| BLUE WATER NAVY
VETERANS SEEK COMPENSATION
At the heart of the matter for Navy
vets seeking Agent Orange compensation from the VA is this
question: Who is a Vietnam veteran?
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... This is, without a doubt, the
best-written article I have ever read that explains the fight that
Blue Water Navy veterans are going through to get their deserved
benefits. Hats off to William R. Levesque. For more
from Levesque about military and veterans' issues,
click here. And, use our search engine for more about
the
Blue Water Navy,
Agent Orange and
Vietnam veterans.
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Navy's Vietnam vets seek equal benefits
By William R. Levesque
Times Staff Writer
A bill in Congress provides a seemingly straightforward answer to
a question that has vexed tens of thousands of Americans who
served in the U.S. military.
Who is a Vietnam veteran?
The answer is vitally important to Navy personnel who served in
Vietnam's territorial waters. For now, the Department of Veterans
Affairs' definition of a Vietnam veteran does not include these
men and women.
Legislation introduced in the House would change that, clearing
the way for Navy veterans to get disability payments and free
health care for ailments linked to the herbicide Agent Orange,
from type II diabetes to a variety of cancers.
At stake: $3 billion in benefits.
The VA says the pool of veterans who would become eligible for
benefits under the bill is 800,000, a number critics accuse the VA
of exaggerating to inflate costs that may scare Congress.
"They have no respect for Navy veterans," said Virgil Anderson,
63, a Navy veteran with diabetes who has a June 15 VA hearing in
St. Petersburg to appeal a denial of benefits.
Before 2002, sailors with the Vietnam Service Medal — given to
those who served in the theater of war on land or sea —
automatically got benefits, whether they were ground troops or in
the Navy.
But the VA, which did not return repeated calls for comment,
changed its policy in 2002, saying common sense dictated that
Agent Orange was used on land alone and therefore couldn't harm
Navy personnel.
The VA has argued it was not the intent of Congress to include the
Navy when it adopted a law in 1991 providing compensation for
Agent Orange.
Rep. Bob Filner, D-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on
Veterans Affairs, has introduced legislation to include Navy
veterans. He has more than 40 co-sponsors.
"These guys have suffered long enough," Filner said. "It's going
to cost money. But that's the cost of going to war. We're spending
trillions bailing out everybody else. Let's bail out Vietnam
veterans."
The chances for passage are uncertain. Filner said lawmakers may
be reluctant to add costs to the federal budget in an economic
crisis. A similar bill introduced last year failed.
• • •
The U.S. military sprayed 20 million gallons of the herbicide
Agent Orange in Vietnam to remove foliage that provided cover to
enemy fighters.
It
might seem counterintuitive that veterans who served on ships
would claim exposure to an herbicide used only on land. But
reality, Navy veterans say, is far more complicated.
Many Navy veterans say they often went ashore or their ships
transported barrels of Agent Orange.
Also, ships secured drinking water by distilling saltwater, and a
study by Australian scientists said the dioxin in Agent Orange
could not be eliminated by ship filtration systems and provided a
likely source of contamination to sailors.
Australia provides Agent Orange benefits to its Navy veterans of
Vietnam.
Bart Stitchman, co-director of the National Veterans Legal
Services Program, said testimony by many Navy veterans also
indicates that ships close to shore or in Vietnam harbors were
sometimes inadvertently sprayed by drifting winds that carried
Agent Orange.
A 1990 study by the Centers for Disease Control showed Vietnam
veterans had a rate of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma 50 percent higher
than the general population. The disease is linked to Agent
Orange.
More surprising was the finding that among all Vietnam veterans,
those in the Navy had the highest rate of non-Hodgkin's.
The VA still pays benefits to Navy veterans who have
non-Hodgkin's, though the agency does not link the illness to
Agent Orange exposure.
VA critics question how the agency can grant Navy veterans
non-Hodgkin's benefits while rejecting their claims for a slew of
other Agent Orange illnesses.
• • •
The VA decided by 2002 that the intent of Congress was that only
veterans with "boots on the ground" should be eligible for
benefits.
So the VA simply changed its definition of who was eligible. The
VA is required to advertise any rule change impacting benefits in
the Federal Register, allowing a period of public comment before
making a change.
The VA, Stitchman said, violated federal law by ignoring that
requirement.
In a 2005 article in the Journal of Law and Policy, Dr. Mark
Brown, director of Environmental Agents Service at the VA, made a
surprising admission: Science did not back up the VA's policy on
the Navy.
Calling Navy veterans "non-Vietnam veterans," reflecting the VA's
policy that sailors don't qualify, he wrote, "There is no obvious
scientific or public health basis for excluding these non-Vietnam
War veterans" from the presumption that their illnesses are caused
by Agent Orange.
To address that "apparent inequity," Brown wrote, the VA paid
benefits to those Navy veterans who could prove they were exposed
to Agent Orange, which ground troops need not do.
But proving exposure 40 years after the fact is often an
impossible hurdle, Navy veterans say.
• • •
In 2004, a Navy veteran appealed the VA's denial of his Agent
Orange claim in a veterans court set up to handle appeals of VA
cases. The case became a precedent-setter.
In 2006, that court ruled in favor of the veteran, saying the VA's
exclusion of Navy veterans was too restrictive. But last year, the
VA won the case on appeal to a higher court, which decided its
rules on Agent Orange were reasonable.
The VA then changed its rules one more time, closing another
avenue for Navy veterans seeking benefits.
After long holding that Navy veterans who served on inland
waterways, like harbors and rivers, could get benefits, the VA
decided a harbor did not qualify.
"The VA will always find something else and interpret the law
however they see fit," said Lloyd Granaas, 67, a Navy veteran
living near Ocala whose Agent Orange claim has been denied.
William R. Levesque can be reached at (813) 269-5306.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Blue Water Navy, Agent Orange, William Levesque |