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LAW STUDENTS TRY TO HELP VETERANS IN BENEFITS
BATTLE -- "If I cannot work anymore, I certainly
would
like to have some type of compensation."

For background on this legal help program, use
the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=UDM&op=and
Story here...
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008
/mar/13/law-students-try-help-veterans-benefits-battles/
Story below:
-------------------------
Law Students Try To Help Veterans In Benefits
Battles
By KAREN BRANCH-BRIOSO of The Tampa Tribune
TAMPA - As a projectionist for the Army Air Forces in World War II, Ella
Robitaille played training films for troops heading to battle.
"I showed the fellows how to take care of themselves with diseases and
stuff," said Robitaille, 83, of Apollo Beach.
Wednesday, it was her turn to learn how to help herself. In a darkened
room, students and a professor from the University of Detroit Mercy School
of Law projected slide after slide onto a wall at South Tampa's American
Legion Post 5 with details on benefits available to veterans.
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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The mobile law school is in town today, too, to
provide free legal assistance to veterans such as Robitaille and to
educate them about federal benefits. Tampa is the sixth city on the
nationwide tour of Project SALUTE, which helps veterans and trains local
lawyers to follow up with those with federal benefits needs.
Failing health and failing pocketbooks brought many of the veterans to the
Tampa leg of the tour.
Robitaille, a six-time cancer survivor who takes 10 prescriptions, long
relied on free prescriptions and no-fee doctors' visits from Veterans
Affairs. Then, acting as guardian to her ailing sister-in-law Blanche
Johnson, she sold Johnson's mobile home in 2004.
"When I sold her house, they reported it to the IRS as my money,"
Robitaille said. "Now, they're getting me to pay for income tax on $50,000
that wasn't mine. They took my VA benefits from me. In 2005, I got a
$2,000 bill from the VA. I still owe more than $1,500. If I don't pay it,
I'll lose some of my Social Security benefits."
Students Commit To Follow-Up
After the slideshow, Robitaille met with second-year law student Katherine
Carr, who took down the details of her case — and promised to get back to
her.
"As law students, we can't give them specific legal advice," Carr said.
"We'll be discussing the cases with the supervisor that's on the trip with
us. Hopefully, we'll be able to help them by referring them to pro bono
attorneys in the area."
On Friday, the law school will hold a training session for lawyers
interested in providing free help to veterans.
Carr said she and her colleagues mainly fielded requests for help from
veterans whose claims had been denied by the VA.
Arthur Jones, 58, of St. Petersburg, said he's barely surviving on his
$900-a-month veterans pension. He knows he would receive a much fatter
disability check if he had proof his bad back came from injuries when he
was in the Army from 1969 to 1970. He's tried since 1975 to get
service-connected disability status, but the VA told him his military
records were among those destroyed in a 1973 fire at the National
Personnel Records Center in St. Louis.
Then last year, the VA's regional office discovered his full medical file.
He plans to re-open his application for service-connected benefits.
Wednesday, he came for free advice on how to do that.
"Before I re-open my case, I want to make sure everything is correct,"
Jones said. "I only get $900 from the government now. The VA gave me a
disability pension. But it's not enough to live on."
Learning About Limits
The veterans learned about the available benefits even if their disability
was unrelated to military service. Those benefits are available to
disabled veterans with low income: at most, $11,181 a year if they have no
dependents; $14,643 with a dependent.
Those income limits earned a Korean War veteran from Riverview a VA denial
of disability benefits. But it takes two months' worth of his Social
Security and pension benefits to pay for his 14 prescriptions. So he came
Wednesday for advice.
The veteran, who didn't want to be identified for this report, said the
law student who heard his story suggested he apply again.
Kendall Koch, 60, of St. Petersburg, also came after his claim was
rejected.
He said he served in the Army during the Vietnam era as a nuclear weapons
maintenance technician in Greece and Germany. After decades of suffering
from infections all over his body that could never be cured, he said his
private physician in Indiana suggested he might be suffering from
radiation poisoning.
He filed a disability claim with the VA.
"All's I get is they denied my claim," said Koch, who said his doctor at
the local VA hasn't yet offered the same diagnosis — but he seems
perplexed by Koch's recurring infections. "He's never seen the likes of
what's going on with me."
Undeterred, Koch sat on a bench Wednesday outside the American Legion
post, determinedly filling out a questionnaire that he hopes will get him
another chance at a diagnosis of a service-connected disability.
Leroy Johnson, 59, of Brandon, came with similar hopes.
Just a few years away from a full state pension, he underwent a quadruple
bypass in February. He's worried he won't be able to work through full
retirement age. He is an Army veteran who served in Vietnam during the
time of Agent Orange exposure.
So he came to see whether his heart condition could be attributed to his
military service. He fears for his financial future.
"If I cannot work anymore, I certainly would like to have some type of
compensation," Johnson said.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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