Forty-three years after the Vietnam War ended, tens of
thousands of U.S. veterans are still fighting for benefits they earned in that
conflict.
Their victory over bureaucracy was in sight in June when 382
U.S. House members agreed on a voice vote to pass H.R.299, the Blue Water Navy
Vietnam Veterans Act of 2017. David Shulkin, then secretary for Veterans
Affairs, was not opposed to the bill.
Unanimous House
In 1991, a law made all Vietnam veterans eligible for
benefits to cover specific ailments related to exposure to Agent Orange. The
U.S. military doused Vietnam with 20 million gallons of this toxic defoliant
during the war. But in in 2002, the VA issued a rule saying that veterans had
to have served on land to be eligible for Agent Orange coverage.
That rule left Navy veterans without the health and
disability coverage for conditions such as Parkinson’s, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
and diabetes.
Finally in 2017, 330 members of the U.S. House — 175
Democrats and 155 Republicans — sponsored legislation specifying that when
Congress said “all veterans” it meant U.S. Navy veterans, too. Reps. Greg
Gianforte of Montana and Liz Cheney of Wyoming didn’t sponsor H.R.299, but they
voted for it.
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