Sestak's Veterans Summit III, A Model For Others to Emulate…

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summit_iii_018_small_400Folsom Pa. –
The Veterans Summit III convened  yesterday evening at Ridley High School 
with an estimated
500 attendees who were in the company of some 50 exhibitors all vying for the attention of veterans and their families in the hopes that their programs and services would make a difference in the lives of those who have served. 
The theme of this Summit, the third annual meeting sponsored by Congressman Sestak and his staff, focused on support the Family, a welcome area of concern during a time when many returning veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are facing new challenges here at home.

     

The hall began to fill up with folks carting in their materials as students sat across the way watching enjoying the afternoon as high schooler’s do every where in this great land on a fine sunny spring day. Sulaiman Khan 16, Abdul Daleh 16, and Irving Grice 16, were asked if they knew there were two wars going on and they replied that they did with Sulaiman saying his father was very attentive to the news broadcasts in the home every day.
summit_iii_004_400Abdul and Irving listened quietly and attentively from one moment to the next. When asked if they had any intentions of signing up for the armed forces the threesome laughed at the notion of diverting from planning out their first car and their first dates, playing football and all the other dreams they had in their heads?
When asked if they knew what the draft was they all three said they did , and when pressed further that if a draft were put in place as was the case during the past if they would report for duty, they answered in unison that they would. They never hesitated a nano second to answer. One gets the feeling from such encounters while so much has changed in the country, some things have never changed at all. Young people are entering a world as boys to men, girls to women, ready to shoulder the future, as inside a hall across the lane, the past is prologue.
As the Summit began to take shape inside there were three Merchant Marines from WWII who had set up a booth. There was Dan Vetre 89 who was a chief steward, and a cannon loader who recalled his $12.00 a day salary and showed his pay stub from the era served on D-Day and spoke of Omaha and the day his 23 year old Captain took command of his ship as the Captains father was a member of the crew, and how they all fought for several days to keep that ship afloat after it was attacked, until the Captain could beach the ill fated vessel on a sand bar to keep it from sinking altogether on yet another time and place , Dan pointed out the ribbon on his chest with bronze star that signified his ship had been sunk.Dan had seven brothers, all served during WWII. All survived.
summit_iii_014_small_400With Dan were the Silver brothers, Leon 83, and Larry 81. Leon was a boatswain who joined the Merchant Marines at 18 and had full chest of ribbons, not the least of which were his Korean medals. You see, after WWII? He was drafted to go fight in Korea.Leon had a twinkle in his eye and smile on his face the entire time as he spoke of the voyages and recollection of the time it was a sea fairer during time of war only to be unlucky enough to have been drafted. Larry was a  deck hand who went off to see the world, the taller of two brothers he had a way of leaning back taking a longer view as a taller man does as he looks across the horizon at sea, he spoke of the ports of call and the cargo runs he participated in and was very proud to have served as a Merchant Marine.
Their table had books and manuals from the era, all three spoke of the inequities the Merchant Marine endures to this day when it comes to recognition for their efforts and the lack of benefits for so long that Congressman Sestak has sought to amend as of late in recent legislation he sponsored on behalf of the Merchant Marines, without whom if not for the efforts of men like these who suffered the highest per capita of losses at sea during WWII the war would not have been won, and for all their factual points that they made on these matters in a vernacular as old salts engage in? Not one spoke poorly of America.
Further on down the line of tables were Marine Corps League Commandant Earle E. Drake and Past Commandant and Bob Spano, men who took the green bible’s words quite seriously as they stood their post in a military manner, representing the Smedley D. Butler Detachment # 741, you get the feeling when you encounter veterans like these that once a Marine always a Marine does not apply to them at all, they are Marines. And speaking of Marines, there was squad of uniformed Marines there as well lead by a Colonel and the youngest first sgt I think I have ever seen. I had to wonder then how it is we call upon such young men to assume such responsibilities, and how they manage to toe the line at all?
summit_iii_028_small_400Elliot Miller was there, he is  a National Service Officer of Amvets and he manned a table full of literature speaking with those who had a need to know.
Rachel Carson, President of Helicopter Tech was there looking for helicopter specialists as she spoke of her companies need to fill positions that she felt only veteran’s could? She can be reached at www.helicoptertechinc.com.
Sharon Murphy-Potts, BSN, RN, CRRN (Clinical Liaison) was there at a table to remind every one that ReMed was there  "Supporting Even the Longest Journey" that we are all in this together, she can be reached at smurphypotts@remed.com
And so were many others who are listed in the link below for your review and consideration.
The time came for the presenting of the colors as the panelists took the stage and the pledge of allegiance was recited and the national anthem sang, afterward as the colors retired, Debbie Armstrong who died during surgery January 27th from a cardiac condition was recalled as a tireless, loving, caring  person who gave 25 years of her life to helping thousands of veterans as her family was called to the stage to receive a letter of appreciation for their loved ones selfless devotion and their loss of such a fine family member. What noble heart indeed…
John Babbit a Vietnam Veteran and Jeff Leonard were also recognized, with Jeff soldiering through 35 years of going it alone as some of us do when we come home and turn our backs and walk away hit to the core of our beings at what we have endured at the notion that no one could ever understand summit_iii_044_small_400what we are feeling and for this meeting we rejoiced at the return of our brother to a rightful place among the pantheon of those who served.
John spoke with Lorna McAlevy from the Lebannon VA  and between the two of them they earned Jeffs trust with Jeff in from his long range patrol…Lorna was brought up for special acknowledgement, and at this writing this reporter does recall her doing what she probably does every day along with the rest of the VA staff in one way or another as being above and beyond the call of what the rest of us do in our daily lives that never adds up to what this one example illustrates.
Congressman Sestak opened the discussion period by talking about a painting that hangs in the halls at the Pentagon of a soldier and his family with the inscription at the bottom quoting Isaiah 6:8

I heard the voice of the sovereign master say, “Whom will I send? Who will go on our behalf?” 1  I answered, “Here I am, send me!”.

Sestak went on to add good accountable government says to its veterans "Thank You We Owe You" , and that the indignity suffered by past generations would not be tolerated being laid upon this new generation of Veterans to a resounding applause of approval from the attendees gathered in the modern auditorium.

“There is no more important event that we do every year than this one,” Sestak said. “I firmly believe that when a veteran is hurting, a family is hurting. And that the reverse is true. When a veteran is secure, a family is secure. In these challenging economic times, that notion is especially relevant.”

The Congressman went on to recall the statistics and data of the past and held those numbers up against the new GI bill, saying there are 6,000 Pa service members about to return from deployment the largest number since WWII, with  2 million WWII  average age 90 yrs old, 2 million Korean era vets at 70-80 yrs old, Vietnam era vets in their late 50’s and 60’s  reminding the audience that after Summit II, $375 million was appropriated for veterans benefits and $500,000 more was subsequently secured as well. with the help of Rep. Bob Filner.

summit_iii_032_small_400Sestak went on to say there was less plentiful jobs available and that the Summit was also created to help address those concerns as well.

 "Call us First"

http://sestak.house.gov/

Sestak also appealed to the audience to "Call us First" citing the seven day a week job Bill Walsh and the rest of Sestak’s staff do on behalf of the veterans they serve including Eve Massa, and John Dworkin. And call they did during the public input part of the forum with one veteran expressing his frustration with recent legislation with respect to privacy rules that prohibit persons from making decisions about family matters while those outside of the family circle do?

Another Iraqi Afghanistan era veteran in uniform was angry that certain determinations with respect to benefit ratings were stripped from him and he did not understand how that could happen? Shortly afterward it was observed in real time how several persons in attendance came to him and they began a dialogue to get to the bottom off his issues with out ever having left his seat and for this reporter that is exactly how it should have worked.

A Korean vet stood and spoke of how he was among the ones who were exposed to nuclear tests in the desert during the cold war and that he was hard of hearing due to the detonations there.He too was given special attention and escorted to a law professor waiting in the hall at one of the tables ready to hear what the mans concerns were.

Then Iraqi vet Tim Kilgore stood and explained that he was attending an apprenticeship program that was going to continue for two more years and the old GI Bill and the new GI bill presented decisions as to which one was a better advantage of pluses and minuses and one of the panelists on the stage agreed that there were differences between the two and that he should consider his alternatives with care.

There was an exchange regarding taxes where a question came from the audience about filing dates and actual approval dates of disabled benefits and Sestak deferred to the experts, the vets who had already dealt with the determinations themselves and it took three different members to get to the nitty gritty of the answer showing that the sincere persona of Sestak is not a mask for hubris when he admitted he could not answer the question and in his wisdom turned  it over to the cohort. It’s times like this when clues are found as to who we are dealing with on matters of concern and that the truth about who the real person we are listening to is reached, and Sestak showed he is not afraid to admit his shortcoming on a particular matter.

summit_iii_043_small_400Another man stood and spoke to concerns he had about criminal courts because he felt that dual diagnosis issues of alcohol and substance abuse coupled with  mental issues including ptsd did not equate to criminal behavior per se but rather spoke to a social  condition that oft times wound the vet thus affected, in criminal court? His concern was responded to with a lively dialogue from the stage by the panelists regarding  ‘Veterans Courts’ and the opportunity they present to more justly determine court cases based on mitigating circumstances a better informed court may consider in its deliberations.

And there was a female public relations Air Force Sgt Marva Johnson, at her first Summit who was impressed by the event, in her company were two Airmen one, Stan Hox a C-130 specilaist and the other a senior airman, Ralph Miller a Vietnam veteran, who described his 9 tours into todays war zone and the harrowing landings and take offs that have resulted in bullet holes in aircraft more times than not, and his concerns for the  aging air fleet. He spoke highly of the C-17 program and is in favor of the recent order for 8 more of the planes assembled in Long Beach, California.

There was Captain Arthur Jenkins age 43, who thanked the congressman for his support when Jenkins was injured and really needed to know some one was standing behind him, the two were locked in a moment of reflection at the bad old days and happy to see one another during better times.

But I don’t think a more poignant moment occurred until a young wife of a service member who is deployed at this time and not expected to return home till September stood up and asked about concerns that she had with respect to family benefits and you almost heard the rush of peoples concerned thoughts as their attention were drawn to her.

In that moment, the efficacy of putting the family first and all the combined effort of each and every person and organization  that worked so hard to bring everyone together to hear what was being said, as the theme of Summit III, was proudly met.

Tomorrow…The Rest of the Story

The panelist’s discuss the changing  VA  from civil war relic to a modern program that interfaces with DOD, homelessness, jobs, SBA loans and the legal system

 

 

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