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Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America, the nation's first and largest nonpartisan organization
for veterans of the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan,
will attend both the Democratic and Republican National Conventions. IAVA veterans will meet with delegates and
convention guests, raising awareness about the most critical issues facing the
1.7 million Iraq and Afghanistan
troops and veterans and highlighting our historic fight for the new GI
Bill. With the new president in office
next year, America will have
the chance to turn the page on the way veterans were treated after Vietnam. Below are the top 10 actions the new
president must take:
1. Ensure Thorough, Professional, and
Confidential Mental Health Screening
IAVA supports mandatory and confidential mental health
and TBI screening by a mental health professional for all troops, both before
and at least 90 days after a combat tour.
2. Advance-Fund VA Health Care
Year after year, the VA budget is passed late, forcing
hundreds of veterans' hospitals and clinics to ration care. IAVA believes the only way to ensure timely
funding of veterans' health care is to fund the program one year in
advance. In addition, IAVA endorses the
annual Independent Budget, produced by leading Veterans Service Organizations
including the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, Paralyzed
Veterans of America, and AMVETS, as the blueprint for VA funding levels.
3. Overhaul the Military and Veterans'
Disability System
IAVA believes the military and
veterans' disability system needs a fundamental overhaul to streamline the
process and provide adequate benefits to our wounded troops.
4. Cut the Claims Backlog in Half
Hundreds of thousands of disabled
veterans are awaiting an answer from the VA on their benefits claims. Without this crucial source of income, many
are struggling to make ends meet. The
claims backlog must be cut in half with the new president's first year in
office.
5. End the Passive VA System
The VA offers a wide array of
benefits and services - but many veterans do not know what they are eligible
for. The VA must do much more to
aggressively advertise their services, especially online and in rural areas,
and ensure that eligible veterans are receiving the care and benefits they have
earned.
6. Combat the Shortage of Mental Health
Professionals
The VA must be authorized to bolster its mental health
workforce with adequate psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers to meet
the demands of returning Iraq
and Afghanistan
veterans. IAVA also supports increased
funding for Vet Centers to alleviate staffing shortfalls. Furthermore, the next president should issue
a national call to service, bolstered by incentives, for mental health care
workers in America.
The Department of Defense must address current
shortages of mental health professionals. IAVA recommends a study of reasons
for attrition among military mental health professionals, and the creation of
new recruitment and retention incentives for mental health care providers, such
as scholarships or college loan forgiveness.
7. Create Tax Incentives for Patriotic
Employers
IAVA supports tax credits for the hiring of veterans,
including National Guardsmen and Reservists, and those at risk for
homelessness. IAVA recommends tax
credits for employers who, when their reserve component employees are called to
active duty for over 90 days, continue to support their employees by paying the
difference between the servicemembers' civilian salary and their military
wages.
8. Fight Homelessness among Veterans
50,000 new vouchers should be
issued to house homeless veterans and the next president should end
homelessness among veterans by the end of his first term.
9. Give Families Access to Mental Health
Support
Military families should have improved access to
mental health services, and active-duty families should be given unlimited access
to mental health care, including family and marital counseling, on military
bases. Families should also be given more effective training in the warning
signs and effects of psychological injuries.
IAVA supports the creation of new VA programs to provide
family and marital counseling for veterans receiving VA mental health
treatment.
Congress should appropriate funding so that the
military can formalize and coordinate the current volunteer family support
services for the families of deployed servicemembers.
10. Repeal the Waiver of High-Deployment
Pay
IAVA opposes the Secretary of
Defense's use of national security waivers to avoid paying servicemembers "high
deployment allowances" of $1,000/month. The high deployment allowance should be
enforced, and should include servicemembers who are currently in a combat
theatre and have served more than 365 days in a hazardous duty zone over the
past two years (for active-duty troops) or over the past five years (for those
in the reserve component)
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