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DEMOCRATIC PRESS RELEASE
March 5, 2007
CHAIRMAN AKAKA DELIVERS FLOOR STATEMENT
RECOMMENDING A $2.9 BILLION INCREASE OVER ADMINISTRATIONS BUDGET
Akaka recommends $2.9 billion increase (over Administration's request)
for veterans' medical care
Mr. President, last week, my majority colleagues and I on the Committee
on Veterans' Affairs submitted the required views and estimates on the
Administration's Fiscal Year 2008 budget for the Department of Veterans
Affairs.
In summary, Mr. President, we are recommending a $2.9 billion increase
over the Administration's request for veterans' medical care. We believe
that this is the total amount necessary to treat all eligible veterans
and maintain the quality of VA medical services through the upcoming
fiscal year.
This amount would also provide VA with resources to absorb the thousands
of service members presently on medical hold at Walter Reed and in other
military facilities. We must ensure that these brave men and women are
provided the best care possible.
Today's Washington Post leads with a story titled "It is Not Just Walter
Reed." The story focuses on the various Federal facilities across the
system, including VA facilities. I urge my colleagues to understand that
at the heart of any solution to improve care is increasing resources to
match demand and to ensure that the facilities themselves are up to par.
I intend to hold a hearing later this month on cooperation between VA
and the Department of Defense on the treatment of injured service
members, and I will pursue the situation at Walter Reed and other
military treatment facilities that are handling the bulk of returning
Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans to ensure that the government is
helping those who have been injured in service to our country, and their
families.
I want to highlight just a few of the accounts for which we are seeking
substantial increases.
In our estimate, we recommended an additional $300 million for treatment
of traumatic brain injuries. These funds will support the expansion of
VA's capacity and will help to resolve case management problems
identified in an IG investigation last summer. Traumatic brain injuries
are turning out to be the hallmark of this war. We simply must ensure
that VA has the resources to do more than just keep up; but to become a
leader in brain injury care.
The recent televised account of ABC newsman Bob Woodruff's long recovery
from a brain injury endured in Iraq has highlighted the suffering of new
veterans and their families. Looking at these young soldiers with such
devastating injuries reminds us of the true costs of war. We know that
the transition from DoD to VA can be a tough one. And this is even more
true for those veterans suffering with TBI. At the start of this war, VA
was unprepared to deal with returning servicemembers with injuries of
all kinds. The budgets in the early years underestimated these costs,
and many VA facilities were caught flat-footed. Over the last year, VA
has made strides in improving the lead brain injury centers. Yet, VA
still has miles to go in caring for servicemembers when they return home
to their communities. Many of these men and women are quite young and
will live with brain injuries for the rest of their lives. VA must do
more than simply send them back to their communities.
I am also concerned that veterans with less severe forms of TBI may not
be receiving appropriate compensation for their injuries. We need to
make sure that VA has the resources necessary to provide for specialist
examinations and appropriate testing so that veterans who file claims
for headaches, memory loss, and other effects of TBI may be properly
compensated and rehabilitated.
We also recommended an increase of $693 million over the
Administration's request for VA mental health programs. These funds are
essential to guarantee timely access to mental health services for
veterans of the Global War on Terror and prior conflicts, including the
Vietnam War. We have heard too many stories of veterans in crisis who
were unable to see a mental health professional for lack of staff or
beds at VA facilities. It is time to fully fund VA's mental health
programs, so that not one more troubled veteran finds himself or herself
on the street for lack of therapy or counseling, or, far worse, takes
his or her own life.
As Chairman of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs, I am deeply committed
to have all in Congress recognize the reality that meeting the needs of
veterans is truly part of the ongoing costs of war. I urge my fellow
Senators to join us as we work to uphold our end of the bargain by
giving our Nation's veterans accessible, first-rate medical care. Thank
you.
---------------
Larry Scott
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