Tuesday, March 17, 2009

President Obama starts off on wrong foot with disabled veterans

Commander Rehbein of The American Legion, center

The American Legion Strongly Opposed to President's Plan to Charge Wounded Heroes for Treatment

To: POLITICAL EDITORS

Contact: Craig Roberts of The American Legion, +1-202-263-2982 Office, +1-202-406-0887 Cell

"I only hope the administration will really listen to us then. This matter has far more serious ramifications than the President is imagining,"


WASHINGTON, March 16 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The leader of the nation's largest veterans organization says he is "deeply disappointed and concerned" after a meeting with President Obama today to discuss a proposal to force private insurance companies to pay for the treatment of military veterans who have suffered service-connected disabilities and injuries. The Obama administration recently revealed a plan to require private insurance carriers to reimburse the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in such cases.

"It became apparent during our discussion today that the President intends to move forward with this unreasonable plan," said Commander David K. Rehbein of The American Legion. "He says he is looking to generate $540-million by this method, but refused to hear arguments about the moral and government-avowed obligations that would be compromised by it."

The Commander, clearly angered as he emerged from the session said, "This reimbursement plan would be inconsistent with the mandate ' to care for him who shall have borne the battle' given that the United States government sent members of the armed forces into harm's way, and not private insurance companies. I say again that The American Legion does not and will not support any plan that seeks to bill a veteran for treatment of a service connected disability at the very agency that was created to treat the unique need of America's veterans!"

Commander Rehbein was among a group of senior officials from veterans service organizations joining the President, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki and Steven Kosiak, the overseer of defense spending at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The group's early afternoon conversation at The White House was precipitated by a letter of protest presented to the President earlier this month. The letter, co-signed by Commander Rehbein and the heads of ten colleague organizations, read, in part, "

There is simply no logical explanation for billing a veteran's personal insurance for care that the VA has a responsibility to provide. While we understand the fiscal difficulties this country faces right now, placing the burden of those fiscal problems on the men and women who have already sacrificed a great deal for this country is unconscionable."


Read the rest here

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The outrage busting forth due to the current state of affairs, seems to dovetail with the Dept. of Homeland Security requiring the American Legion to turn over memberdhip records a while back.
The plans are being implemented and they already pre-registered the ones likely to resist, all under the smoke screen of fighting terrorism!

WILL NOT BOW!!!

Anonymous said...

"Dept. of Homeland Security requiring the American Legion to turn over membership records"

-I had not heard of that-absolutely outrageous!

Anonymous said...

Friend of mine is the Commander of the local,
He was pissed about this.
I am not a member but have known the Man all my life. I have many friends and a relative in the A.L. who were not happy about it.


WILL NOT BOW!!!

Anonymous said...

Department of Defense Directive 1404.10
DoD Civilian Expeditionary Workforce

www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/140410p.pdf

I think that this is going to be developed together with the National Service bill (used to recruit) in relation to Obama and Emmanuel's plans for a civilian militia under the control of the president that could be asked to do what the military would not do.

Please note especially in the first paragraph "support of combat operations" and "restoration of order." Note on bottom of page 2, "deployment tours"--2 years (then 90 days off with possible recall).