One year after Congress and the president passed into law a
measure to grant Veterans Affairs benefits to sailors who served on ships off
the coast of Vietnam, VA has granted about 17,400 claims.
The Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act required the Department
of Veterans Affairs to provide disability benefits to veterans who served in
the waters off of Vietnam. The measure was just one more provision in a
decades-long fight to guarantee the same benefits to nearly 90,000 Navy
veterans who served in the waters offshore of Vietnam that their land and
brown-water comrades were already entitled to after potentially being exposed
to Agent Orange.
Since then, the department has received 58,336 Blue Water
Navy disability claims, VA Press Secretary Christina Noel told Connecting Vets.
As of May 31, 23,735 of those claims have been processed.
And of those that have been processed so far, the Veterans Benefits
Administration tracks 17,401 claims granted or about 73 percent of the claims
processed so far.
Both the House and Senate passed the bill granting Blue
Water Navy vets benefits unanimously and the president signed it into law last
June.
About a week after the president's signature codified those
benefits, VA Secretary Robert Wilkie delayed all claims processing until Jan.
1, 2020, as first reported by Connecting Vets. That stay effectively stalled
the benefits many aging and ill veterans thought they had finally gained with
the passage of the bill in Congress.
Pleas from veterans, their families and advocates over the
following months rendered no change or response from VA, and those who reached
out to the president told Connecting Vets they received no response.
At the time, Wilkie said the department was "working to
ensure that we have the proper resources in place to meet the needs of our Blue
Water veteran community and minimize the impact on all veterans filing for
disability compensation."
Veterans were allowed to file their claims, but they were
not processed until Wilkie's stay lifted on Jan. 1, 2020.
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