December 26, 2011 - As younger military veterans stream back into Illinois from Iraq and Afghanistan, the state faces a challenge as it tries to make them more of a priority in a time of desperately tight budgets.The state has been increasing the amount it spends on veterans services in recent years. But the bulk of that money is spent on older veterans while many younger soldiers and National Guard troops are returning to a difficult economy looking for help with jobs and training.
"You'd wipe out a lot of those issues veterans are running into — homelessness, unemployment — if you focus on education," said Andy Lucido, a former U.S. Army officer in both Iraq and Afghanistan who took advantage of an Illinois Veterans Grant after returning and argues that such programs should be expanded for others.
The Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs doesn't know for sure how many veterans of the Iraq and Afghan wars live in the state, spokesman Louie Pukelis said. But 2010 U.S. Census figures put the number of Illinoisans who were in the armed forces after 1990 at about 191,000. That's almost double the number of Illinois vets found in the 2000 census who served after 1990.
snip She said public awareness of veterans' needs seems to be strong right now, something that works in her department's favor as it looks for ways to serve returning troops. But it may not last.
Victor Smith, a 78-year-old U.S. Navy veteran who works as legislative director in Illinois for the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said public attention to veterans' concerns tends to quickly fade.
"When the wars are over, you shove the veterans back in the back room," he said. "It's going to happen again; it'll fade into the background." read more>>>
December 26, 2011 - The VA hospital in Milwaukee is shortening its residential mental health treatment programs. Doctors there say the shortened stay — from 90 to 45 days — will mean more intense treatment and will make it easier for veterans to transition back into society sooner. Some patients worry about being pushed out too soon. Transcript
Listen to Report
Dec. 25, 2011 - Veterans Affairs hospitals across Southern California are bracing for a flood of veterans with the withdrawal of troops from Iraq.VA hospitals in the region are expecting as many as 16,000 returning veterans. Officials at the Jerry L. Pettis Memorial Veterans Medical Center in Loma Linda expect to see an influx by March. read more>>>
No comments:
Post a Comment