VARO–ILP GREENHOUSE DENIAL

Ah. yes. The ongoing greenhouse brouhaha. This will entertain all who are contemplating ILP claims. Remember always in your filings that the operable phrase is “necessary or vital to independence in everyday living”. If you fail to demonstrate this need, your request falls flat like a soufflé. Conversely, the knife cuts both ways. If vA fails to say you haven’t met this hurdle or proceeds to denial saying you can adequately accomplish the mission with the tools (greenhouse) at hand, they are implicitly acknowledging that a greenhouse is necessary and vital to that independence you seek in everyday living. Ofttimes,  phrases become operable assumptions that cannot be retracted.

When my VR&E counselor first denied my computer and greenhouse in 2011, he traveled the “necessary and vital” road to denial in addition to the frivolous nature of  avocational useage. Ruh-oh, Rorge. Avocational is smack dab in the middle of what is allowed. He is so well-versed in the vocational aspect of it that he misread 38 USC § 3120 and assumed everything associated with an ILP program has to be a vocational step closer to an eventual job. Those of us applying for ILP are hopelessly handicapped and are the very reason for the program. We are also not candidates for retraining of any sort.

After almost a year  of denial, one day the sun rose and the need for a computer became “necessary and vital” to my independence in everyday living. How this change occurred I know not. That is immaterial. The good counselor, in his infinite wisdom ascertained that I suddenly  qualified for this item while also determining it was still not necessary and vital to have the greenhouse. I italicize that purposefully.  Last Friday he revised his assessment.

The greenhouse, which was adjudged not necessary and vital to my independence, now is-with a codicil. The existing one I have is adequate for my agricultural production needs and I do not need an additional one. Now for the punchline in three letters-ADA.

Yes, we sadly run afoul of the Americans with Disabilities Act or should I say the VDA? The entrance to my existing greenhouse is only 29 inches wide. The interior aisle is only thirty inches wide with no room for my walker to turn around in. Furthermore, this myopic assessment makes no provisions for future debilitation and will effectively preclude me from my agricultural avocations.  Excuse me, Mr. Counselor. Allow me to draw you a picture.

Ruh-oh. 28 1/4 inches.

No room for seating

30 inches does not an ADA greenhouse make.

Unfortunately for Mr. Counselor, he did not peruse my medical VISTA records or he would know my lifting limit is 15 lbs due to all those lovely hernias I received for Father’s day in 2010. Absent sufficient room to sit inside a greenhouse out of the weather, I am forced to grow outside. Unfortunately, I can’t lift the improvised greenhouse glass he finds adequate because it weighs 85 lbs.

inaccessible romaine lettuce

Last but not least, how do I enter my existing greenhouse unless I back in?

As we all know, any denial must be accompanied by an articulated and  well-reasoned rationale. Sharp-eyed Veterans will note the following excerpts:

This letter provides the following information:

•  The evidence I considered

Under “Why you are denied the service as requested?” (sic) I can only surmise the counselor is temporally challenged with respect to the correct tense. The denial occurred in the past rather than the present and the question is a fragment of an interrogatory.  Time for an Adobe update, Kris.

After carefully reviewing the evidence, I find that you… etc. 

Hold the phone, Alexander Graham Bell.  Where, pray tell, is this elusive evidence which was considered? Granted, it has been carefully reviewed but I do not see the reasoned review. A bald conclusory statement, absent any supporting logic is pure speculation and unsupported by the evidence of record. Any denial lists the evidence, the name of the doctor, and usually a date.

The last sentence is the supposed clincher on the evidence. Current limitations? Check. He’s disabled. Medical records review? Impossible. Had this occurred, there would be a discussion of Raynaud’s syndrome and photosensitivity due to PCT.  Counseling sessions? I must have missed those appointments. Independent Living assessment? I have yet to see one of those.

My Notice of Disagreement will be a pièce de résistance. It will include untold pages of VISTA records, nexus letters for cryoglobulinemia and PCT with supporting blood labs, medical diagnoses of ventral hernias, and an admonition on weight-lifting limits. This is good practice for those of you who are awaiting a long appeal. Remember, you only have to be over 20% to qualify for ILP even though the majority of grants go to exceptionally disabled Vets. Are you listening Squidley? WGM?

The avenue to an administrative appeal is mentioned as a preamble to a full blown substantive appeal. By doing so, I will embroil myself in what amounts to a VR&E DRO Review which could go on for years. No. The smart money, as we know, is to proceed to a NOD. This will provoke a DRO review in its own right, albeit an in-house VR&E one. That is what you want to occur. The problem is my counselor. Due to his unfamiliarity with the ILP, he is laboring under the vocational misconception rather than the more relaxed standard of an avocational interpretation. Infused with this, he cannot see the greenhouse as a legitimate need because it doesn’t lead to an employment goal.

I’ll keep you up to speed on the appeal as it develops. Feel free to plagiarize anything you see here. Dang. Now I have to go out and find some Tickle Me Elmo stickers for the NOD. Onward through the vA fog.

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SQUIDLEY STILL ALIVE AND KICKING

As you may remember, we left Squidly in the last chapter attempting to fight his VARO to  let him in the front door. This has been a long battle. The squidster’s up to it though. Armed to the teeth with the sure knowledge we put up here, he held his ground and got the next big bite of the apple. vA is not giving up gracefully on this and we suspected they wouldn’t. Every experience is like pulling teeth out of live alligators.

So it is with great pleasure that we (he, actually) announce the recent correspondence he received from Uncle Eric and the gang. Trust me, it’s all good news and another step in the right direction towards the inevitable. Good job, Squidster.

 

 

 

 

80% and counting. We’ll keep you apprised of the 100% party. Remember, the Squidmeister still hasn’t gotten his HCV rating for EMG needles yet. That may be the straw that breaks the TDIU back or even 100% schedular. What’s more, it appears the long-lost c-file San Diego managed to misplace has now made an immaculate reincarnation suddenly at his local RO. The Catholic Church doesn’t have anything on these guys. They make Houdini look like a bozo. But then, so does Squidly.

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VARO SEATTLE–CLAIM COMPLETION DATE 8/02/13

The boys are rocking and a rolling now. I decided to see if vA had even received my claims and/or were willing to admit as much. It appears they have. With my luck, they will send them off to DC for a milk run. They did this with the CUE filing for taking 10% away. Ship it to DC, boss. We can’t touch it. One problem with this technique is that it has to be adjudicated in the first instance in Seattle before an appeal to DC. They know that. This just insures it will float in the cloud for a while and eventually alight back in the Emerald City. Now it’s back and they are looking at it along with other claims. They categorize it as a claim for increase rather than a Motion for Revision (CUE).

Of most import is the estimated date of completion– August 2nd, 2013 to March 24th, 2014. Looks like that 125-day, 98% accuracy target date is still pretty slippery in 2013-2014. Being optimistic, I expect they’ll farm it out to Cleveland where it will be shredded properly and the trail will go cold.

 

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LUCKY VETS IN WISCONSIN

LawBob sends this one to us. I do so hope that the University of Washington (Tacoma) or the University of Puget Sound would institute something like this. On the other hand, I wish Gonzaga made it mandatory in order to induce my son into a year of it. Vets need good legal help to win in the best of circumstances. Not wishing to offend VSOs, the calibre of Leaglezoom.com is somewhat subsonic. Buckwheat jr. will do some of this eventually because the firm he’s going to be hired by “sublets” some of its legal staff for the purpose.

Subject: FW: Wisconsin Law School launches Veterans Law Center

The need for civil legal services among veterans is substantial, partly due to the numbers of soldiers returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Students will take what they’ve learned in class and apply it to real life with real people.

Law students help veterans. New Wisconsin program aims to lead the way in assisting veterans with legal advice, legal help, and a brilliant array of committed law students, attorneys, and paralegals.

MADISON – Legal assistance for Dane County veterans will be available starting Nov. 8 when the University of Wisconsin Law School launches a new Veterans Law Center. The first clinic will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the City-County Building, 210 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Madison, with brief remarks at 10 a.m.

By Kari Knutson – knutson4@wisc.edu 

 The center will help veterans with civil legal services and information. The first clinic comes just before Veterans Day, observed Nov. 12, and will continue to operate from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. the second Thursday of every month at the City-County Building and from 4 to 6 p.m. the fourth Thursday of every month at Porchlight, Inc., 306 N. Brooks St., Madison.

Volunteer attorneys, paralegals and UW Law students will staff the center.

“We’re always looking for pro bono opportunities for students,” says Ann Zimmerman, pro bono director for the Law School. “This is a great way for our students to get experience while helping area veterans.”

Forty students were trained in September, all of whom will work with practicing attorneys as well as paralegals.

Two attorneys and two law students are scheduled for each clinic and will work as partners, with the practicing attorney taking the lead during client interviews.

Some of the issues facing veterans include foreclosure, housing issues, divorce, child custody matters and unemployment benefits. The center provides basic legal information and guidance for civil, not criminal, cases.

“The need for civil legal services among veterans is substantial, partly due to the numbers of soldiers returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Zimmerman says. “Students will take what they’ve learned in class and apply it to real life with real people.”

Some of the students bring more than legal expertise to the center; Leigh Neville-Neil, a third-year law student, is an Army veteran who served in Iraq for 18 months. “It definitely helps being a fellow veteran,” says Neville-Neil, who has participated in a pilot clinic. “I can understand what they’re saying and many of the issues they face.”

For her, it’s an opportunity to get real world experience while helping those who have also served. “A lot of people don’t know what services are available,” Neville-Neil says. “This helps make them aware of programs that might help them get their lives back on track.”

Dan Rock, a second-year law student, is a captain in the U.S. Marine Corps and one of the student volunteers for the clinic. Rock says his background helps him relate to the veterans coming to the center but also inspires him to raise awareness among students about the issues veterans face.

“Hopefully we will be able to provide veterans with information or contacts that can help them with whatever legal issue they have,” Rock says. “There are many services available to assist our veterans with their problems, but it is often complicated and confusing to determine what those services are and how to use them.”

The free legal center is funded by a Pro Bono Initiative grant for $5,000 from the State Bar Legal Assistance Committee.

The project is administered by the UW Law School’s Pro Bono Program and is a collaborative effort with support from the Dane County Veterans Service Office, the Dane County Bar Association, Porchlight, Inc. and representatives from the William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital in Madison. Habush, Habush & Rottier SC recently contributed an additional $5,000 to fund the center.

“The center provides a wonderful opportunity for our students to learn about veterans, gain experience handling legal problems and discover how to make a real difference in our community,” Zimmerman says.

Michael Leon
Marketing and Public Relations Consultant
http://malcontends.blogspot.com/
malleon@live.com

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THE BURNING QUESTION ON EVERYONE’S LIPS

VETERANS

PRESIDENTIAL

PREFERENCE

POLL

Here for all the members who have pestered me to go political is my one concession. You may vote to your heart’s content and I have no opinion officially. As usual, Chicago voting is permitted. Stuff the box to your heart’s content. Invite your dead parents over to vote. Channel 35,000 year old warriors named Ramtha and allow them to vote. Vote early and often. Vote for the chucklehead of your choice-but vote. Exercise your right as an American.

              

I love America.

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EINSTEIN WAS RIGHT–IDIOTS’ DELIGHT

 

Albert Einstein:
“I fear the day when the technology overlaps with our                                              humanity. The world will only have a generation of idiots.”

Idiots sharing a coffee moment

Idiots out at a dinner engagement

Idiots at the museum absorbing culture

Idiots having a private tete a tete

Idiots at the beach soaking up the rays

Idiots at sporting events cheering on their team

Idiots out for a scenic cruise

Idiots enjoying a quiet dinner to themselves

I see this more and more and finally someone sent it to me. It epitomizes what is happening. I’ve been sitting at the dental/hearing clinic at VAMC American Lake and observed well over 75% of the patients engaged in this. I’d take Ladies Home Journal over it any day. Idiots’ delight.

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INJURIES DURING TRAINING NOT SC

After reading this article I’m speechless. I’ve been working with member JM on his claim which falls into the same category and he’s being handed the same baloney sandwich. We all signed on the dotted line with no codicils other than that we were doing this of our own free will.

The legislation, if allowed to stand, makes those of us inadvertently injured during training out to goldbricks and charter members of the Safeway® Slip and Fall Club. I find that insulting. To lump all Vets injured in training under this reading of law is to condemn them to being morally suspect. There’s also the financial shortfall of someone who now finds him or herself unable to work as JM does with no apparent path to remuneration.

LawBob sends me this and I think immediately of how, one day, Americans are going to say “Piss on it. Serving my country is fraught with danger and the chance of getting screwed out of benefits far outweighs the moral satisfaction. No thanks.”  That day is not too far off if legislation like this is allowed to proliferate. It’s bad enough for career military troops waking up ten years after service to discover their right to free medical  care (promised on enlistment) just got another TRICARE haircut. That’s happened about ten times already.

George Washington was very farsighted and discussed this in detail so it isn’t as far-fetched a concept as some would think.

The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional as to how they perceive Veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by this country.

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FAST LETTER 09-52

Some of you are soon going to run afoul of the strictures of classified operations as I did after the war. This precluded my filing for legitimate injuries in a timely manner. As we used to say “If I tell you about it, then I have to kill you.” Fortunately we don’t have to do that anymore on claims related to SEA or one would hope not. I’m still not sure as no one mailed me a letter releasing me from my Nondisclosure Agreement of 1970.

However, that stricture still applies in spades for much of what happens over at SOCOM. For those of you contemplating how to approach this, the vA has come up with a crackerjack way of fixing it. Unfortunately, no one is aware of it and, like the Independent Living Program, it isn’t exactly well-publicized.

For your ease of use, I converted this document from PDF to Microword so it can be filled out and printed with the barest of computer skills. Best of luck on the claims and Thank you for you unrecognized service to America’s continued freedom.

fAST LETTER 09-52


Postscript to this. Attached is Pilot in Charge (PIC) accident report I waited forty years to obtain from Consolidated International Airlines. And for the record, I don’t believe for a minute that the gentleman’s name was Jack F. Smith. We called him “JFC” Smith, the C standing for Christ. His flying technique with PC-6 Porter aircraft left many of us underwhelmed.

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FOIA– SENIOR EXECUTIVE SERVICE BONUS PROGRAM 2010

I bet you always wondered what those “bonuses” amounted to when mentioned by vA for service above and beyond the call of duty. Well, pilgrim, an FOIA can move mountains. I received this several weeks ago and my addled brain tells me I forgot to publish it. Or, if I did, it’s a rerun worth reading.

Often, we fail to realize all the hard work that goes into doing claims work. Hoisting martini glasses high in tribute to hard work accomplished in the heat of legal battle frequently is overlooked and proper recompense is overlooked. Fortunately, everyone at the top is watching their six and that of their brethren. This can lead to some interesting results during an economic meltdown or “great recession”.

Indeed, while Veterans sleep under overpasses and commit suicide with great regularity during these tumultuous financial times, it is heartening to know that those entrusted with our well-being are keeping their noses to the grindstone and whittling away at the pesky backlog. Why, even those over at the VHA are similarly motivated to “keep them doggies rolling” on the PTSD frontier. Think what the numbers of suicides daily might rise to absent this concerted effort to ameliorate and treat those who have borne the battle…

Herewith, I attach a compendium of all the worthy souls to whom we owe so much. This is a miniscule snapshot of 2010. The 2011 bonuses are still being tabulated. Obviously the 2012 remunerations have not been posted due to some who are no longer employed after the Orlando Playcation and Golf Tournament revelations.

2010_Bonuses001

Crack a cold one and kick back in the recliner while you read this. For those of you who live under the overpasses in life, ask the librarian if she’ll print it for you so you can recycle it for bathroom tissue after digesting the absurdity of it.

And the winner, at $27,000.00 even, is Edward L. Murray of Central Office fame. My goodness. What on earth could Mr. Murray have done single-handedly that would warrant an almost yearly stipend for a 100% service connected Veteran? He must be an accomplished worker integral to the day-to-day operations of this august agency.

DEPARTMENT OF

VETERANS AFFAIRS

IT’S JOE VETERAN’S COMPENSATION

BUT THE BONUS DEPARTMENT IS OURS

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FACEBOOK FROM PATRICIA

HCVETS Founder Patricia Lupole posted this on my facebook page today.  This is sadly all too true day in and day out. That’s a lot of troops and former ones. Every day. You would think vA might get apoplectic over the catastrophic losses on their watch. You would think wrong. vA isn’t even breaking a sweat with the possible exception of the data input clerks entering the names every night. They don’t want to be sending out any checks to dead Vets. Shoot. Perish the thought.

Posted in All about Veterans, HOMELESS VETERANS, PTSD, VA BACKLOG, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment