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DEMOCRATIC PRESS
RELEASE
November 9, 2007
AKAKA INTRODUCES COMPENSATION FOR COMBAT VETERANS
ACT
Legislation to Improve Combat Veterans’
Eligibility for Compensation
WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman of the
Veterans' Affairs Committee, introduced legislation Tuesday to remove
documentation barriers that in some cases prevent combat veterans from
receiving compensation for their disabilities. The "Compensation for
Combat Veterans Act," would provide that evidence in a veteran's record of
assignment in a combat zone shall be sufficient for a veteran to prove his
or her combat service, when other military documents are unavailable.
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Chairman Akaka said: "Veterans should never be denied compensation for
disabilities sustained in combat areas because the military failed to make
or maintain adequate records. I urge my colleagues to support this
legislation so all combat veterans can receive the compensation they are
entitled to and deserve."
Oversight investigations by the Committee on Veterans' Affairs found that
veterans are being delayed or denied compensation for combat injuries
because they are unable to produce official military documentation proving
their personal participation in a specific combat incident. These veterans
include a Marine injured in Iraq by an IED blast, a veteran accidentally
shot by a fellow servicemember in Iraq, and a Vietnam Army Infantryman who
served in the Tet Offensive of 1968.
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Chairman Akaka's floor statement on the
Compensation for Combat Veterans Act is copied below:
MR. AKAKA. Mr. President, today I introduce the proposed "Compensation for
Combat Veterans Act." This legislation would remove a barrier to the fair
adjudication of claims for VA benefits filed by veterans who have
disabilities incurred or aggravated by their military service in combat
areas. Under existing law, veterans who can establish that they served in
combat do not have to produce official military records to support their
claim for disabilities related to that service.
At present, some veterans, disabled by their service in Iraq and
Afghanistan as well as those who served earlier in Korea and Vietnam, are
unable to benefit from this liberalizing evidentiary requirement because
they have difficulty proving personal participation in combat by official
military documents.
Under an opinion of the Department of Veterans Affairs General Counsel, VA
GC Opinion 12-99, veterans must establish by official military records or
decorations that they "personally participated in events constituting an
actual fight or encounter with a military foe or hostile unit or
instrumentality." Oversight visits by Committee staff to VA regional
offices have found claims denied as a result of this policy because those
who served in combat zones were not able to produce official documentation
of their personal participation in an actual fight from official military
sources.
Some of these cases include a Marine Combat Engineer serving in Iraq who
was exposed to IED's, an Army veteran accidently shot in Iraq by a fellow
servicemember, and an Army Infantryman whose records showed participation
in the Tet offensive of 1968, but not "personal participation in an actual
fight." In other cases, extensive delays in claims processing occur while
VA adjudicators attempt to obtain official military documents showing that
a Marine who served in Bagdad or Fallujah was personally exposed to IED's.
The legislation I am introducing would overturn the General Counsel
precedent opinion. I believe that the requirement in that opinion is
inconsistent with the original intent of Congress in liberalizing the
requirements for proof of service-connection in cases involving veterans
who served in combat areas. As the Senate noted in 1941, in the report on
the original bill providing special consideration for combat veterans:
the absence of an official record of care or treatment in many of such
cases is readily explained by the conditions surrounding the service of
combat veterans. It was emphasized in the hearings that the establishment
of records of care or treatment of veterans in other than combat areas,
and particularly in the States, was a comparatively simple matter as
compared with the veteran who served in combat. Either the veteran
attempted to carry on despite his disability to avoid having a record made
lest he might be separated from his organization or, as in many cases, the
records themselves were lost.
S. Rep. 77- 902 to H.R. 4905 at 2.
While some improvements have been made since 1941 in obtaining and
maintaining records in combat areas, record keeping and transmittal of
records in combat areas remains problematic.
This bill would require that, in cases in which the veteran can
demonstrate service in a recognized combat area and alleges disabilities
related to that service in a combat area, the relaxed evidentiary
principles intended by the Congress would apply, with no requirement for
further evidence from the veteran regarding his or her specific activity.
I urge all of my colleagues to support this measure, so that combat
veterans of the current conflicts as well as those who served in earlier
conflicts can receive the benefits they deserve in a timely manner.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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