vA JOBS PROGRAMS BY MOS

At last, we’re going to be saved. Yessir. They’re starting with military policemen  and eventually will work all the way down to cooks in the mess hall as culinary masters in Michelin 5 star Restaurants. Were you a mechanic? Chances are you could find yourself in a high paying job at Mr. Goodwrench® in the near future thanks to the President’s new program that will pay corporations big bucks to hire you with continuing tax writeoffs for decades.

This program for ex-military police is pretty exciting. $111 million for 600 new jobs and to save another 200. That works out to $138,750.00 per year per person per job for them. Really? You think any police outfit is going to pay FNG cops, even Veterans, that kind of change? Worse, is that the message you want to be sending the 99% in the middle of economic doldrums? Do you want to see Occupy Oakland Police Department? Reality is as usual. The new cops will get $49 K plus bennies and the bigwigs will get their bonus for dreaming it up. The Oshkosh, Oklahoma cop shop and others across the fruited plain will get a one-time check to hire 3 officers in 2013 and then the money dries up. Mr. Vet goes on unemployment in 2014 and the program is quietly retired. Like sand through the hourglass…

Across the fruited plain

And if you have PTSD? This could get interesting.

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VA-FAIR AND BALANCED

I wouldn’t be surprised if the Undersecretary for vA Apologies doesn’t come out with the new Logo. No flies on Fox News.

FAIR AND BALANCED

YOU REPORT

WE DECIDE

 According to the poohboahs, every claim is viewed in the light most favorable to the Veteran. What more do they want or need? A good question. vA sees their rules and regulations as being extremely liberal and slanted toward Vets. Well, okay, but liberal as opposed to what exactly?

War is messy. We’ve had Vets we helped here who had transfusions- myself included- that there are no records of. vA will ignore much in order to deny you. A thru and thru GSW is mighty hard to fake. It’s a signature scar. Often that is not enough to win with if you don’t have a PH or a CIB. I’ve read BvA decisions where they denied HCV because there was no mention in the SMRs of sharing of razors or toothbrushes. Imagine a mortician with a dead cadaver and his exposure risks in 1970. Nope. No risk there. He wasn’t a medical worker and his MOS was Graves and Registration. No risks or reported needle sticks in the SMRs so he lost. You lose because there is no contemporary evidence in a decidedly brief military medical record of your adventures for several years. If you were TDY or deployed to places that weren’t on regular maps, your medrecs didn’t reflect all that happened.

Nevertheless, the fair and balanced way to do this is, in vA’s eyes,  by the record to keep everyone honest. One ploy I love is to have a BvA hearing and pull down your pants or shirt to expose the mega scar for the VLJ. A military tattoo or a contemporary one “looks” old by its very nature. Just because you don’t have a nexus for it doesn’t make it evaporate. Many learn what they need to win very late in the ratings game and are forced to play catch up. This gives many a chance at a remand and an opportunity to obtain what they lack ( the nexus).

As for fair and balanced, lay testimony is looked at like, well, just that. vA views your recollections like an adult listening to the ramblings of a five year old with ADD-very imaginative but hardly truthful. They aspire to rebut it by the extreme passage of time on your memory and further by finding something minuscule to point to proving you are purposefully stretching the truth and the facts. This sets the stage for the denial. How in good faith, granting every benefit of the doubt, can they in good conscience grant the claim when your recollections and the records don’t support it?

vA is not allowed to openly treat you as a hostile witness. In truth, the whole adjudication process is based on exactly that.  Working strictly toward a negative outcome, they carefully construct a scenario that corrupts everything you say occurred. In order to make it all above board, they phrase it in glowing terms. “Dear Joe-Thank you for your service to America. Unfortunately, we were unable to do this. If you had some real evidence you got group haircuts in service documented by STRs showing they put the razor back in the blue juice behind the barber on the shelf in between ‘dos, then perhaps we can change our decision. Your buddy letters from John Sixpack and Tommy Twotones were very convincing but no one can recall that far back. Dude, that was like 40 years ago. Tommy, on the one hand, swears it happened in Germany whereas John said he recalled it in Basic at Ft. Hood. While we sincerely believe you case has merit, we are unable to grant in spite of the benefit of the doubt”.

Always keep this in mind when you get down in the trenches with vA.

Now serving Number 25 (from 2006)?

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JACK DANIELS FISHING STORY

More from Michigan Bob. This is entirely believable. Most snakes hear you coming and beat feet. Most. Not our friend the Water Moccasin. They come to you knowing you are a potential meal.

Jack Daniels Fishing Story

I went fishing this morning, but after a short time I ran out of worms.

Then I saw a cottonmouth with a frog in its mouth. Frogs are good

bass bait. 

 

Knowing the snake couldn’t bite me with the frog in its mouth,

I grabbed it right behind the head, took the frog, and put it in

my bait bucket.

Now the dilemma was how to release the snake without getting

bit. So, I grabbed my bottle of Jack Daniels and poured a little whiskey

in its mouth. Its eyes rolled back, and it went limp. I released the snake into the lake without incident and carried on fishing, using the frog. 

 

Not long after, I felt a nudge on my foot. It was that damn snake…with

two more frogs.

 

Life is good in the South. Now, if we’d just won the war…

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HCV–HOW BAD WILL IT BE?

This just in from member Shawn  about predictors of how bad and how rapidly your liver deteriorates measured by a 1970s- era infection. Its done by the NIH which makes it semi-legit. At least they don’t have financial ax to grind to make money.

P.S. I’ll piggyback this one of hers on here too. This one is more about the vA’s interminable hope that we’ll commit lead poisoning and go away.

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ADVENTURES IN vA LAND–NEW BOOK

Well, I guess the cat’s out of the bag now. XLibris just informed me they sent out this press release several days ago. I’m not finished talking to them on price. I didn’t get any input on that yet. I don’t have copies of it either but am expecting them soon.  Its time for a new era in claims-one where the Vet is the aggressor and controls the claim rather than a powerless bystander.

Press Release

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The One & Only campaign

If you have ever had an injection that did not conform to the exact guidelines in this CDC video, you did not have a safe injection.   The rule is, “one needle, one syringe, only one time.”  There are no exceptions to this rule. 

The intended audience for this simple 13-minute video is healthcare workers.  It explains how to avoid spreading blood-borne pathogens by using safe injection practices.  Multidose vial use is covered.   About 8-minutes into the presentation, there is a good animation about how cross-contamination occurs.

Notice that there are no exceptions for jet-gun injectors and needleless devices.  Now we know how to protect ourselves and our families in the future.

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BVA–WHERE’S WALDO?

Okay what’s wrong with this picture? We’ve all thrown bottles into the ocean via the IRIS system here at Nodville to no avail. The BvA steadfastly insists they’re “working on it”. We can see the BVA decisions are there and published. We know that the system is working yet the vA refuses to enable the system to allow us to view them.

I am not a conspiracy theorist but this smacks of a good news story. Perhaps we’ll be able to view them by 2015. What disturbs me is that vA is more than aware of the problem and blithely ignores us.  Allow me to rephrase that. vA never ignores us. They are just preternaturally disposed to obeying their “first come, first served” mantra. Who do we have to thank for this? Undersecretary for Benefits Denial Allison A. Hickey comes to mind but she isn’t the IT guru who controls the censor button.

More importantly, why would vA go to the trouble of publishing something, carefully upload it to the internet, and then disable it or render it inoperable? T’would be better to keep it under wraps out of sight and profess an inability to produce it; much the same as they are doing presently with claims. I submit there’s less here than meets the eye. And as Roseanne Rosanadanna was fond of saying “It always goes to show it’s something.”

So, fellow Veterans. Chew on this conundrum. I tampered with the web address of the 2011 HCV decisions which is

http://www.index.va.gov/search/va/bva_search.jsp?QT=Hepatitis+C&SQ=vetapp11&RPP=100&UA=Search

I removed the “1” after vetapp11&RPP in the address and substituted a “2” which yields

http://www.index.va.gov/search/va/bva_search.jsp?QT=Hepatitis+C&SQ=vetapp12&RPP=100&UA=Search

Interestingly, up popped the 2012 decisions in all their glory. Equally intriguing is the fact that they are tantalizingly close but still in the promised land. The same is true for any other disease, injury or ailment one chooses to search for. I really can’t wait to hear why this enigma persists. Being a lowly Walmartian, I don’t presume to know the whys and hows of the mighty organization constructed solely for my benefit. I will reside in ignorance and trust that Greater Powers are busy trying to fix this.

Where’s the BVA Decisions?

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VBM–FOREGO THE C&P?

Before I begin, I would like it known that Michigan Bob has given us a new 2011 VBM. As for the title above, I know that looks like a misprint and I was floored to read it myself. Nevertheless, right there on page 928 it says this under 12.5.4.5:

12.5.4.5  The Consequences of Failing to Report for a VA Medical Examination

Corresponding to the VA’s duty to assist the veteran in obtaining information, including to obtain medical nexus opinions, is the veteran’s duty to cooperate with the VA in developing a claim. This duty on the part of the veteran includes reporting to scheduled VA examinations. However, in a few situations, it may be in the veteran’s best interest not to report to a scheduled VA examination. Under 38 C.F.R. § 3.655(b) (2011), [w]hen a claimant fails to report for an examination scheduled in conjunction with an original compensation claim, the claim shall be rated based on the evidence of recordThus, in instances where the veteran is able to procure his or her own positive medical opinion, and that positive medical opinion is included in the record, it may be in the veteran’s strategic best interest to forego the scheduled VA examination and allow the VA to adjudicate the claim based on the evidence of record, including the positive medical examination.

On the other hand, it is never in the veteran’s best interest to fail to report for an examination scheduled in connection with an original claim for a benefit other than disability compensation, a reopened claim for a benefit which was previously denied, or a claim for a rating increase. If a veteran fails to report for a scheduled VA examination relating to any of the above-mentioned classifications of claims, the claim will be denied.223

Section 3.655(b) provides a good cause exception to the rules governing the adjudication of claims when a veteran fails to report to a scheduled VA examination. The regulation identifies several examples of good cause, including the illness or hospitalization of the veteran and the death of an immediate family member. This list is not inclusive; thus, other extenuating circumstances may constitute good cause for failing to report to a scheduled VA examination.

So, let us walk through this new jungle. We are all familiar (or should be) with vA’s legendary C&P doctors. We need not go into that now. Suffice it to say that if you show up with a brilliantly reasoned nexus like mine, don’t be surprised if they send you out for one. If that fails, don’t even pretend shock when they venture off to some VAMC in Winston-Salem for a proctologist to do an IMO. I had all three.
What the authors  of the Veterans Benefits Manual (not to be confused with the pink Peggy Veterans site) are offering is a whole new take on this. If you have a dynamite nexus from Dr. Cecil and all the other Caluza elements, why would you venture into the lion’s den? We all know a C&P is a fishing expedition to find you not service connected if at all possible. vA is also rather fond of rubbing salt in the wound and saying they are forced to rate on the available evidence when you fail to show up. As the authors point out, on a new claim for Hep. with all the evidence in your favor, they are hoist on their own petard. 38 CFR §3.665(b) has no punishment attached to a failure to submit to a C&P on an original claim. Yet…
This can be all the more entertaining if they inadvertently deny based on your no-show. That is CUE. If you noticed the authors of this manual, one that stands out is Meg Bartley. That would be the very same Meg who was just approved by the Senate to the CAVC.  If she advocates this, I can assure you it is cutting edge law that passes muster.
What will be interesting is the response from the vA when this becomes well-known. As with all new ploys, they will invariably move to plug the hole as soon as they discern it. As we have mentioned, the new DBQs are noticeably missing a place to write in a nexus. It’s almost as if they did it on purpose. We can only assume they want to achieve 125-day denials by artfully concealing the DBQ shortcomings and providing damning C&P exams.
Turning the tables on vA is my stock in trade. I love this idea. Apparently Meg Bartley and crew do too.
Gentle readers know we never look at the price tags on gifts but I did look it up and Bob’s generosity was rather shocking. Veterans hereabouts may come to find that his munificence will help them succeed.
Posted in Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

$18.2 MILLION FOR TBI DOWN THE TUBES

Detroit Bob sens us this dismal news. It seems like more of the same time after time. The assessment at the end of the article says it all:

Dr. Chrisanne Gordon, chairwoman of Resurrecting Lives, a TBI research, treatment and advocacy group based in Columbus, Ohio, said the amount of money the Pentagon spent on the TBI/BH tool could have paid for a year of cognitive training and rehabilitation for more than 700 troops.

But then, General Dynamics wouldn’t have had shovel-ready jobs, either. Sounds like the Solyndra fiasco.

Posted in All about Veterans, Complaints Department, Gulf War Issues, PTSD | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

LEJEUNE H²0 BILL PASSES SENATE

Great news for all those with the cancer. Now, after the Senate has done their duty, the  Govt. empties out the bag and fesses up. It would be nice to see this out of the House promptly and on the President’s desk for a signature pronto.

I certainly hope they don’t intend to hand it off to the vA to handle. That will give VASEC an excuse to delay claims way into the next decade. And of course, no one with the cancer will win because they will drag out the Maxson decision and declare it to be too far distant in the past and pure speculation. Marines with nothing in their records or worse, lost records, will be disenfranchised as usual. Be prepared for a magnificent Dog and Pony Show, the likes of which would put Barnum & Bailey’s to shame.

Best to start working on the evidence now. We know there will be damn few of you alive to collect when they finally agree to some ground rules and start shuffling the cards.

Coming soon to Jacksonville, N.C

P.S. I was wondering out loud on who the arbiter of the new Jamie Ensminger Act would  be and damned if it isn’t our good ol’ buddies down at the RO. Yep. 125 days/98% and Bingo- a Denial saying you were never there. Add 10 years to the claim resolution for the appeal. Rots a ruck Marines (and friends and neighbors in Jacksonville).

 

Posted in Camp Lejeune poisoning, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment