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McNerney Waits for Green Light E-mail
Written by Rob L. Wagner   
Tuesday, 24 July 2007
He hopes the Veterans Administration will pay for a retreat for returning soldiers in Livermore.

Although Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson is holding his cards close to his vest about future projects, Rep. Jerry McNerney, D-Pleasanton, said he hopes that VA officials will fund a retreat for returning soldiers from Iraq.

Livermore’s 115-acre VA Medical Center, with its hospital and nursing home, is almost certain to close because of the federal VA department’s budgeting problems. But McNerney is pushing to keep the center open to treat post-traumatic stress disorder and other psychiatric illnesses faced by veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

"We hope to use it as a residence for veterans that might need some time to adjust to PTSD," McNerney said in a telephone interview Monday.

But Nicholson, who is the subject of a lawsuit brought by disabled veterans and who has submitted his resignation and will leave his post Oct. 1, is not committing himself to the idea.

"We did go meet with Secretary Nicholson, and he seemed interested in our ideas and suggestions, but he didn’t commit to anything," McNerney said. "He seemed genuinely concerned."

While McNerney waits for an answer, he has two things going for him. Last week, Nicholson announced that he would add mental-health services to more than 100 VA medical centers to treat returning veterans for depression and other illnesses.

The VA also will add 23 new so-called vet centers, which are small, storefront walk-in clinics with staffs of five workers each. More suicide prevention counselors will be hired, and mental-health conferences will help state and local services coordinate to provide assistance.

A less direct impact — but one that could provide the impetus for more services — is a class-action lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco that alleges the Veterans Administration is denying veterans disability pay and mental-health treatment.

The complaint, filed on behalf of veterans by Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans United for Truth, alleges that the VA is failing to provide prompt disability payments and additional staff for medical care and services for PTSD.

McNerney, who is on the committee for Veterans Affairs, sells the medical center as a peaceful and idyllic setting for veterans to "rest and garden." He noted the grounds are remote and would allow veterans to decompress from their wartime experiences.

"There is a lot of room on campus," he said. "Nice palm trees, serene. Veterans can reside there and do gardening and do group sessions for a couple of weeks. Recuperating after the experience of combat, the sooner help is available and treatment comes, the better it is."

In May, a panel of medical experts reported that the number of veterans filing claims for PTSD jumped from 120,265 in 1999 to 215,871 in 2004. Payments climbed from $1.72 billion to $4.28 billion during the same period

The Livermore veterans’ medical center has a hospital and a nursing home for 120 long-term patients and 30 sub-acute inpatients.

Closure of the medical center is almost certain.

"The clinic almost certainly will be closed," the congressman said.

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Comments (9)add
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written by sharonbrock , July 24, 2007
Those troops deserve the best medical care. I hope Livermore will get all the radiation from depleted uranium out of their system, I am interested in how they plan to do that. McNerney, MAKE IT MANDATORY TO HAVE EACH TROOP TESTED FOR DEPLETED URANIUM SO THEY CAN BE TREATED PROPERTY, do not hide diagnosis. We must be informed so we can better prepare ourselves for the returning troops and their health.
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written by sharonbrock , July 24, 2007
HOWEVER, I have this thought, maybe they wanted to close the medical clinic so there would not be evidence connected to Livermore Lab to show the residents that THERE ARE EFFECTS FROM DU!
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written by sharonbrock , July 24, 2007
"Depleted uranium contamination causes virtually every known illness from acute skin rashes, severe headaches, muscle and joint pain, and general fatigue, to major birth defects, infection, depression, cardiovascular disease, brain tumors, and every other type of cancer. Uranium replaces calcium, destroying teeth and bones.

D.U. is causing permanent disability and death for hundreds of thousands of American veterans who served in the Middle East.

For more information, every military family should watch Beyond Treason, and every high school should play the DVD for students subjected to military recruitment. According to experts interviewed on the DVD, some soldiers return home contaminated with billions of radioactive ceramic particles."

Please, McNerney, make it mandatory for the troops to be tested for depleted uranium so they can be treated properly.


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written by Mark David Ecklestein , July 24, 2007
The world's richest country spends more money on defense than the rest of the world combined, and yet has never adequately provided for those souls wounded while fighting to defend it.

Come on, VA. Cough up. Congress, step up to bat.
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written by sharonbrock , July 24, 2007
You may have to section the hospital off for "Hospice" care for those heavily contaminated troops. Soon the reality of the war will come home.
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written by Tom Benigno , July 25, 2007
Pushing for more hospitals to open, help me call Jerry Mc Nerney to get the backing to open more military hospitals. 28,000 wounded troops need our help. Pombo said he didn't have the time while he was in congress. Help Jerry get the funding for the hospitals, give him the time to do it now.

Benigno

Benigno
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written by isthistrue? , July 25, 2007
Those troops did not let us down, they kept the war out of USA. Should we let them down, hell, no! Give them the best medical care. United States must now take care of them. Call McNerney, keep the heat on!
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written by sonora , July 25, 2007
"Bush/Cheney ordered the largest amount of depleted uranium to be used in the battlefield in the history of warfare" I want to see Bush and Cheney stand in the battlefield where spent depleted uranium lay on the ground contaminated, I want to see them pick it up. Of course not, the war does not inadvertently affect them. This is bad, so bad! Poor troops! God help them!


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written by lloyd sutherland , July 27, 2007
There are soldiers who need time to decompress. Besides the debt we owe the returning soldiers for having them kill humans, society will be better off if soldiers can adjust from battlefield killing and ambushes. I think of that National Gaurdsman who used sniper technique to kill his estranged wife while she was singing onstage.

One minute a soldier is on edge for IEDs, ambushes, snipers, and suicide bombers. They see Iraqies ripped apart like road kill, then they come home like nothing has happened? A lot of them are probably comming home to a wife or a girlfriend who may not be able to handle this. We owe them. Lets pay our debt.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 July 2007 )