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The Healing Power of Fly Fishing for Combat Veterans

On 112 acres off Springhill Road in Belgrade, Montana, sits a six-bedroom, 10,000-square-foot home called Quiet Waters Ranch.

The ranch belongs to the Warriors and Quiet Waters Foundation, a nonprofit located 10 miles south in Bozeman that teaches combat veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan how to fly fish in the place that’s considered the sport’s mecca.

Roughly 10 times each year, a half dozen veterans spend six days in Bozeman learning fly fishing.

They arrive on a Monday and are outfitted with the essentials—fly rods, waders, boots, shirts, jackets, and other fishing gear—all of which the warriors can keep.

By Friday, the fifth day, participating veterans have spent three solid days fishing Montana’s ponds and streams.

On the fifth night, before the warriors pack up their new equipment and depart, they gather with Warrior and Quiet Waters volunteers at Quiet Waters Ranch for one final meal, the “Sayonara Dinner.”

And it’s there or in follow-up correspondence where the veterans really open up, Faye Nelson, the organization’s executive director, recalls.

They open up about the impact that six days spent fly fishing in Montana has had on them.

“What this trip did for me is beyond words,” retired Army Sgt. Scott Riddle wrote in a letter read at a farewell dinner in 2011, adding:

It was pretty overwhelming for me to come back from theater on a stretcher badly broken, both physically and mentally. I wondered what was left of the life that I had before I went, but I still remember my drive to answer the call, and I was willing to sacrifice it all because this is what Americans do.

What this trip did for me was to restore my faith that great Americans like the people of Bozeman, Montana, are worth defending, even if it means not getting to come home. This awesome community and this great organization didn’t just teach me fly fishing—they gave me the gift of peace.

Some warriors, Nelson says, talk about the suicide notes they’ve written, picked up, and ripped to pieces. Others have talked about returning home only to sell the gun they contemplated using every day.

“Those are the extremes,” she says.

But other combat veterans talk about how they’ve used fly fishing to connect with their children or spouses, or have decided to make it their new family activity, foregoing video games for time out in nature.

“Fly fishing and the act of fly fishing is very methodical and rhythmic, and it’s often compared to golf in … how rewarding and frustrating it can be at the same time in terms of getting it just right,” Nelson tells The Daily Signal:

That rhythm and the actual act of casting can be really helpful to someone who has traumatic brain injury or PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder] because their mind can wander or get overly anxious at any time. It’s a calming activity.

Ingredients for Success

The idea for Warriors and Quiet Waters can be traced back to the merging of ideas from the program’s co-founders: John Baden, founder of the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment; Volney Steele, a retired military doctor; and Eric Hastings, a retired Marine Corps colonel.

Baden and Steele’s roles began in December 2006, when the two men began a conversation at their gym while both were on treadmills, Baden tells The Daily Signal.

Steele told Baden of his idea to design outdoor activities in Montana specifically for veterans who were wounded while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Steele wanted to mirror those services after the ones offered by Eagle Mount, a Bozeman-based organization founded in 1982 that offered outdoor activities—skiing, fishing, kayaking, and more—to people with disabilities and children with cancer.

The two specifically wanted to help those who returned home from war with psychological or physical injuries, the goal being to use the great outdoors and all that Bozeman has to offer.

“We have all the ingredients for success: superb fishing, exceptional air service, an army of top fishers, excellent fishing shops, and a strong tradition of helping others,” Baden wrote that December 10 years ago on the website for his Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment.

This new organization wouldn’t rely on federal money to succeed, Baden wrote, since such funding sources often come with strings attached—usually in the form of complying with costly regulations and other requirements—and could “corrupt or distort the mission.”

The only thing missing, Baden tells The Daily Signal, was what he calls a “social entrepreneur.”

That’s where Hastings came in.

Psalm 23

The retired colonel served in the Vietnam War and recalled, during flight missions, tracing “meandering ribbons that cut through the jungle,” according to the Warriors and Quiet Waters website.

Those ribbons reminded Hastings of the trout streams of his home in Montana.

When the veteran returned to the state after serving more than three decades in the Marines, he went back to fly fishing.

“He realized how special the act of fly fishing was in terms of being able to focus his mind and really find some hope and serenity in both the activity of casting as well as being out in the outdoors around here,” Nelson says.

Hastings and his wife had two sons in the military, and they were concerned about the growing number of veterans returning home with both seen and unseen injuries, especially when compared to those returning from past conflicts, she says.

So Hastings approached the Naval Medical Center in San Diego and asked to be allowed to take some patients fly fishing.

The hospital obliged.

In 2007, Hastings, Steele, Baden, and other volunteers hosted 14 veterans for a fly-fishing trip in Bozeman.

During the course of the trip, the veterans were housed in rented vacation homes and given fishing gear, instruction from professional guides, and home-cooked meals.

And so Warriors and Quiet Waters—the name conceived from Psalm 23: “He leads me beside quiet waters. He restores my soul.”—was born.

“Our experiences have shown that most separating from military service are experiencing feelings of isolation and that loss of purpose, that loss of a mission,” Nelson says. “Our goals are to decrease those feelings of isolation by fostering camaraderie and providing a new network of support, and also to help them find that greater sense of purpose.”

Relating to the Military Experience

In the years after Sept. 11, organizations aimed at helping veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan began sprouting up.

Their missions run the gamut, from Team Red, White and Blue, which focuses on connecting veterans to their local communities through physical fitness, to Mission Continues, which focuses on connecting veterans to community service projects.

Indeed, Warriors and Quiet Waters isn’t the only organization that aims to help veterans adapt to life at home through participation in outdoor activities.

But research suggests that outdoor activities like fly fishing, which Warriors and Quiet Waters focuses on, can improve veterans’ mental health.

In 2013, the Sierra Club Military Families and Veterans Initiative and researchers from the University of Michigan conducted a study examining the effects that group- and nature-based recreational programs such as fly fishing, whitewater rafting, and backpacking have on veterans.

Participating veterans were surveyed one week before, one week after, and one month after participating in one of 12 different programs lasting four to seven days. None of the programs included structured therapy.

According to the study, those surveyed one week after their outdoor experience reported gains in psychological well-being, social functioning, and life outlook.

“The types of activities they’re doing are in many ways not that dissimilar from aspects of the military experience,” Jason Duvall, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Michigan and author of the study, tells The Daily Signal. “You’re creating an experience that resonates strongly with where veterans are at and aspects of the military experience that many found to be valuable and rewarding.”

So far, extensive research has looked at outdoor recreation and contact with nature, but little research exists on how those experiences can affect veterans specifically.

The research by Duvall and co-author Rachel Kaplan indicates that the gains veterans reported one week after their outdoor experiences were, in part, related to the positive effect the natural environment can have on one’s emotional state.

But Duvall also attributes the positive results to the programs’ participants:

If you think about where veterans are going to be coming from, they’re going to be in situations where other people don’t have the same kinds of experiences as them. The mental models that they have are not shared with other people they’re going to come into contact with. That’s going to leave them feeling a little detached and misunderstood. Being able to get into a group of other veterans, all of a sudden you have a group where they share the same perspective and mental models.

‘A Ripple Effect’

In 2016, Warriors and Quiet Waters hosted 10 fishing outings, held April through October.

Warriors can participate in one of three “experiences”—a solo fishing, alumni fishing, or couples fishing. Each spans six days, with three full days spent out on the water fly fishing.

The alumni fishing experience pairs first-time participants with previous participants, who are encouraged to mentor new attendees.

“It really helps people open up and confide in one another, and trust and know that there’s not only the military experience but the combat experience,” Nelson says. “It really deepens the bonds within the group.”

The couples experience is designed for warriors who have participated in solo fishing and return with their spouses.

“To us, it’s important to (a) recognize their service, since so many of them are the primary caregivers to warriors dealing with seen and unseen injuries, and (b) to really better the family,” Nelson says. “We want to have a ripple effect to marriages and children.”

During each outing, Warriors and Quiet Waters hosts six veterans—or six couples—at a time. Participating veterans may be from any branch of the military, but must have seen combat in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom, or Operation New Dawn. Some arriving warriors have visible injuries, while others may struggle with wounds that can’t be seen by the naked eye.

‘Home Environment’

Next year, Warriors and Quiet Waters will celebrate its 10-year anniversary.

In nearly a decade, the organization has served more than 336 combat veterans and 89 spouses, many of whom have returned, with the help of nearly 1,000 volunteers.

In 2016 alone, the organization served more than 70 combat veterans and 12 spouses or caregivers.

During past fishing experiences, warriors lodged at rented vacation homes in the Bozeman-area. But in May 2015, Warriors and Quiet Waters purchased a $3 million property that ultimately would become Quiet Waters Ranch.

Volunteer “moms” make breakfast and dinner from scratch.

“We really want them to feel like they’re in a home environment, not a rehabilitation facility or institution,” Nelson says.

In 2017, Nelson says, she hopes Warriors and Quiet Waters will expand its programming to include professional development and entrepreneurship classes, or offer help with finances or relationship-building.

But fly fishing will always be a component of what Warriors and Quiet Waters does.

“We are all responsible for going to war and letting our Congress put us in those situations,” Nelson says, “so we’re all responsible for taking care of the people that stepped up to the plate.” (For more from the author of “The Healing Power of Fly Fishing for Combat Veterans” please click HERE)

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Navy Vet Creates 7-Point Plan to Fix the VA. But He Needs Your Signature by Christmas.

Since 2015, there have been at least a dozen reported cases of military veteran suicide on Veterans Administration medical facility grounds. The most recent occurred just before Thanksgiving, when Army Sgt. John Toombs, who served in Afghanistan, hanged himself on the grounds of the Alvin C. York VA Medical Center in Murfreesboro, Tenn.

In a viral video recorded hours before he ended his life at the age of 32, Toombs, who suffered from PTSD and depression, claims he was kicked out of a drug treatment program for “trivial reasons.”

Like many of his peers, Joe Schmitt, a Navy veteran and hospital corpsman, is fed up with way the government has failed servicemen and women. After hearing of Sgt. Toombs’ untimely death, he decided to do something about it.

Schmitt has authored not one, not two, but seven petitions asking the White House to address what he believes are major flaws in the VA. Why seven? WhiteHouse.gov has an 800-word limit for petitions. To get around this, Schmitt created a separate petition for each proposed area of reform:

Leadership employment requirements

Intern employment expectations

Veteran health care education

Release of records upon death

Higher accountability for VA employees

Drug and alcohol treatment programs

Termination of redundant studies that waste VA money

In order for the White House to consider all of these reforms, he will need a total of 700,000 signatures by Jan. 3.

Schmitt, a Brooklyn native who joined the Navy in 1986 at age 17, has had to deal with the flawed VA system in the wake of a traumatic brain injury (TBI) he suffered after an IED explosion in Afghanistan in 2011.

Speaking to Conservative Review, he noted that the reforms listed above had long been on his mind, but John Toombs’ untimely death was “the straw that broke the camel’s back.”

Schmitt said he actually had two chance encounters with Toombs.

The first encounter was at a local bar in Tennessee. Schmitt, who currently resides in Tennessee, recalls “talking to a kid from the Tennessee National Guard that was telling me about his PTSD and his drug problem, and how he wanted to better himself for his daughter.”

At the time, Schmitt advised Toombs to get honest with himself and get the help he needed to “have a decent life.”

The second and last time he saw Toombs was when he went to drop off paperwork at the Alvin C. York center.

“He was sitting on a couch there, and it had to have been after he’d gotten kicked out of the program, because he did not look happy at all,” Schmitt said. “And then when I see him in the video, I’m like, ‘Oh my God … that was him.’”

Toombs’ death was a wakeup call for Schmitt, who says he’s had to deal with incompetent VA personnel who overlook or ignore serious medical problems. He has gone so far as to spend $9,000 of his own money to seek external medical services at a TBI clinic in Maryland.

“It kind of irritates me that you can bring in individuals who are refugees from another country, or have someone who is here illegally, and they can get top medical care,” he told CR. “But you have all of these veterans who’ve sacrificed so much, and it’s a struggle for them to get care.”

Schmitt explained that many veterans who are fed up with the Veterans Administration end up homeless, addicted to drugs, or worse, as in the case of Sgt. Toombs.

“Here’s the thing,” he explained. “When it comes to John Toombs, PTSD is the main cause of the addiction, because the veterans are trying to self-medicate. So, yeah, you’ve got to treat the addiction. But you need to treat the PTSD as the primary cause, and then work a recovery system around that.”

Joe Schmitt said he doesn’t think the majority of VA health care providers “really, truly understand” veterans. Part 6 of his petition addresses this point.

“You know how some people have workplace sensitivity courses? Well, they should have something like that regarding veterans, where providers try to understand the world of a veteran, and what makes them different from a civilian,” he said.

“I can sit there and direct my care because I’m a corpsman,” he said. “But what happens to these guys who don’t have the background — or don’t know any better — that put their blind trust and faith in a system that’s supposed to be there for them? And it fails them?”

“You don’t have suicides in [regular] hospitals around the country,” he continued. “But the fact that you have the 12 suicides since 2015, on VA property … that’s a personal thing. That’s a personal message.”

That is why Schmitt drafted his seven-part petition – in the hope of preventing similar incidents from happening.

“The veterans and our service members sacrifice so much, and we ask so much from them,” he said. “They’re all heroes in the fact that they raised their hand and said, ‘Look, U.S. military, send me wherever you’re going to go.’”

Schmitt created a Facebook event for the petition, including links to each of the seven parts and a record of the 12 veteran suicides since 2015. (For more from the author of “Navy Vet Creates 7-Point Plan to Fix the VA. But He Needs Your Signature by Christmas.” please click HERE)

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Veteran Dies With Maggots Crawling in Wound, Four Employees at VA Hospital Immediately Resign

Four employees at the Talihina Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs center have resigned after a patient was found with maggots in his wound shortly before he died.

Talihina director Myles Deering confirmed the maggots didn’t enter the wound after the patient died on Oct. 3, but rather were present while the patient was still alive . . .

eering also serves as secretary of the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs, which is separate from the federal Department of Veterans Affairs.

The 73-year-old veteran, Owen Reese Peterson, initially came to the medical center with an infection, but then ended up with sepsis, to which he later succumbed . . .

The Oklahoma VA has since reported the maggot incident to the Oklahoma State Department of Health and has sent over a report to the district attorney, which means charges may be forthcoming. (Read more from “Veteran Dies With Maggots Crawling in Wound, Four Employees at VA Hospital Immediately Resign” HERE)

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‘Clear Bias’ Against Hiring Veterans Under Obama Administration, Says Former VA Official

Veterans must be given preference in securing federal jobs, according to long-standing laws, but hiring hasn’t always worked out in their favor. A federal audit found that on numerous occasions, agencies placed Obama administration political appointees into career government jobs with civil service protections—bypassing veterans.

Much of the federal bureaucracy has turned against men and women who served the country in the military, said Darin Selnick, a retired Air Force captain and former official at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“There is a clear bias against veterans. They think veterans should start at the bottom like everyone else,” Selnick told The Daily Signal in a phone interview.

“The government culture wants everyone to start from the bottom in government. But it’s not as if veterans never worked for the government. They worked for the Department of Defense.”

Selnick, the senior veterans affairs adviser for the advocacy group Concerned Veterans for America, was also the special assistant to the secretary of Veterans Affairs and the director for the Center for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives during the George W. Bush administration, said the preference is most helpful for lower-level jobs.

“The country realizes it has a debt,” Selnick said. “Without the military, we would be in terrible shape. They put their lives on the line and are willing to die.”

Under federal law, veterans who are disabled or served active duty get preference over other applicants on the condition they are qualified for the job. If a veteran scores 70 percent or higher on the civil service exam, the applicant will have an extra five to 10 points added to their rankings for the job.

Some form of veterans’ preference for federal jobs has been in place since the Civil War, according to the Office of Personnel Management. This policy was established to help disabled veterans especially. Congress updated the law with the Veterans’ Preference Act of 1944 in the midst of World War II.

President Franklin Roosevelt, in supporting the law, stated:

I believe that the federal government, functioning in its capacity as an employer, should take the lead in assuring those who are in the armed forces that, when they return, special consideration will be given to them in their efforts to get employment.

The post-Civil War law specified disabled veterans, recognizing that economic damage that could result from injuries in service to the country. After World War I, executive orders expanded preference to all honorably discharged war veterans.

The World War II-era law largely codified existing executive orders.

The Office of Personnel Management website states:

Recognizing their sacrifice, Congress enacted laws to prevent veterans seeking federal employment from being penalized for their time in military service. Veterans’ preference recognizes the economic loss suffered by citizens who have served their country in uniform, restores veterans to a favorable competitive position for government employment, and acknowledges the larger obligation owed to disabled veterans.

The Government Accountability Office reported last month that federal agencies didn’t follow procedures to avoid favoritism in hiring a quarter of President Barack Obama’s political appointees that transitioned into career positions. The report sampled the actions of 30 federal agencies in such “conversions” from Jan. 1, 2010, to Oct. 1, 2015.

In cases with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Department of Health and Human Services, this meant bypassing past qualified veterans despite that statutory preference.

Unlike political appointees, federal workers in the civil service system are hired through a merit system, are difficult to fire, and carry over in changes of administrations, Republican or Democrat.

In 1883, Congress passed the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act to replace a “spoils system” with a merit system of hiring. Under the merit system, employees would be specifically hired based on scores and tests rather than the preference of the political party in power. The new system also made it more difficult for a new administration to fire workers.

Agencies and employees face consequences when procedures are not followed, said Office of Personnel Management spokesman Sandy Day.

“In such cases, [Office of Personnel Management] conducts a post-appointment review,” Day told The Daily Signal. “When we cannot conclude the hiring action was free from political influence, we require the agency to take corrective action and hold the agency accountable for carrying it out.”

If there was a violation, Day said, “The individual would either have to be placed back in his or her political position or, if that was not possible, have his or her employment terminated.”

Veterans’ preference has been scrutinized, even under Senate Armed Service Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., as the Senate voted to make changes in its version of the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act. Congress has since removed the changes from the bill.

Defense Department officials reportedly pressed for the change in June, concerned that some of the senior positions weren’t going to the most experienced applicants.

The change would have limited veterans’ preference to “single use,” which means, it could only be used to get one job. So, veterans already working in government civilian jobs who are applying for higher positions, would not have preference.

However, McCain scrapped the idea in October, after veteran groups objected. In a letter to the American Legion, McCain said, “Given your and others’ concerns, I will ensure that this provision, which is not included in the House bill, is not included in the NDAA conference report.”

“We appreciate Sen. McCain’s stalwart defense of an important benefit for all veterans who’ve served and sacrificed for their country,” American Legion National Commander Charles E. Schmidt said in a statement. “We look forward to working with the chairman to ensure the final NDAA properly protects this earned benefit.” (For more from the author of “‘Clear Bias’ Against Hiring Veterans Under Obama Administration, Says Former VA Official” please click HERE)

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Why Is the VA Spending Millions on Solar Panels While Veterans Die?

The environmental religion of the radical Left has infected the Department of Veterans Affairs management, at the grave expense of veterans.

After news recently broke that the VA spent millions of dollars on high-end art purchases over the past eight years, the Washington Free Beacon, per a Veterans Affairs audit, reports the VA spent over $408 million on solar panels since 2010 while neglected veterans were dying waiting for care.

The solar panel projects have experienced “significant delays,” with some of these systems completely inoperable:

The watchdog conducted an audit of 11 of the 15 solar projects awarded between fiscal years 2010 and 2013 that were still in progress as of May last year. The investigation, which was completed in March, found that only two of the 11 solar panel projects were fully completed. […]

The contracts for the 11 projects reviewed by investigators totaled about $95 million, though some have become more expensive because of poor planning and delays. The VA spent more than $408 million on its “green management program” solar panel projects between fiscal years 2010 and 2015, according to annual budget records.

While the VA was wasting hundreds of millions of dollars on these exorbitant vanity projects, employees were manipulating hospital records to cover up the distressing wait times for service.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has made VA reform a key tenet of his campaign. Among Trump’s proposed reforms are increased funding for PTSD services, job training and placement services, firing “incompetent and corrupt” VA executives, and “modernizing” VA operations.

But proponents of the same enviro-Marxist ideology that thought solar panels on federal buildings were more important than veterans’ healthcare services have come out swinging against Trump. The Washington Examiner reports that following Trump’s economic policy speech in Detroit Monday, an environmentalist group blasted the remarks for “doubl[ing] down on dirty fuels.”

Billionaire activist Tom Steyer’s group NextGen Climate immediately criticized Trump’s ideas as the policies of an all-white, all-male policy team, which offers “nothing ‘new’ or ‘fresh,'” but only looks to protect corporate profits for big polluters.

“The Trump economic agenda — developed by Trump’s all-male, all-white economic advisory team — doubles down on dirty fossil fuels and ignores the enormous economic opportunities presented by clean energy,” the group said.

While the radical Left is free to take shots at anyone it so pleases, the real-world consequences of environmental zealotry continue to be felt throughout the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The result? Incomplete solar panel projects, hundreds of millions of dollars wasted, and wounded veterans neglected. (For more from the author of “Why Is the VA Spending Millions on Solar Panels While Veterans Die?” please click HERE)

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Report: 300,000 Vets Died While Waiting for Health Care at VA

More than 300,000 American military veterans likely died while waiting for health care — and nearly twice as many are still waiting — according to a new Department of Veterans Affairs inspector general report.

The IG report says “serious” problems with enrollment data are making it impossible to determine exactly how many veterans are actively seeking health care from the VA, and how many were. For example, “data limitations” prevent investigators from determining how many now-deceased veterans applied for health care benefits or when.

But the findings would appear to confirm reports that first surfaced last year that many veterans died while awaiting care, as their applications got stuck in a system that the VA has struggled to overhaul. Some applications, the IG report says, go back nearly two decades . . .

More than half the applications listed as pending as of last year do not have application dates, and investigators “could not reliably determine how many records were associated with actual applications for enrollment” in VA health care, the report said.

The report also says VA workers incorrectly marked thousands of unprocessed health-care applications as completed and may have deleted 10,000 or more electronic “transactions” over the past five years. (Read more from “Report: 300,000 Vets Died While Waiting for Health Care at VA” HERE)

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Veterans Are Not Applying for Discharge Status Upgrades, Pentagon Blamed

Very few veterans take advantage of a Pentagon policy designed to make it easier for veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) to upgrade their discharge status and become eligible to apply for veterans’ benefits, according to a Yale Law Clinic report.

At a news conference Monday, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., veterans, and Yale law students, blamed the Department of Defense for not adequately publicizing the policy to veterans with less than honorable discharges. Since new guidelines were announced last year, just 201 of tens of thousands of eligible veterans applied for a PTSD-related service upgrade, according to the report. Blumenthal called the statistic “a staggering, outrageous fact.”

“Veterans on the streets of New Haven or Connecticut or the rest of the country have no idea about this,” Blumenthal said. “It takes a vigorous and rigorous effort, which the DOD committed to and they have failed,” he added.

Sundiata Sidibe, a student in the law school’s Veterans Legal Services Clinic, called the number of applicants “miniscule.” In previous years, an average of 39 veterans applied annually for status upgrades in connection with PTSD, the report states.

Blumenthal, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, had asked the Pentagon to give the committee a progress report by August 2015 on its efforts to inform veterans about the policy. A report was never submitted, he said. (Read more from “Veterans Are Not Applying for Discharge Status Upgrades, Pentagon Blamed” HERE)

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Country Music Legend Just Released News That Changes Everything for Veterans

Although country music legend Charlie Daniels is famous for his fiddle-playing skills, what he does for our military is even more impressive.

The Journey Home Project, a non-profit organization co-founded by Daniels, recently donated $50,000 for the new Veterans and Military Family Center at Middle Tennessee State University.

The center will not only provide distinctive space for study sessions and discussions, but also a VA mental health counselor on-site to assist veteran students and their families as they cope with post-war traumas . . .

The 2,600-square-foot center will also include a conference room for employer job interviews and video teleconferencing to benefit veterans.

“The new center will encourage and facilitate the success of our veterans as they transition out of uniform into academics, and then into future employment opportunities, as they strive to become leaders in the community much like they were in uniform. It will also help to answer all of their questions and give them a place to go where they’re talking to people with a commonality of background, purpose and focus,” said U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Keith Huber, MTSU’s senior adviser for veterans and leadership initiatives. (Read more from “Country Music Legend Just Released News That Changes Everything for Veterans” HERE)

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Nearly One Million Veterans May Have Pending Health Care Requests

l_ssveteranhealthcarex1200Nearly 900,000 military veterans officially have pending applications for health care from the Department of Veterans Affairs, the department’s inspector general said Wednesday, but “serious” problems with enrollment data make it impossible to determine how many veterans were actively seeking VA health care.

About one-third of the 867,000 veterans with pending applications are likely deceased, the report says, adding that “data limitations” prevent investigators from determining how many now-deceased veterans applied for health care benefits or when. The applications go back nearly two decades, and officials said some applicants may have died years ago.

More than half the applications listed as pending as of last year do not have application dates, and investigators “could not reliably determine how many records were associated with actual applications for enrollment” in VA health care, the report said. (Read more from “Nearly One Million Veterans May Have Pending Health Care Requests” HERE)

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Hidden Camera: James O’Keefe Exposes How the VA Is Turning Veterans Into Drug Addicts

This is a must watch exposé by James O’Keefe and Project Veritas on how the VA is admittedly turning veterans into drug addicts. And they are doing it just to get these vets out of their hair, so to speak, instead of actually treating their illnesses. It’s simply disgusting.

(Read more from “Hidden Camera: James O’Keefe Exposes How the va Is Turning Veterans Into Drug Addicts” HERE)

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