Occupy the Department of Veteran's Affairs, Washington DC
Jan
8 2013 by Angela
Ever
feel compelled and driven to do something, to take some action or go experience
or see something without knowing exactly why? When I found out there was an
Occupy event at the Department of Veterans Affairs Building going on at 810
Vermont in NW Washington DC I had such a feeling. I didn’t know if it was a
real event or if anyone would be there for sure. I took a chance, used my
frequent flyer miles and headed to DC. My flight arrived at 1:15 Am so I spent
the first night engaged in a conversation with a young girl who is an athletic
trainer. We sat on a bench in the airport and I shared stories with her. It
felt much like the bus bench scene in Forest Gump. Was I there to meet and help
this person I wondered as she became teary eyed in the conversation describing herself
as lost, unable or not having the courage to do the things she wants to do in
her life? This was all of the advice I had to offer her.
It is a switch in effort and focus from
thinking about all we cannot or have not been able to do, overcoming doubt and moving
forward with a new purpose and method to achieve personal goals or success. To
be Able requires effort and action not complacency or stagnation. It requires
dumping the behaviors that hold us back and learning new ones that move us
positively forward. Its about being open to change and then making it happen
for yourself not waiting or counting on someone else to do it for you. It
seemed to be a message she needed to here and she left our meeting on a
mission. She caught her bus and I hailed a cab and went on to the Occupy event.
I had been traveling and up all night. I know
how difficult it can be sleeping on the street so I did not want to arrive in
middle of the night. When I did arrive I took a space on the sidewalk at the
end of a row. I rolled out my bag, placed all of my valuables inside my bag
with me, I put a tarp over my chair and my head and went to sleep for two
hours. I was woken up by a fellow named Mike who was looking for his blanket.
Seems someone had taken one from him during the night. He was my first
encounter with one of the occupiers. I asked him questions about the Occupy
Department of Veterans Affairs event… It started at the big Occupy DC event
last year during which a group of veterans got together and decided to go to
the Department of Veterans affairs with some questions and some ideas on how to
help veterans. The DVA said they would send someone out to speak with them and
no one came out. That was October 4, 2012 and they have been there ever since. Born
from the Larger Occupy Washington DC event it became Occupy the Department of
Veterans Affairs event. They have no plans of quitting or leaving anytime soon
and will be there as long as it takes.
While
I was talking with Mike the tarp next to me started shuffling around and a head
pops out and Steve introduced himself to me. He also volunteered to show me
where the YMCA was in case I wanted a shower. They all told me I should look
for Frosty the garden gnome and told me to go to the Starbucks just down the
road and to the right so I rolled up my bag and grabbed all of my possessions
which wasn’t much and set off to Starbucks to find Frosty. Inside the Starbucks,
sitting by the window was a silver haired and long bearded older gentleman who
looked like a garden gnome. Obviously this was Frosty. He told me the same
story as Mike about how it all started and all of the things they have done to
them to try and get rid of them but the DC police have defended the Veterans
constitutional rights to peaceably gather and explained to the DVA that they
are on public sidewalk and not on DVA property. Then the DVA began pressure
washing the sidewalk on a daily basis but they have stopped as it did not work.
They moved me from the outside edge to inside the doorway saying it was warmer
but there is an order and protocol to homelessness and where you sleep in the
group. I was hesitant at first because I did nothing to earn this upgrade and
then I reminded myself I was a visitor and these were Veterans. It was very
noble and hospitable gesture with hints of overprotectiveness. I did move to
inside the doorway where anyone approaching could only come from one direction that
I could defend easily. I felt much safer there. Under the cover of scaffolding
it may have been warmer also but it was still damn cold! There is a place
called the peace house that was used for the large occupy event where people
could go use the internet but the ongoing services there are dwindling and it
will probably be closing soon so now the surrounding coffee shops are the place
to go to warm up, grab a cup of Jo and get online. The Veterans who are clean
and organized have a good reputation with most of the businesses and they are
supportive. None of us were denied entry or service because we were occupiers
or homeless. The people who are in and out of the surrounding businesses and
the locals know what is going on and the bad reviews about the Occupy Veterans
being a bunch of homeless bums I found to be completely false. These could be
complaints about the other homeless population that surround us or could be
generated by the DVA people who are uncomfortable with the Veterans presence
there. There is much to hide and I can’t imagine that everyone is happily
accepting and administering the orders and policies that hurt our wounded
warriors and veterans. These are things that both consciously and
subconsciously affect most human beings negatively. They have been given the
orders not to engage in conversations with the veterans and the threat of job
loss and devaluation is evident in the tension. There seem to be many
frightened people at the DVA who are conflicted and unhappy in their work and
many others who seem to be hostile in mitigating their guilt. I had to stay on
a workday just to witness this and see it for myself. My three days here have
been a positive experience and what these veterans are trying to do, I see as
being very important. Why continue to utilize a system and a method that is
clearly broken beyond repair, 900,000 backlogged Veterans claims for benefits
and growing.
There
is a system of automatic denial and keywords and events are sought, created and
expunged from medical records every day to generate a denial because denial
counts as adjudication of the claim and earns the reward of a congressional
mandated time stamp for adjudication of a Veterans claim which is now 125 days.
Very few claims are properly and fairly adjudicated in 125 days. Don’t believe
me, check the appeals rate. It is easier to deny and there are no physical or
financial consequences of that action to the DVA or individual employees. There
is a consequence to the Veteran and they do this without regard for human life.
These increased suicides I view as casualties of this system.
What
happens after first denial is that then the Veteran has to file an appeal of
that decision this process can take time and usually leads to another denial.
Any veteran eligible for medical or monetary assistance due to service related
injury is ineligible for insurance and public assistance. They say it’s the government’s
responsibility. More denials, can’t pay rent, can’t work, can’t get food
stamps, can’t get appointments for care at VA, can’t get paperwork properly
filed out and disability documented for claims because VA is a teaching
hospital and all notes are entered by students who don’t use correct language
or terminology. If the veteran has any resources left by this point or any hope
then they will continue to fight. The DVA relies heavily on family and friends
of the veteran to provide support financially and emotionally to the veteran
and taxes those relationships to the full extent possible usually fracturing
any sustainable connection the veteran has to those sources of support. The VA
abuses counseling notes and personal information contained in medical records
against the veterans in the adjudication process and in the system to discredit
veterans so they are not to be trusted. Veterans often end up isolated and
alone with no one to turn to for support and no hope. Years later after
multiple hearings and denials a successful veteran will finally get through the
process in 10-20 or like Frosty 37 years at no consequence to the Department of
Veterans Affairs. How many have died trying? Too many! How many have given up?
Too many! These losses are unacceptable! Fix the system for God’s sake; don’t
just hire more adjudicators to do the job the same way, change the way the job
is done. Properly and fairly adjudicate the claim in 125 days so lives don’t
have to be needlessly destroyed while a soldier fights a battle that he is not
trained for, never saw coming and should not have to fight “The struggle for
benefits and the battle with the Department of Veterans Affairs”.
There was no way to quickly and easily
summarize what the process is like so I apologize for the lengthy blog. This
information is a compilation of shared stories over my 33 years of service to Veterans
in the Disabled American Veterans and the Paralyzed Veterans of America as well
as my own personal struggle. I am one veteran with an all too common story.
The
Occupy the Department of Veterans Affairs is taking place at 810 Vermont NW
Washington DC, they have a fb page and anyone who is for the cause is welcome
to join in. Homeless experience helpful but not required. They will take good
care of you there. Street rating ***** 5 star
4 comments:
Good luck! Go for it I still can't believe that your using a support vessel! That's like not doing it at all! Get rid of them and do it on your own! Solo means solo!!! With a support boat this means nothing!!! Where's the risk involved! Your wasting your time! Anybody could do what your doing with a support boat! Go figure!!! And don't tell me your using "GPS" ! Dream on lady!
Right on Anonymous! She should get a job! Who's going to pay for her rescue!!Probably all of us!!
Nameless folks talking about things they know nothing about.... There is not a support boat. Angela loads everything on her boat and doesn't stop, take anything from anyone and has no physical contact with anyone until she arrives in Hawaii. We have purchased rescue insurance in the event a rescue becomes necessary.
Angela was injured while on duty in the military which ended her military career. 12 years later, while working as a mechanical engineer, her ruptured discs and spine deteriorated to the point of needing surgery to fuse her spine. Because the injury occurred while she was on duty in the military she was required to go to the VA for the surgery. They started by taking the wrong disc (a healthy one) and then the two bad discs. The did not have rods or bone grafts for three levels so the just fused the three levels with the items they had and drilled into her spinal cord. The expunged the evidence of wrongdoing from her medical records . You cannot sue the VA. Angela was homeless and unable to work so she filed a claim for veteran's benefits it took her 13 years to get her benefits (which why she o copied the VA for the weekend to bring awareness to the VA claims process.. Angela runs a 501C3 adaptive rowing program which is free for participants, she is a Paralympic athlete who trains several hours a day to maintain at the elite level. Angela is a motivational speaker, an author, coaches wounded warriors and is a board member of the California paralyzed veterans, she works very hard but there are still barriers keeping her from having a "regular job." Angela needs to lie down and decompress her spine every couple of hours. She has nuerogenic bowel and bladder. She often times is not able to leave her house timely due to bowel control issues.
So please next time, do a little research prior to criticizing.
PS: I'm Angela's spouse and I have a full time job.
You tell 'em, Deb!!
I just wanted to say I am following the blog and very inspired by her story. Best wishes to you both
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