Bad Postal Addresses
Marines,
Part 1
The Department has brought this issue up in the past with our Life Insurance mailings, hundreds of envelopes are returned. The two pictures below represents just a small portion of returned mail due to bad postal addresses. I have received multiple trays of returned mail. We have asked before, and will ask again for ALL Detachment Commandants, Paymasters and Adjutants to please verify each members mailing address and submit the appropriate Membership Transmittal with the codes of COAO (Change of Address Old) and COAN (Change of Address New) with any changes.
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Part 2
National COO Borka sent out this message today, with the same topic, Bad Postal Addresses. Here is COO Borka's message:
As lists of membership cards are created and mailed out by the company that does the printing, hundreds upon hundreds of cards are being returned to headquarters as bad addresses. The attached photo is a very small example. (see below)
These are annual dues paying members that transmittals have been processed for.
Our HQ team takes the card out of this envelope and will mail to the Detachment Paymaster. |
Vietnam Veterans of America Legislative Update
January 8, 2021
Please note, once proposed legislation has been signed into law, the Executive Branch is responsible for implementing it. VVA will work with Congress and the Department of Veteran Affairs to ensure that these new bills are fully implemented.
On January 1, 2021, H.R. 6395--the FY 2021 NDAA, containing the Tester/Harder Amendment—was passed into law. At long last, Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange who have been diagnosed with Parkinsonism, Bladder cancer, and/or Hypothyroidism will be deemed service-connected and be eligible for healthcare and compensation:
Title XCI—Veterans Affairs Matters, Section 9109 reads as follows: Additional Diseases Associated with Exposure to Certain Herbicide Agents for Which There is a Presumption of Service Connection for Veterans Who Served in the Republic of Vietnam. Section 1116(a) (2) of title 38, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new subparagraphs: (I) Parkinsonism. (J) Bladder cancer. (K) Hypothyroidism.
- Highlights of H.R. 6395 - Title XCI—Veterans Affairs Matters Modification of licensure requirements for Department of Veterans Affairs health care professionals providing treatment via telemedicine.
- Additional care for newborn children of veterans.
- Expansion of eligibility for HUD–VASH.
- Study on unemployment rate of women veterans who served on active duty in the Armed Forces after September 11, 2001.
- Access of veterans to Individual Longitudinal Exposure Record.
- Department of Veterans Affairs report on undisbursed funds.
- Transfer of Mare Island Naval Cemetery to Secretary of Veterans Affairs for maintenance by National Cemetery Administration.
- Comptroller General report on Department of Veterans Affairs handling of disability compensation claims by certain veterans.
- Additional diseases associated with exposure to certain herbicide agents for which there is a presumption of service connection for veterans who served in the Republic of Vietnam.
View bill conference report at:
On Jan. 5, 2021, President Trump signed into law H.R. 7105, The Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvements Act of 2020. “This is the culmination of two years of bipartisan work,” noted Rep. Phil Roe (R-Tenn.). “There is something in this bill for just about every one of our nation’s veterans and their loved ones.”
View bill conference report at:
Highlights of H.R. 7105 H.R. 7105 - the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvements Act of 2020
- Benefits Requires VA to return Disability Based Questionnaires to their public-facing website and requires the VA to accept Disability Based Questionnaires as evidence in disability compensation claims, even when completed by non-VA medical providers.
- Increases the timeframe of the Vietnam War Era of military service, stating that the Vietnam Era began on November 1, 1955, instead of February 28, 1961, which will extend benefits to the more than 3,200 U.S. Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG ) who served in the Vietnam War during November 1, 1955 – February 27, 1961.
- Eliminates the 12-year time limit governing applications for Veteran Readiness & Employment (VR&E) benefits for veterans who separated from military service after January 1, 2013 (i.e., making VR&E the same as the “Forever G.I. Bill”).
- Sets new limits on when the VA’s Debt Management Center may initiate debt collection proceedings against veterans.
- Lowers the age to 55 at which a remarried surviving spouse of a Veteran may still receive Dependency Indemnity Compensation (DIC).
- Agent Orange Exposure Fairness Act S. 332 and H.R. 566; requires a GAO briefing and report on repealing the manifestation period for presumptions of service connection for certain diseases associated with exposure to herbicide agents.
- Increases the federal government’s special pensions for the surviving spouses of Medal of Honor recipients.
- Requires the Veterans Benefits Administration to establish specialized teams for processing Military Sexual Trauma claims.
- Allows veterans filing a claim for a physical or mental health condition resulting from sexual trauma to choose the gender of their Compensation & Pension Exam provider.
- Allows National Guard and Reserve service under Title 32 orders to count for VA Home Loan eligibility.
- Requires the VA to allow veterans to update dependent information via the eBenefits website.
- Requires the VA to study cancer, diseases, or illness experienced by those who served at the Karshi-Khanabad (K2) Air Base in Uzbekistan between October 1, 2001, and September 30, 2005, and expands VA’s open burn pit registry to include burn pits located in Uzbekistan.
- Specifies circumstances under which a Service Member, including members of the National Guard and Reserves, is considered service-connected for a disability or death from COVID-19.
- Orders the VA’s Under Secretary for Benefits to ensure every paper or electronic document relating to the receipt of non-service-connected pension include a notice that the Department does not charge any fee in connection with the filing of an initial claim for benefits.
- Services for Women Veterans Devotes $20 million for retrofitting healthcare facilities “to make it safer and easier for women veterans to get care” and requires the Veterans Health Administration to submit plans for approval regarding how they will designate these funds.
- Mandates that every VA facility have at least one women’s health primary-care provider.
- Creates a permanent Office of Women’s Health within the Veterans Health Administration, tasked with providing oversight over all Women’s Health Programs within the VA
- Requires VA leaders to create “an anti-harassment and anti-sexual assault policy” and designate officials to take responsibility for any related complaints.
- Requires VA to create a training module for community healthcare providers that is specific to women veterans.
- Expands the Advisory Committee on Women Veterans’ mandate to include examining the effect of intimate partner violence on women veterans, and creates a VA pilot program to care for survivors of intimate partner violence.
- Ensures that servicemembers and veterans seeking access to care and counseling related to Military Sexual Trauma can seek this care at any VA healthcare facility, not limited to Vet Centers.
- Requires VA to enter into agreements with public or private entities, to provide free legal services to Women veterans to meet the following unmet needs: Child Support, Eviction & Foreclosure Prevention, Discharge Upgrade Appeals, Financial Guardianship, Credit Counseling, and Family Reconciliation Assistance.
- Improves access to prosthetic items made specifically for women at VA medical facilities.
- Enhanced Healthcare Services Waives VA requirements for receipt of per diem payments for domiciliary care at State Veterans Homes and modification of eligibility for payments.
- Prohibits the Veterans Health Administration from collecting co-payments from veterans who are members of a Native American tribal nation.
- Makes permanent a pilot program to provide childcare to veterans enrolled in the VA healthcare system and gives the Veterans Health Administration five years to implement the provision of childcare at every VA medical center.
- Requires State Veterans Homes to report on COVID-19 cases within these facilities to the VA.
- Requires the VA to pay for emergency transportation of newborns.
- Requires VA medical facilities to have drop-off locations for controlled substances medications.
- Mandates an annual audit of facility-level appointment scheduling, which the Veterans Health Administration must share with Congress.
- Services for Homeless Veterans & Veterans at Risk of Homelessness Expands the HUD-VASH voucher program to veterans with Other Than Honorable characterizations of discharge.
- Increases the amount of grant funds awarded to organizations providing services to homeless veterans to 115 percent of the State Veterans Home domiciliary rate, and allows for additional increases of grant funds in higher cost-of-living areas.
- Allows the VA to award grants to legal services organizations assisting veterans who are homeless and veterans at imminent risk of homelessness.
- Requires the VA to study existing programs that provide assistance to Women veterans who are homeless, with a goal of identifying continued areas of need.
- Extends contracts for VA Homeless Veteran Case Managers to prevent gaps in services for homeless veterans during COVID-19.
VVA thanks you for answering the call to action, and we look forward to working together in 2021 to achieve more legislative victories for our nation’s veterans.
Adjutants Note: Thank you for North Central Area Vice Commandant Stan Lewosko for sharing this information. |
COVID-19 Vaccination Update from Commandant Wortmann
Commandant Wortmann reports that he just got this information from his primary VA Doctor:
"New development --the VA will be sending out postcards to all eligible veterans to get the vaccine who meet the first criteria. Once you get the postcard follow the directions." -- Cathy Dunn RN |
Department of New York Marine of the Year
Once again, the Department of New York encourages Detachments to nominate that outstanding Marine for Department Marine of the Year. It must be addressed and mailed to the Department of New York Adjutant. It must be postmarked no later than 15 days prior to the opening date of the Department of New York Convention (June 2021, exact date TBA). A copy of the rules for Marine of the Year can be downloaded from the Department web site at
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