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Fw: Kevin - Can u answer
- To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;>
- Subject: Fw: Kevin - Can u answer
- From: "Don Greenlaw" <dgreenlaw@cox.net>
- Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2011 08:30:54 -0800
- Authentication-results: cox.net; none
Forwarded.
----- Original Message -----
From: Wayne Gatewood, Jr
To: 'dgreenlaw@cox.net'
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 7:52 AM
Subject: Fw: Kevin - Can u answer
Sir. Pls see below.
Best.....Wayne
From: Secor, Kevin [mailto:Kevin.Secor@va.gov]
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 09:28 AM
To: Wayne Gatewood, Jr
Subject: RE: Kevin - Can u answer
Wayne,
Military retirees, Survivor Benefit Plan annuitants, and disabled veterans
will see a 3.6 percent cost-of-living adjustment in January. The 3.6 percent
COLA goes into effect Dec 1 and will be reflected in January retired pay,
SBP annuitant checks, and Veterans Affairs disability compensation checks.
This is the first COLA increase since 2009.
Kevin
From: Wayne Gatewood, Jr [mailto:wgatewood@qualitysupport.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 8:29 AM
To: Secor, Kevin
Subject: Kevin - Can u answer
Sir - Can you or someone u know answer the below question!
S/F Wayne
From: Don Greenlaw [mailto:dgreenlaw@cox.net]
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2011 10:02 PM
To: Wayne Gatewood, Jr
Subject: Re: Veterans New for Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Wayne: Are "US" retired vets on the VA Disabled
Compensation List getting a COLA this year?
Best Regards & Happy New Year,
Don Greenlaw
Captain, USMC(Ret'd)
----- Original Message -----
From: Wayne Gatewood, Jr
To: Wayne Gatewood, Jr
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2011 6:48 PM
Subject: Veterans New for Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Happy Wednesday all! Hope everyone is well and gearing up for a great
New Year. Let us see what we can do individually and collectively to help
our fellow Veterans identify and obtain gainful employment.
Veterans Job Fair. Please go to following link to get information on
major Veterans Job Fair taking place on January 18, 2012, at Washington DC
Convention Center. Please also refer any and all interested Veterans and
Transitioning Service members here to register:
http://www.vaforvets.com/DC/
HAVE YOU HEARD? Sally Ann Homes, M.D., the spinal cord injury care line
executive at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, recently received the
Operation American Heroes Foundation Founderâs Award. The Founders Award is
given annually to honor local heroes, Veterans, and first responders who
have gone above the call of duty to serve their country and community. âDr.
Holmes has always been the consummate rehabilitation professional who
practices, teaches, and exemplifies a life that has far transcended her
physical challenges and limitations,â said Thomas Horvath, M.D., former
chief of staff for DeBakey VA. âHer patience, strength of character, quiet
determination, and inspirational leadership has led the Michael E. DeBakey
VA Medical Center to be recognized as the finest spinal cord injury service
in the VA.â Holmes was diagnosed with a congenital neuromuscular disorder
that prevented the development of her muscular system as a baby. She now
oversees medical care for more than 500 patients who are in rehabilitation
from spinal cord injuries.
Prayers and blessings for you and your loved ones and for our dear Troops
and their loved ones everywhere.
Best....................Wayne
-------------------------------------------
VA HQ Veterans News for Wednesday, December 28, 2011. Thanks to Kevin
Secor, VA VSO Liaison.
1. Strapped Illinois grappling to meet needs of younger vets
returning from Iraq.
2. VA centers connect vets through Facebook.
3. Brides Across America Offers Wedding Gowns To Women Vets.
4. Bio-feedback Program Helps Women Vets.
5. Veterans Find N.C. Residency Requirements Hinder Higher Education
Efforts.
6. Veterans Face Uncertain Times.
7. VA: Happy Feds Saved $200 Million In Turnover Costs.
8. District Director Says VA Listening To Valley Veterans.
9. How The Iraq War Changed A Generation Of Veterans.
10. VA's Costs To Care For Iraq, Afghanistan War Vets Likely To Exceed
Vietnam, Analysis Finds.
11. Illinois Grappling With Younger Veterans' Needs.
12. Efforts Underway To Help Returning Iraq Veterans Find Jobs.
13. Milwaukee's VA Hospital Cuts In-Patient Stays.
14. San Diego Naval Hospital Testing Unusual PTSD Treatment.
15. Veterans Affairs Claims Progress In Ending Homelessness Among Vets.
16. Arizona Vet Is First To Get Aid Under Project H3 VETS.
17. Current Veterans Seen Falling Faster Into Homelessness.
18. Assistance For Veterans Arrives In Bath Area Next Month.
19. Employers Work With CalVet To Help Veteran Employees.
20. VA's Message System Improves Patient-Physician Relationship.
21. Two World War II Gunners With A Lot In Common Enter Hospice Care With
Pride, Dignity And Sharp Memories.
22. 96-Year-Old SC Army Veteran Eager To Give Blood.
23. Black Navy Veteran To Get Medal For WWII Action.
24. Group Fighting For WWI Memorial At Pershing Park.
25. A Vet Helping Vets.
26. VA / VSO-MSO Hearings as December 28, 2011
27. Today In History:
1. Strapped Illinois grappling to meet needs of younger vets returning
from Iraq. Chicago Tribune Pat Quinn put together to provide feedback on
veterans' services. "With Illinois and a couple of others states, I think
they've created more of a culture," said Blumke, who went to work for the US
Department of Veterans Affairs after graduating last ...
2. VA centers connect vets through Facebook. WCBD Additionally, in
June 2011, VA produced a Department-wide social media policy that provides
guidelines for communicating with Veterans online. The US Department of
Veterans Affairs says that all 152 of its VA centers are now represented on
Facebook, ...
3. Brides Across America Offers Wedding Gowns To Women Vets. NBC
Nightly News "Brides Across America, a nationwide program that gives
wedding dresses to military couples. At first the idea was to donate a
handful of bridal gowns to engaged servicewomen, but Brides Across America
grew beyond the founder's wildest dreams." So "five years, 38 salons
nationwide and 8,000 dresses later, it's not just active servicewomen who
benefit but also fiancÃes of servicemen."
4. Bio-feedback Program Helps Women Vets. Redlands Daily Facts
"Years ago, psychologists at the Jerry L. Pettis Memorial Veterans Medical
Center in Loma Linda would bring biofeedback training to certain patients.
But its use came to an end, until about 18 months ago, when it was
resuscitated, said Idalia E. Canez, a staff psychiatrist at the hospital."
There is also some discussion about "ancillary courses, such as yoga or
Transcendental Meditation."
5. Veterans Find N.C. Residency Requirements Hinder Higher Education
Efforts. Fayetteville (NC) Observer "Military veterans who want to attend
college in North Carolina are encountering a roadblock to their plans to
further their education: the state's residency laws combined with new
restrictions in the GI Bill." The program "no longer pays out-of-state
tuition rates at public universities and community colleges," so "veterans
who haven't become North Carolina residents must make up the difference."
And "about 420 student veterans in the state's 16-campus university system
are affected."
6. Veterans Face Uncertain Times. Westchester (NY) Journal News
"Many veterans are coming home to an uncertain future in a weak job market."
Yet, while "the challenges are considerable...so are the growing support
networks for veterans." The paper highlights the "VOW to Hire Veterans Act,
the only part of President Obama's sweeping jobs initiatives to clear
Congress," and "the Department of Veterans Affairs' new online tool, My
HealtheVet portal (www.myhealth.va.gov), gives veterans detailed data about
their training and duties performed during deployment," intended "to help
veterans enhance a resume or figure out how their military training fits
into their future job prospects." It quotes Secretary Shinseki saying,
"Savvy employers look to veterans for the excellent training and unique
experiences they bring to the civilian workforce."
7. VA: Happy Feds Saved $200 Million In Turnover Costs. Federal News
Radio "The Department of Veterans Affairs avoided $200 million in turnover
costs this year by using its VA Learning University to train employees." The
article is based on an interview with Assistant Secretary for Human
Resources and Administration John Sepulveda. He said that "the VA is
preparing for a busy year as troops return home" and "is asking its
employees to carry larger workloads." The VA is "one of the natural leaders
in the Obama administration's drive to bring more veterans into the civilian
federal workforce." He also said that "more work is needed to preparing
agencies to welcome disabled vets, in particular, to their workforce." And
"VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and Deputy Secretary Scott Gould have championed
investing in employees as the best way to serve veterans, he said."
8. District Director Says VA Listening To Valley Veterans. Monitor
(TX) "The new director of the region's Veterans Affairs health care system
said he is not fighting the push for a full VA hospital here, but said he
cannot join the campaign to create a hospital." Lawrence A. Biro, director
of the VA Texas Valley Coastal Bend Health Care System explained, "I cannot
lobby Congress." He also said, "What I learned from last time is that any
decision like that, in strategic planning, will come from the secretary."
Biro said that Secretary "Shinseki does read letters and emails sent to the
DVA by Rio Grande Valley veterans and is very thorough."
9. How The Iraq War Changed A Generation Of Veterans. PBS NewsHour A
"conversation with four American war veterans about their experiences and
conclusions." The veterans spoke about the war as having changed their
lives. They also discussed their views on the wars. They also talked about
their injuries. One said, "when we talk about the war being over, really,
there's a whole other war that veterans are facing when they return to get
care for post-traumatic stress disorder, military sexual trauma, traumatic
brain injury, and other physical and mental injuries that they suffer. And
it's a huge problem."
10. VA's Costs To Care For Iraq, Afghanistan War
Vets Likely To Exceed Vietnam, Analysis Finds. St. Paul Pioneer-Press "The
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan may be winding down, but the long-term costs of
caring for those wounded in battle is on a path to rival the costs of the
Vietnam War." And "the VA is losing ground in efforts to provide fast,
efficient and accurate disability decisions." The story cites Harvard's
Linda Bilmes' estimates "that providing disability payments to Iraq and
Afghanistan war veterans could range from $355 billion to $534 billion over
the next 40 years; on top of that, costs to the VA's medical system could
range from $201 billion to $348 billion." The VA's Thomas Murphy is cited
saying that with respect to difficulties in coming to disability decisions,
"We think we've got the problem identified and we think we have the right
disciplines in place."
11. Illinois Grappling With Younger Veterans'
Needs. AP "Military veterans are streaming back from the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, but the state of Illinois has only limited means to help them
with jobs and education because of its budget problems. More than 80 percent
of the Department of Veterans Affairs' $97.7 million budget is dedicated to
running four veterans' homes with a population of just under 1,000 older
veterans." So "Veterans Affairs Director Erica Borggren says the agency has
to look for inexpensive or non-financial solutions to unemployment and
education needs."
12. Efforts Underway To Help Returning Iraq
Veterans Find Jobs. WDUQ-FM "With the official conclusion of the Iraq War,
local officials have made much of Pennsylvania's efforts to help returning
service members come back into the civilian workforce." The article focuses
on the need to get civilian employment saying that veterans are advised to
"cut the shorthand out of their speech," and to "check out an online skills
translator." Pennsylvania law "ensures that veterans who take civil service
exams get 10 extra points for their military experience. Veterans get an
additional hiring preference when they're in the running with another job
candidate who is otherwise equally qualified."
13. Milwaukee's VA Hospital Cuts In-Patient Stays.
NPR's "The VA hospital in Milwaukee is shortening its residential mental
health treatment programs. Doctors there say the shortened stay - from 90 to
45 days - will mean more intense treatment and will make it easier for
veterans to transition back into society sooner." Clinical psychologist
Karen Berte explained, "Residential care is really designed to be a more
intensive level of care to help someone through a difficult time and prepare
them for continuing their care on an outpatient basis."
14. San Diego Naval Hospital Testing Unusual PTSD
Treatment. Los Angeles Times "The Pentagon is spending hundreds of millions
of dollars searching for a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder,"
and "nearly all of the dozens of research projects involve long-term
counseling and prescription drugs. But researchers at the Naval Medical
Center San Diego believe that something as seemingly simple as injections of
an anesthetic given to women during childbirth may be effective in
alleviating the symptoms associated with PTSD." The research is being led by
"Dr. Robert McLay, a psychiatrist and director of mental health research at
the medical center," and "Dr. Anita Hickey, a Navy captain and pain control
specialist." They "are midway through a two-year study" and "hope to present
their findings to the American Psychiatric Assn. at its May convention in
Philadelphia." Chicago Anesthesiologist Dr. Eugene Lipov is credited with
the idea, though the Pentagon rejected his applications for research
funding.
15. Veterans Affairs Claims Progress In Ending
Homelessness Among Vets. Washington Post "Halfway into an ambitious
five-year campaign to end homelessness among veterans, the Department of
Veterans Affairs says it has made enough progress that the goal is within
reach, even as a new generation of veterans returns from Iraq and
Afghanistan." It quotes the VA's Susan Angell saying that "there is 'a
better opportunity to end veterans' homelessness by 2015 than at any time in
the past.'" The VA "estimates that more than 20,000 Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans have been homeless at some point during the past five years, and
that their numbers are rising." Secretary Shinseki is quoted saying, "We've
learned we can't end homelessness by street rescues alone." The article says
that the VA-HUD joint voucher program is "the most effective remedy."
16. Arizona Vet Is First To Get Aid Under Project
H3 VETS. USA Today Greg Guerra who received "a new sofa, chair, TV, bed,
pots and pans, plates and other necessities" along with an apartment. "Until
Friday morning, he had been homeless." He "is the first veteran in Arizona
to get an apartment through Project H3 VETS. The new initiative involves 25
non-profit groups working under the umbrella of the Arizona Coalition to End
Homelessness." The group also works with the VA to get housing vouchers.
17. Current Veterans Seen Falling Faster Into
Homelessness. Yuma Sun Veteran Robert Herr, who "was homeless and living
in his car in California." Then "in late 2010, he came to Phoenix to be
close to his 8-year-old son. He ditched his car and slept in bushes outside
the Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center until a VA liaison connected him with
U.S. Vets, a private organization that provides temporary housing,
counseling and job placement for veterans." And "Sean Price, the homeless
veterans services coordinator for the Arizona Department of Veterans
Services, said Vietnam veterans fell into homelessness an average of six
years after they left the service, but many veterans of recent wars are
becoming homeless in two years or less."
18. Assistance For Veterans Arrives In Bath Area
Next Month. Lansing (MI) State Journal "Beginning next month, veterans and
their family members will be able to get help with veterans benefits at the
local level. Michael Thompson, a state field service officer for the
Veterans of Foreign Wars, will spend two days per month at the Bath Township
Hall to help with VA health care benefits, service-connected disability
compensation, burial and death benefits and other services, township
officials said."
19. Employers Work With CalVet To Help Veteran
Employees. Lake County (CA) News "California employers are working with the
California Department of Veterans Affairs (CalVet) to help ensure veteran
employees are connected to the state and federal benefits they have earned
through military service. CalVet's growing list of employer partners
includes Aerojet, Bechtel Corp., Cintas Corp., Comcast, Health Net Federal
Services, HP, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co., Merck, Oracle, Pacific Gas
and Electric Co., Republic Services, Southwest Airlines, State Farm, TASC
Inc., United Airlines, United Rentals, Verizon, Warner Bros. Entertainment
and many others in the defense, energy, technology, telecommunications,
transportation, finance, health care, pharmaceutical, media, entertainment
and retail industries." Yet, "less than 15 percent of eligible California
veterans are taking advantage of their compensation and pension benefits and
only 36 percent are using their health benefits."
20. VA's Message System Improves Patient-Physician
Relationship. Star-Telegram "The VA...has been aggressive in North Texas in
trying to get patients to register for its MyHealtheVet system," and
"nowhere is it more popular than the Fort Worth outpatient clinic on
Interstate 20."
21. Two World War II Gunners With A Lot In Common
Enter Hospice Care With Pride, Dignity And Sharp Memories. San Jose Mercury
News
22. 96-Year-Old SC Army Veteran Eager To Give
Blood. ABC
23. Black Navy Veteran To Get Medal For WWII
Action. AP
24. Group Fighting For WWI Memorial At Pershing
Park. Washington Examiner
25. A Vet Helping Vets. Santa Rosa (CA) Press
Democrat
26. VA / VSO-MSO Hearings as December 28, 2011
None
27. Today In History:
 1832 â John C. Calhoun becomes the first Vice President of the
United States to resign.
 1835 â Osceola leads his Seminole warriors in Florida into the
Second Seminole War against the United States Army.
 1836 â Spain recognizes the independence of Mexico.
 1846 â Iowa is admitted as the 29th U.S. state.
 1867 â United States claims Midway Atoll, the first territory
annexed outside Continental limits.
 1879 â The Tay Bridge Disaster: The central part of the Tay Rail
Bridge in Dundee, Scotland collapses as a train passes over it, killing 75.
 1885 â Indian National Congress a political party of India is
founded in Bombay, British India.
 1895 â Wilhelm RÃntgen publishes a paper detailing his discovery
of a new type of radiation, which later will be known as x-rays.
 1912 â The first municipally owned streetcars take to the
streets in San Francisco, California.
 1918 â Constance Markievicz while detained in Holloway prison,
became the first woman to be elected MP to the British House of Commons.
 1943 â World War II â After eight days of brutal house-to-house
fighting, the battle of Ortona concludes with the victory of the 1st
Canadian Infantry Division over the German 1st Parachute Division and the
capture of the Italian town of Ortona.
 1944 â Maurice Richard becomes the first player to score 8
points in one game of NHL ice hockey.
 1945 â The United States Congress officially recognizes the
Pledge of Allegiance.
 1958 â "Greatest Game Ever Played" â Baltimore Colts defeat the
New York Giants in the first ever National Football League sudden death
overtime game at New York's Yankee Stadium.
 1972 â Kim Il-sung, already Prime Minister of North Korea and
General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea, became the first President
of North Korea.
 1973 â The Endangered Species Act is passed in the United
States.
 1974 â Senegalese marxist group Reenu-Rew founds the political
movement And-JÃf at a clandestine congress.
 2000 â U.S. retail giant Montgomery Ward announces it is going
out of business after 128 years.
 2008 â War in Somalia: The militaries of Somalia's Transitional
Federal Government and Ethiopian troops capture Mogadishu unopposed.
 2009 â 43 people die in a suicide bombing in Karachi, Pakistan,
where Shia Muslims are observing the Day of Ashura.
 2010 â Arab Spring: Popular protests begin in Algeria against
the government.
--------------------------------------------------
Godspeed all...............Wayne
Wayne M. Gatewood, Jr. USMC (Ret)
President/CEO
Quality Support, Inc.
A Service Disabled Veteran and Minority Owned-Small Business
8201 Corporate Drive, Suite 220
Landover, MD 20785
301-459-3777 EXT 101 - Fax 301-459-6961
www.qualitysupport.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any
war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional as to how they
perceive the Veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their
Nation." - George Washington