Contact your Senator NOW and ask them to please support H.R. 299 Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2018 |
Take Action!
|
Vietnam Veterans of America - Legislative Alert November 29, 2018 Congress is very close to finally passing Blue Water Navy legislation, but unless the Senate acts in the next two weeks, that effort will fail. For over a decade, Vietnam Veterans of America has sought legislation to restore presumptive Agent Orange exposure status to members of the Armed Forces, who served in the territorial waters of Vietnam. H.R. 299, the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2018, passed the House by a vote of 382-0 on June 25, 2018. When the bill is enacted into law, “Blue Water” veterans who served off the coast of Vietnam, veterans who served near the demilitarized zone in Korea, and certain veterans who served in Thailand will again be eligible for compensation for service-connected, disabilities related to their exposure to Agent Orange. VVA believes Congress should recognize that these veterans were exposed to Agent Orange and should authorize presumptive status for VA disability claims associated with this exposure. Now is the time to contact your Senators to ask them to support this bill. Take Action enter your zip code, and send the prepared letters to your Senator requesting that Senator Isakson, Chair, Senate Veterans Affair Committee move H.R. 299, the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2018, out of committee and on to the Senate floor for a vote and passage. Please follow-up your letter with a call to the Senate switchboard at (202) 224-3121 and ask to be connected to your Senator. These veterans are aging, and the time to help them is now! |
Thursday, November 29, 2018
BLUE WATER NAVY VETS NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT
Barney Miller, Season 7, Episode 5 - Agent Orange
Sunday December 2 on FETV Network
CHECK YOU LOCAL LISTINGS...
AGENT ORANGE and YOU!
courtesy Paul Ammiano via Paul Sutton
Reliving Agent Orange: What The Children of Vietnam
Vets Have To Say
What Is Agent Orange? | History
The Dark Shadow of Agent Orange | Retro Report | The
New York Times
The Children of Agent Orange
Impacts being seen in grandchildren of Vietnam War
veterans, is it Agent Orange?
The Children of Agent Orange
Reliving Agent Orange: Blue Water Navy Veteran Jim
Smith
What Agent Orange Does To The Body
Agent Orange Aftermath - Vietnam Veterans Speak Out -
Vietnam: The Secret Agent
Do You Ever Think About A Vietnam Veteran's Kid?
Reliving Agent Orange: Charles Marshen was 'drenched
in the defoliant'
Sprayed and Betrayed: Veterans exposed to Agent Orange
feel abandoned by VA
Congress takes steps to expand burn pit research efforts
Veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are becoming
increasingly concerned that exposure to toxins produced by burn pits during
deployments will mirror the experiences of veterans who were exposed to Agent
Orange in Vietnam. In an effort to help address these concerns, earlier this
year Congress passed the Helping Veterans Exposed to Burn Pits Act. This Act
marks the first major step by Congress to research how burn pits affected
veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. However, while this legislation is
another step forward in helping veterans suffering from exposure to burn pits,
a true solution for burn pit exposure is most likely still years away.
Responding to the increasing concern regarding how exposure
to burn pits is affecting veterans, this September, Congress passed the Helping
Veterans Exposed to Burn Pits Act. The Helping Veterans Exposed to Burn Pits
Act is the second piece of legislation Congress has passed to help veterans
suffering from the effects of burn pit exposure, but the first piece of
legislation that may finally provide answers regarding what conditions are
caused by burn pit exposure.
In 2013, Congress required the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs to establish the Burn Pit Registry to identify health conditions
possibly related to burn pit exposure. While the Burn Pit Registry provided
data for use in research it did not provide funding to carry out research
regarding the data collected from the Burn Pit Registry.
Vt. Guard general’s death draws attention to burn pit dangers
Flags in Vermont are flying at half-staff in honor of a
former Rhode Islander, Vermont National Guard Brig. Gen. Michael T. Heston, 58,
who died Nov. 14 from an aggressive cancer linked to his three tours of duty in
Afghanistan, one with the Rhode Island National Guard.
Flags in Vermont are flying at half-staff in honor of a
former Rhode Islander, Vermont National Guard Brig. Gen. Michael T. Heston, 58,
who died Nov. 14 from an aggressive cancer linked to his three tours of duty in
Afghanistan, one with the Rhode Island National Guard.
Heston was buried with full military honors at the Veterans
Cemetery in Randolph, Vermont, on Saturday. An order from Vermont Gov. Philip
B. Scott said flags would be flown at half-staff until sunset Monday.
Heston, the oldest son of Thomas and Dorothea Heston, grew
up in Cumberland, graduating from Cumberland High School in 1978 and from Roger
Williams College in 1982.
During his 34-year military career, he rose to the
second-highest rank in the Vermont National Guard. He was also a trooper in the
Vermont State Police for 26 years, retiring as a sergeant in 2010.
Monday, November 26, 2018
'Dr. Orange': GAO report corroborates conclusions
The long-awaited Government Accountability Office report on
the use of Agent Orange on Guam was not quite the smoking gun some veterans
hoped for.
It does not conclude that the toxic herbicide made landfall
or was used on island, as claimed by certain veterans.
For one man familiar with the history of Agent Orange, the
report speaks more toward the opposite.
Alvin Young, commonly called "Dr. Orange" for his
expertise on tactical herbicides, said the GAO corroborated his prior
conclusions.
Young often has been criticized for his opposition to claims
that Agent Orange was used on Guam and elsewhere. Pro Publica, a nonprofit
based in New York City, ran an exposé on Young, tying the scientist to
government rhetoric denying Agent Orange claims.
But the issue has weaved in and out of headlines over the
years, and recent claims of herbicide spraying from the late Master Sgt. Leroy
Foster reignited interest in the topic. Certain members of Congress requested a
review of potential links between the herbicide and Guam.
After reviewing logbooks for 96 percent of vessels known to
have transported Agent Orange, the GAO found one ship carrying Agent Orange and
other tactical herbicides stopped at Apra Harbor en route to Vietnam more than
50 years ago, but there is no evidence indicating the toxic cargo was offloaded
on island.
"They did acknowledge that the SS Gulf Shipper stopped
at Port Apra on the way to Vietnam. However, they make the argument that why
unload any tactical herbicide and move it to Andersen (Air Force Base) when
there was simply no justification – especially if the conclusion is that the
tactical (herbicide) was then flown to Vietnam. Makes no sense," Young
said.
Benefits for thousands of Navy veterans depend on Georgia senator's next move
The clock is ticking on a bill to help Vietnam-era Navy
veterans, and time is running out on many of them who are now sick.
The legislation extends health care and disability benefits
to Navy veterans suffering from exposure to the toxic herbicide known as Agent
Orange.
The so-called Blue Water Navy bill would assist 50-70,000
Navy veterans.
In June, the measure sailed through the U.S.House of
Representatives, where it received a unanimous endorsement.
Then instead of leading the way, Georgia Republican Senator
Johnny Isakson, blocked the door.
About 90,000 U.S.sailors fought in the Vietnam War, not on
the ground, but from the sea.
Their ships pulled into Vietnam's bays and harbors.
Veteran Mike Kvintus of New Port Richey was one of them.
"My ship sailed into Da Nang Harbor, and the days that
I was there, they sprayed Agent Orange all over the harbor," Mike
recalled.
The U.S. military sprayed millions of gallons of the
herbicide Agent Orange on Vietnam, to kill vegetation in which the enemy hid
and rob them of their food supply.
The powerful defoliant is now killing Americans.
"I have diabetes, I have heart disease, neuropathy, I
have kidney disease, all these are associated with Agent Orange.
The VA doesn't agree.
It maintains the science connecting Agent Orange to sailors
that never touched Vietnam soil, is just not there.
"Baloney," Commander John Wells of Military
Veterans Advocacy said.
According to Mr. Wells, a major force behind this bill, this
isn't about science, it is about money that the VA does not want to pay.
Cdr. Wells cites studies that show Agent Orange ran into
streams and rivers, then ended up offshore.
There, U.S. ships converted contaminated sea water to water
that crews drank, cooked and bathed in.
The distillation process only enhanced the Agent Orange.
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
HAPPY THANKSGIVING 2018
AOZ will be closed until Monday December 3 so our feral staff can enjoy the
holiday with with anyone willing to tke the risk
Dioxins in food more harmful than thought, EU watchdog says
LONDON (Reuters) - The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
on Tuesday slashed its recommended limits in food of dioxins and related toxins
- chemicals that have been linked to problems with reproductive health, the
immune system, hormone levels and tooth enamel.
Dioxins and dioxin-like PCBs are mainly by-products of
industrial activities and can accumulate in the food chain, notably in fatty
fish, cheese, eggs and farmed meat.
New data and techniques for modeling how long dioxins stay
in the body convinced EFSA that the maximum weekly intake should be cut to just
2 trillionths of a gram per kilogramme of body weight - one seventh the
previous limit, set in 2001.
Saturday, November 17, 2018
Scientists call on VA to study Agent Orange impact in Vietnam veterans' kids
A new report calls for the Department of Veterans Affairs to
look at the generational impact of male Vietnam veterans' exposure to dioxin --
a component of Agent Orange.
Decades after the Vietnam War ended, the children of
soldiers who served say they continue to struggle grapple with the impact of
Agent Orange exposure.
The new report, released Thursday by The National Academies
of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, specifically looked into generational
health effects of dioxin after a special request from the VA.
The group noted "there are relatively few studies on
the health effects of paternal chemical exposures on their descendants, and
none address Vietnam veterans specifically."
The majority of generational studies done by the scientific
community regarding Agent Orange has been focused on women and not men. The
report is the final study from the Veterans and Agent Orange series, a
Congressionally mandated review that was required following the passage of The
Agent Orange Act of 1991.
Agent Orange is a term that is used to describe a series of
odorless herbicides that were used by the U.S. military to defoliate hiding
places, fields and rice paddies used by the Viet Cong for survival.
Almost 20 million gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed in
Vietnam, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs between 1962 and 1971.
The Vietnam Veterans of America, last week told ABC News
that they will continue to educate and advocate for its members and their
descendants regardless of the outcome of the report.
Gulf War and Health, Volume 11: Public Briefing
Dear Interested Parties:
This is a reminder that the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine’s Committee on Gulf War and Health, Volume 11:
Generational Health Effects of Serving in the Gulf War will hold a public
briefing for the release of the committee’s report on Wednesday, November 28,
2018, from 10-11 AM in Room 250 of the National Academy of Science’s building
at 2101 Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC. You and any interested
colleagues are welcome to attend the briefing in person or via a webcast (using
Zoom). The briefing will be led by the committee chair, Dr. Kenneth Ramos.
If you have not already done so, please let Pam McCray-Ramey
(PMcCray@nas.edu) know in advance if you plan to attend the meeting in
person. If you’d like to participate via
Zoom, please let Pam know and she will provide you with information for
accessing the briefing on Monday, November 26.
You are welcome to distribute this notice to other interested parties
and ask them to contact us about participation.
Sincerely,
Robbie Wedge
Roberta (Robbie) Wedge, M.S., Study Director
Senior Program Officer
Health and Medicine Division | Find us at
nationalacademies.org/HMD
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-334-3106
Email: rwedge@nas.edu
Veterans and Agent Orange: 11th Biennial Update
News from National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and
Medicine
Nov. 15, 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Hypertension Upgraded in Latest Biennial Review of Research
on Health Problems in Veterans That May Be Linked to Agent Orange Exposure
During Vietnam War
WASHINGTON -- The latest in a series of congressionally
mandated biennial reviews of the evidence of health problems that may be linked
to exposure to Agent Orange and other herbicides used during the Vietnam War
found sufficient evidence of an association for hypertension and monoclonal
gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS). The committee that carried out
the study and wrote the report, Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 11 (2018),
focused on the scientific literature published between Sept. 30, 2014, and Dec.
31, 2017.
From 1962 to 1971, the U.S. military sprayed herbicides over
Vietnam to strip the thick jungle canopy that could conceal opposition forces,
destroy crops that those forces might depend on, and clear tall grass and
bushes from the perimeters of U.S. bases and outlying encampments. The most
commonly used chemical mixture sprayed was Agent Orange, which was contaminated
with the most toxic form of dioxin. These and the other herbicides sprayed
during the war constituted the chemicals of interest for the committee. The
exact number of U.S. military personnel who served in Vietnam is unknown
because deployment to the theater was not specifically recorded in military
records, but estimates range from 2.6 million to 4.3 million.
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
AGENT ORANGE TOWN HALL MEETING SCHEDULE
We update our meetings
regularly on the Town Hall Meeting Calendar:
https://vva.org/AOTownHall.html
November 16, 2018
Libby, Montana
Contact: Willa Burgess
Burn Pits – the Agent Orange of the Iraqi War
The same deadly chemicals
found in the herbicide Agent Orange that was sprayed on the jungles of Vietnam
during the Vietnam War are being released in burn pits on U.S. military bases
across Iraq and Afghanistan.
“Otherwise healthy U.S.
service members are returning from deployment with cancer, leukemia,
respiratory illnesses and other chronic conditions,” said Chelsey Poisson, a
RIC nursing student with prior military service in the R.I. Army National
Guard. Poisson has made it her mission to advocate for service members who have
been exposed to burn pits and to push for legislation to change military
policies.
Burn pits are massive
holes backhoed in the ground to dispose of waste/garbage on U.S. military
bases. One of the largest burn pits –
at Joint-Base Balad in Iraq – spanned 10 acres. Smaller metal barrels are used
at smaller platoons. The danger, Poisson said, is what is being burnt in them.
“Everything is burned,”
she said. “Because you’re in a war zone, you can’t call up the local waste
management or recycling company to come by and pick up your trash. So the
military thought the best way to get rid of their waste is to dig a large hole,
pour in diesel fuel and set the trash on fire.”
“Burn pits smolder for
weeks or months at a time, often around the clock,” she said.
And plastics proliferate
on base, she said. Plastic water bottles have replaced canteens, and
plastic utensils have replaced their metal counterparts. When plastic burns it
releases the same dioxins found in Agent Orange, another known carcinogen.
Exposure to benzene, dioxins and other toxic chemicals
occurs through inhaling or passively ingesting the fumes, gases or ashes. If
toxic ash settles in water bottles, eating utensils or
on cigarettes, it can be passively ingested orally, while airborne
ash that settles on the very fine Iraqi sand can enter the lungs during
strenous work or outdoor exercises.
Joint-Base Balad, an air base, had one of the largest burn
pits in Iraq, said Poisson. “On average, 147 tons of garbage were burned per
day,” she said. “Burning operations ran 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, to keep up with the trash accumulating on the base.”
Vietnam War veterans' kids say Agent Orange impact 'a nightmare'
READ THE STORY
Angelica Caye Kuhn was on the road to becoming a nurse.
Angelica Caye Kuhn was on the road to becoming a nurse.
The mother
of two was working as a patient care technician nearly two decades ago when one
day she heard a pop in her back.
She was in
pain for days and, after several tests, she was diagnosed with Spina Bifida, a
spinal cord defect common in children of male Vietnam veterans who were exposed
to Agent Orange. The daughter of a combat Vietnam veteran who served in 1969
until 1970 in areas that were the most heavily sprayed with Agent Orange, Kuhn
said most of her life she struggled with neurogenic stomach and bowel issues
that were often misdiagnosed.
Her father
years later would later be diagnosed with several heart conditions and diabetes
all related to Agent Orange exposure.
Kuhn eventually
received her nursing license and went back to work, but her career was
short-lived. Since then, she has had 28 different surgeries and is now legally
disabled.
"I am a
hostage and a prisoner," she wrote in an email to ABC News.
"Imprisoned by my handicap. All because of a KNOWN toxic chemical that was
dumped on my unsuspecting father and millions of other unsuspecting members of
our military, who have/are paying with their lives and the lives of their
children!!!"
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Friday, November 9, 2018
Public release and briefing - National Academies Veterans and Agent Orange report
We are
writing to inform you of the public release of the National Academies report
"Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 11 (2018)". The release will take
place at 11am EST on Thursday, November 15, 2018.
Concurrently,
we will conduct a briefing on the report’s content presented by committee
members Dr. Karl Kelsey, Dr. Mary Fox, and Dr. Wendy Bernstein. The briefing will
be November 15 from 11:00 am to noon EST at the Keck Center of the National
Academies (500 Fifth Street, NW; Washington DC 20001), Room 101. This briefing
will also be broadcast over the web—remote participants will be able to view
slides, hear the presentation, and participate in the question and answer
session that follows.
If you would
like to be a part of the briefing, please register by responding to this email
with the name[s] and email address[s] of the participants and indicating
whether they will attend in person or via the web. Questions may be directed to
veterans@nas.edu. All are welcome; interested persons who are outside the
Washington, DC area are encouraged to participate via the web.
Thank you
for your interest in our work.
Dioxin contamination in Da Nang more serious than expected
The dioxin contamination of soil in Da Nang
was worse than expected, experts said at a conference reviewing the cleanup on
Tuesday.
The event,
organized by the National Steering Committee for Post-war Clearance of Ordnance
and Toxic chemicals and USAID, shared some details on dioxin cleanup at the Da
Nang International Airport, a U.S. air base during the Vietnam War.
Pham Quang
Vu, head of the Air Force and Air Defense’s Military Science Division, said
earlier calculations had underestimated the actual contamination at the
airport.
He said the
actual amount of contaminated soil is 162,500 cubic meters and not 72,900 cubic
meters as earlier estimated.
Anthony
Kolb, chief of USAID’s environmental remediation unit, explained that experts
only took soil samples from the surface and from that determined the depth to
which the dioxin could have penetrated.
The dioxin
had percolated three meters deeper than expected, he said at the conference in
Da Nang.
Vu said the
miscalculation could be attributed to the fact this was the first time this
particular technology was used to remove dioxin from the soil on such a large
scale. It involves heating the contaminated soil while covering it in concrete.
The finding
could help make future dioxin assessments more accurate, especially at another
ongoing cleanup project at the Bien Hoa Air Base in the southern province of
Dong Nai. Bien Hoa is considered one of the worst dioxin-contaminated spots,
with some 850,000 tons of soil feared contaminated.
Burn Pit Vet's Widower: Memos Show that Illness Didn't Need to Happen
It was in
2009 when Brian Muller first met his wife, Amie.
"We
actually met at a music venue. And at the time I was playing music in a band
and she had some friends there that were at the event," Muller, 45, from
Woodbury, Minn., recalls in a recent interview with Fox News. "Her friends
forced her to go out. I forced myself to go out and just to see some
music."
He remembers
how they discussed her service with the Minnesota Air National Guard.
"We
ended up talking about what she does with the military," he says,
"and at that time, she was doing a project to make video memorials for
gold star families. Families that lost loved ones in Iraq or Afghanistan or any
type of war."
"She
asked me to write a song for those videos. And that's how we kind of started
our relationship, as-- friends, and then it developed from there."
Brian has
never served in the military but was impressed by Amie's service -- including
her two tours in Iraq.
"She
wanted to fly, and she joined the Air Force. And she got deployed and had her
life kind of uprooted there for a while."
Amie was
stationed at the Iraqi air base in Balad during both of her tours in 2005 and
2007. While her active service was already behind her, the effects from her
time on that base still lingered.
"She
didn't really want to talk about her time over there," Brian says.
"Anytime a door would slam or a loud noise, she'd get startled very
easily. She had a lot of PTSD [episodes] from just little things."
A decade
after returning from Iraq, Amie's physical health also suffered. She was
diagnosed with Stage III Pancreatic Cancer.
"I
still remember Amie getting the call, and she looked at me," Muller says
about the day they found out about her diagnosis back in April 2016.
"We
walked around the corner just to make sure the kids didn't see. I could tell by
the look in her face how scared she was. And I just kind of listening in to the
call. And we just started shaking.
Both she and
Brian believed it was related to her exposure to open-air burn pits used to
destroy trash generated on the base. Nearly every U.S. military installation in
Iraq during the war used the crude method of burn pit disposal, but Balad was
known for having one of the largest operations, burning nearly 150 tons of
waste a day.
The smoke
generated from these pits hung above Amie's barracks daily.
"She
talked about the burn pits even before she got cancer," Muller recalls,
"and how the fact that they would change the filters on these ventilation
systems quite frequently. And every time they'd change it would just be this
black soot, so thick that you would think you'd have to change it every
hour."
Supreme Court grants certiorari
In Gray v. Wilke the court will answer the
question of “whether the Federal Circuit has jurisdiction under 38 USC § 502 to
review an interpretive rule reflecting VA’s definitive interpretation of its
own regulation, even if VA chooses to promulgate that rule through its
adjudication manual.” The question arises out of the VA’s interpretation of the
Agent Orange Act, an act that made it easier for veterans “to obtain disability
compensation.” The Agent Orange Act “creates an automatic presumption of
service connection” for any veteran who served in the Republic of Vietnam and
developed “one of several diseases medically linked to Agent Orange.” However,
“[o]ver the past 20 years, VA has repeatedly narrowed its understanding of
which Vietnam War veterans ‘served in the Republic of Vietnam’ and thus qualify
for the Agent Orange Act’s automatic presumption.”
Monday, November 5, 2018
Vets Exposed to Agent Orange May Get Help From SCOTUS
The U.S.
Supreme Court agreed today to review a case that could eventually make it
easier for veterans exposed to Agent Orange to obtain benefits.
The court
said it would take a look at a 2017 ruling finding that the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit didn’t have the authority to review 2016
changes by the Department of Veterans Affairs to the Agent Orange Act of 1991.
Okinawa and Review of the Historical Records on Agent Orange
This paper by Dr. Alvin Young flies in the face of several documented
instances where it has been proven that herbicides were, in fact, on Okinawa.
The Brown Water Navy
courtesy Brian DuMont via Paul Sutton
This 1996 History Channel video is 46+ minutes
long but well worth watching and really explains the history of and development
of the Brown Water Navy in Vietnam. Many of the Brown Water Navy innovations
came about once then-Vice Admiral (later CNO) Elmo R. Zumwalt became commander
of all naval forces in Vietnam.
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