Affairs Committee passed Congressman John Hall's (D-Dover) landmark legislation to increase access to treatment and benefits for veterans suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and other injuries. Hall's H.R. 952, Compensation Owed for Mission Based Activities in Theatre (COMBAT) Act, will remove the burden from disabled veterans who have to prove that a specific incident during combat caused his or her disability. Hall's COMBAT Act will make it so that any veteran who served in combat will automatically have the ability to get treatment and benefits for injuries incurred during service.
 
"Currently there is an onerous burden put on the veteran, especially those diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder to prove combat zone stressors," stated Hall. "Instead of helping these veterans, the VA acts as an obstacle, inflicting upon the most noble of our citizens a process that feels accusatory and disbelieving. The current process is complex, legalistic and protracted, and particularly difficult for veterans because of the stresses and uncertainties involved while facing skeptical and cynical attitudes of VA staff."
 
The VA's current policy forces veterans to "prove" that a specific stressor during a war triggered their PTSD, even if they have already been diagnosed and been receiving treatment for the condition. Veterans must track down incident reports, buddy statements, present medals, and leap other hurdles to validate to the VA that their PTSD was a result from their war service.


"The current policy violates common sense," stated Hall. "A soldier who does not have PTSD before entering a war, who returns home from war with PTSD, should not have to prove that his PTSD is a result of a specific experience during war. Simply serving in combat can induce PTSD. The wars America is fighting right now have no front or rear lines. Danger can strike in any place, anywhere. It is clear that the current regulations are in need of change."
 
From Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts alone, over 100,000 veterans have been diagnosed with PTSD. Tragically, however, only 42,000 have been granted service-connected disability for their condition. The disability claims backlog at the Veterans Administration (VA) is topping 900,000. A great many of these claims are Vietnam Veterans seeking compensation for PTSD.


During the House VA Committee's debate on the COMBAT Act, Hall told his colleagues "We can pave the way for today's veterans to receive the same assistance that created the Greatest Generation. Otherwise, we run the risk of allowing veterans and their families to face mental illness, suicide, homelessness, divorce, and unemployment alone. I, for one, won’t let that happen. I hope you won't either."
 
The Committee favorably passed the COMBAT Act, which now goes to the full U.S. House of Representatives for further consideration.

END

DocGreek
06-13-09, 11:20 AM
AND.....it's about FVCKING TIME!!! I knew Nurses, Doctors, and Corpsmen who collapsed mentally, while attending to wounded Marines, and Corpsmen at 3rd. Med in 68', and 69'. A couple of days off, and some barbiturates kept them online....NICE, HUH?? GOD BLESS EVERY ONE OF THEM!! They ALL deserve compensation for their highly stressful duty....with HONOR!!.....DOC

Messenger
06-13-09, 11:31 AM
Re HR 952
 
I strongly encourage everyone to contact their Congressional Representative and request that they support and vote to pass HR 952.
 
Keep in mind that this isn’t a fix-all, but it is a step in the right direction.
 
Semper Fi

SSgt Ramsey
08-05-09, 04:52 PM
I've searched and tried to find some updates on this bill, its status, or where in the legislative pipeline it is currently at....anybody have concrete info to share on this??

This bill is critical to many of us with PTSD but were not awarded the CAR or CIB as non-combatants.

The VA is exploiting and bastardizing legislation and law circa 1945 as their "reference" point and not updating their critera to include modern warfare and the changing engagements we are currently involved with in Iraq and Afghanistan, and others.

Messenger
08-07-09, 01:21 PM
Co sponsor HR 952.
Below is the link to the Congressman’s site that started HR 952. At the bottom of the page is a form that will allow you to become a citizen co-sponsor of the bill. Currently there are 94 congressional co-sponsors. Ask your congressman to not only co-sponsor HR 952 but also vote on it when it comes up.
http://johnhall.house.gov/veterans_combatact.asp (http://johnhall.house.gov/veterans_combatact.asp)
Excerpt from the above link…
One of my most important priorities this Congress will be passing H.R. 952, the COMBAT (Compensation Owed for Mission Based Activities in Theatre) Act, to ensure adequate treatment and compensation for soldiers with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). For too long soldiers have returned from overseas battles, bearing mental and physical wounds, only to be forced to fight another war to get their benefits from the VA. Currently, veterans face an adversarial process when they seek treatment and compensation from the VA. This is especially true for soldiers who have PTSD. In the Iraq and Afghanistan wars alone, over 115,000 veterans have been diagnosed with PTSD. Tragically, however, only 51,000 have been granted service-connected disability for their condition.
 
This is true for past conflicts as well. The disability claims backlog at the VA is approaching one million, a great majority of which are Vietnam Veterans seeking compensation for PTSD. These facts are a clear indication that current regulations at the VA are too stringent for veterans seeking disability benefits.
 
As it currently stands, veterans have to "prove" the stressor that triggered their PTSD, even if they have already been diagnosed. They need to track down incident reports, buddy statements, present medals, and leap other hurdles to meet the threshold that VA mandates in order to receive desperately needed compensation.
 
The Combat Act lowers the burdensome threshold that veterans have to meet to receive compensation. Just as our military adapts and reforms its strategies in every war it fights, so must VA to assist the surviving heroes of those wars.
 
The bill would expand the definition of "combat with the enemy" in Title 38, USC to include active service in a theater of combat. This would essentially establish service in combat as the presumptive stressor for the incurrence of PTSD. The veteran would still need to be clinically diagnosed with PTSD, however, he or she would no longer need to "prove" the events that caused this diagnosis.

SSgt Ramsey
08-10-09, 07:13 AM
I'm just curious and to be honest afraid that even if this bill is passed, the VA Benefits side of the house will exploit and bastardize the new verbage to further screw over Veteran's in the future with PTSD.

As it is now, proving the stressors is very difficult at best as trying to locate and further communicate with those you served with from years past is a nightmare.

I've been fortunate that I've found both my former Platoon Commander who is now a LtCol Reserve Officer and also my Combat Cargo Flight Deck SNCOIC who retired as a MSgt for collobaration of our involvement and hostilities in Albania during Operation Silver Wake.

I'm sure that I will receive my retroactive CAR for "peacekeepers" though I don't know how long the process is once its submitted in the awards system. Once that's done, I'm hoping that my test scores, and labeling of "unemployable" and "100% disabled" will be pretty much cut and dried, but I have no faith or trust in the VA Benefits side of the house any longer. The VA couldn't give 2 ****s less about us and we are just a burden upon them in their eyes...prove that statement wrong.