Agent
Orange-related illness?
December
11, 2012
Sgt.
Shaft
Was
ship in Vietnam exposed to Agent Orange?
Dear
Sgt. Shaft:
A
friend of mine who recently passed from cancer was in Vietnam on the USS Hoel
DDG 13. The ship had several missions in Vietnam, but it is not on the VA ships
list. His daughter is trying to help get compensation for her
mother. Can you help?
Stuart
O.
Via the Internet
Via the Internet
Dear
Stuart:
If
you think a ship should be on the list and you are not filing a claim, you may
conduct your own research and submit documentary evidence to
VA.
Documentary
evidence includes deck logs, ship histories and cruise book entries. You may
obtain ship deck logs from the National Archives at College Park,
Md.
This
evidence must show the ship entering the inland waterways of Vietnam, docking in
Vietnam or otherwise sending crew members ashore. A ship that anchored in an
open water harbor, such as Da Nang Harbor, is not sufficient evidence for the
presumption of Agent Orange exposure. You
must scan your documentary evidence and email it to the Veterans Benefits
Administration's Compensation Service at 211_AOSHIPS.VBACO@va.gov.
Emails sent to this email address are not secure, so do not include personal
data.
Shaft
notes
* A
Shaft shot to the Small Business Administration for eliminating the veteran’s
advocacy award as part of the competition that recognizes various groups for
their contribution to America’s small business. SBA sponsors the annual National
Small Business Week (NSBW), part of which includes an award ceremony. The
categories have included Financial Small Business Champion, Minority Small
Business Champion, Women in Business Champion of the Year, etc.
…
This
year, the SBA has eliminated a number of pre-existing categories and has
substituted other categories to include:
*
National Small Business Person of the Year (chosen from among state award
winners from each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
U.S. Virgin Islands, and Guam);
* Phoenix Awards (recognizing outstanding accomplishments during disaster recovery);
* Small Business Prime Contractor of the Year;
* Small Business Subcontractor of the Year;
* The Dwight D. Eisenhower Award for Excellence (recognizes large prime contractors who have used small businesses as suppliers and contractors);
* SBA 8(a) Graduate of the Year (for recent graduates of the SBA’s 8(a) contracting program);
* Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Excellence and Innovation Award (nominations of SBA-funded SBDC Service Centers);
* Women’s Business Center (WBCs) of Excellence Award (nominations of SBA-funded WBCs);
* Veterans Business Outreach Center Excellence in Service Award (nominations of SBA-funded Veterans Business Outreach Centers).
* Phoenix Awards (recognizing outstanding accomplishments during disaster recovery);
* Small Business Prime Contractor of the Year;
* Small Business Subcontractor of the Year;
* The Dwight D. Eisenhower Award for Excellence (recognizes large prime contractors who have used small businesses as suppliers and contractors);
* SBA 8(a) Graduate of the Year (for recent graduates of the SBA’s 8(a) contracting program);
* Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Excellence and Innovation Award (nominations of SBA-funded SBDC Service Centers);
* Women’s Business Center (WBCs) of Excellence Award (nominations of SBA-funded WBCs);
* Veterans Business Outreach Center Excellence in Service Award (nominations of SBA-funded Veterans Business Outreach Centers).
These
new award categories are primarily a self-serving list of which many of the
categories are those that the SBA funds.
Eliminating
the Veterans Small Business Champion Award is a bad
decision.
First,
this decision was made without any input from leadership in the veterans
community, or even within veterans representatives within the SBA. Essentially,
it was rolled out under the cover of night. Secondly, this decision is at odds
with this administration’s pronouncements of being pro-veteran. Furthermore,
this decision is inconsistent with SBA’s own initiatives such as “Boots to
Business,” which was rolled out this summer at Quantico by Karen Mills, the SBA
administrator. And, by the SBA’s own government procurement scorecard, most
federal agencies miss their SDVOB procurement goals.
The
SBA knows this. It is incomprehensible for the SBA to then eliminate a category
designed to inspire, encourage and recognize those individuals (to include those
in the civilian/private sector) who advocate day and night to help and promote
veteran-owned small businesses.
The
Sarge urges the chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee to have those
apparatchiks at the SBA who are responsible for this disgraceful action march up
to the Veterans Affairs and justify their outrageous
decision.
*
Five new members have been appointed to the Department of Veterans Affairs
Advisory Committee on Women Veterans, an expert panel that advises VA on issues
and programs affecting women veterans.
“VA
relies on the Advisory Committee on Women Veterans to provide insight on key
issues that impact the women veteran population. The committee’s recommendations
provide guidance that direct VA’s efforts to identify and address the diverse
needs of women veterans,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “VA
welcomes the newest members.”
Established
in 1983, the committee makes recommendations to the secretary for administrative
and legislative changes. The new committee members, who are appointed to
two-year terms, are: Gina Chandler, Bryant, Ark.; Larri Gerson, Dunedin, Fla.;
Mary Morin, Raymond, N.H.; Charlotte S. Smith, Farmington, N.M.; and Mary
Westmoreland, Bronxville, N.Y.
*
Send letters to Sgt. Shaft, c/o John Fales, P.O. Box 65900, Washington, D.C.
20035-5900; fax 301/622-3330, call 202/257-5446 or email sgtshaft@bavf.org.
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