Paul Simon
2009-01-03 23:16:10 UTC
Did You Know 200,000 Vets Are Sleeping on the Streets?
By Aaron Glantz, New America Media. Posted January 3, 2009.
America's promise to "Support the Troops" ends the moment they take
off the uniform and try to make the transition to civilian life.
SAN FRANCISCO - Roy Lee Brantley shivers in the cold December morning
as he waits in line for food outside the Ark of Refuge mission, which
sits amid warehouses and artists lofts a stone's throw from the
skyscrapers of downtown San Francisco.
Brantley's beard is long, white and unkempt. The African-American
man's skin wrinkled beyond his 62 years. He lives in squalor in a
dingy residential hotel room with the bathroom down the hall. In some
ways, his current situation marks an improvement. "I've slept in
parks," he says, "and on the sidewalk. Now at least I have a room."
Like the hundreds of others in line for food, Brantley has worn the
military uniform. Most, like Brantley, carry their service IDs and
red, white and blue cards from the Department of Veterans Affairs in
their wallets or around their necks. In 1967, he deployed to Vietnam
with the 1st Cavalry Division of the U.S. Army. By the time he left
the military five years later, Brantley had attained the rank of
sergeant and been decorated for his valor and for the wounds he
sustained in combat.
"I risked my life for this democracy and got a Bronze Star," he says.
"I shed blood for this country and got the Purple Heart after a mortar
blast sent shrapnel into my face and leg. But when I came back home
from Vietnam I was having problems. I tried to hurt my wife because
she was Filipino. Every time I looked at her I thought I was in
Vietnam again. So we broke up."
In 1973, Brantley filed a disability claim with the federal government
for mental wounds sustained in combat overseas. Over the years, the
Department of Veterans Affairs has denied his claim five separate
times. "You go over there and risk your life for America and your
mind's all messed up, America should take care of you, right," he
says, knowing that for him and the other veterans in line for free
food that promise has not been kept.
On any given night 200,000 U.S. veterans sleep homeless on the streets
of America. One out of every four people -- and one out of every three
men -- sleeping in a car, in front of a shop door, or under a freeway
overpass has worn a military uniform. Some like Brantley have been on
the streets for years. Others are young and women returning home
wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan, quickly slipping through the
cracks.
For each of these homeless veterans, America's promise to "Support the
Troops" ended the moment he or she took off the uniform and tried to
make the difficult transition to civilian life. There, they
encountered a hostile and cumbersome bureaucracy set up by the
Department of Veterans Affairs. In a best-case scenario, a wounded
veteran must wait six months to hear back from the VA. Those who
appeal a denial have to wait an average of four and a half years for
their answer. In the six months leading up to March 31st of this year,
nearly 1,500 veterans died waiting to learn if their disability claims
would be approved by the government.
There are patriotic Americans trying to solve this problem. Last
month, two veterans' organizations, Vietnam Veterans of America and
Veterans of Modern Warfare, filed suit in federal court demanding the
government decide disability claims brought by wounded soldiers within
three months. Predictably, however, the VA is trying to block the
effort. On December 17, their lawyers convinced Reggie Walton, a judge
appointed by President Bush, who ruled that imposing a quicker
deadline for payment of benefits was a task for Congress and the
president-not the courts.
President-elect Barack Obama has the power to end this national
disgrace. He has the power to ensure to streamline the VA bureaucracy
so it helps rather than fights those who have been wounded in the line
of duty. He can ensure that this latest generation of returning
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan does not receive the bum rap the
Vietnam generation got. Let 2008 be the last year thousands of
homeless veterans stand in line for free food during the holiday
season. Let it be the last year hundreds of thousands sleep homeless
on the street.
By Aaron Glantz, New America Media. Posted January 3, 2009.
America's promise to "Support the Troops" ends the moment they take
off the uniform and try to make the transition to civilian life.
SAN FRANCISCO - Roy Lee Brantley shivers in the cold December morning
as he waits in line for food outside the Ark of Refuge mission, which
sits amid warehouses and artists lofts a stone's throw from the
skyscrapers of downtown San Francisco.
Brantley's beard is long, white and unkempt. The African-American
man's skin wrinkled beyond his 62 years. He lives in squalor in a
dingy residential hotel room with the bathroom down the hall. In some
ways, his current situation marks an improvement. "I've slept in
parks," he says, "and on the sidewalk. Now at least I have a room."
Like the hundreds of others in line for food, Brantley has worn the
military uniform. Most, like Brantley, carry their service IDs and
red, white and blue cards from the Department of Veterans Affairs in
their wallets or around their necks. In 1967, he deployed to Vietnam
with the 1st Cavalry Division of the U.S. Army. By the time he left
the military five years later, Brantley had attained the rank of
sergeant and been decorated for his valor and for the wounds he
sustained in combat.
"I risked my life for this democracy and got a Bronze Star," he says.
"I shed blood for this country and got the Purple Heart after a mortar
blast sent shrapnel into my face and leg. But when I came back home
from Vietnam I was having problems. I tried to hurt my wife because
she was Filipino. Every time I looked at her I thought I was in
Vietnam again. So we broke up."
In 1973, Brantley filed a disability claim with the federal government
for mental wounds sustained in combat overseas. Over the years, the
Department of Veterans Affairs has denied his claim five separate
times. "You go over there and risk your life for America and your
mind's all messed up, America should take care of you, right," he
says, knowing that for him and the other veterans in line for free
food that promise has not been kept.
On any given night 200,000 U.S. veterans sleep homeless on the streets
of America. One out of every four people -- and one out of every three
men -- sleeping in a car, in front of a shop door, or under a freeway
overpass has worn a military uniform. Some like Brantley have been on
the streets for years. Others are young and women returning home
wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan, quickly slipping through the
cracks.
For each of these homeless veterans, America's promise to "Support the
Troops" ended the moment he or she took off the uniform and tried to
make the difficult transition to civilian life. There, they
encountered a hostile and cumbersome bureaucracy set up by the
Department of Veterans Affairs. In a best-case scenario, a wounded
veteran must wait six months to hear back from the VA. Those who
appeal a denial have to wait an average of four and a half years for
their answer. In the six months leading up to March 31st of this year,
nearly 1,500 veterans died waiting to learn if their disability claims
would be approved by the government.
There are patriotic Americans trying to solve this problem. Last
month, two veterans' organizations, Vietnam Veterans of America and
Veterans of Modern Warfare, filed suit in federal court demanding the
government decide disability claims brought by wounded soldiers within
three months. Predictably, however, the VA is trying to block the
effort. On December 17, their lawyers convinced Reggie Walton, a judge
appointed by President Bush, who ruled that imposing a quicker
deadline for payment of benefits was a task for Congress and the
president-not the courts.
President-elect Barack Obama has the power to end this national
disgrace. He has the power to ensure to streamline the VA bureaucracy
so it helps rather than fights those who have been wounded in the line
of duty. He can ensure that this latest generation of returning
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan does not receive the bum rap the
Vietnam generation got. Let 2008 be the last year thousands of
homeless veterans stand in line for free food during the holiday
season. Let it be the last year hundreds of thousands sleep homeless
on the street.