Barrack Obama

 

Vets object to billing private insurance for service injuries

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Veterans groups are warning President Barack Obama against going ahead with a possible administration move to charge veterans' private health care for service-related injuries.

Veterans groups say it's "wholly unacceptable" to charge their private insurance for service injuries.

In a letter sent by 11 of the most prominent veterans organizations, the groups warned that the idea "is wholly unacceptable and a total abrogation of our government's moral and legal responsibility to the men and women who have sacrificed so much."

CNN obtained a copy of the letter sent to the White House last Friday by groups including The American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, Military Order of the Purple Heart, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, and Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. Read the letter (PDF)

A White House spokesman would neither confirm nor deny the option is being considered.

"The details of specific proposals will be transmitted with the full submission in April. The president has made it clear that meeting the needs of veterans is one of his priorities, and as a result has requested an 11 percent increase in discretionary funding for 2010, and the administration is actively working with the veterans community to ensure we get the details of this budget right," said White House spokesman Nick Shapiro.

In the letter, the groups said they have been told by sources on Capitol Hill and at the VA that the idea under consideration would allow the Department of Veterans Affairs to bill health insurance for a treatment of a disability or injury that was a result of military service.

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Veterans groups letter to President Obama
The argument for the proposal is that it frees up money for the VA by charging the private insurers, allowing the VA to spend on more services, said Joe Violante, legislative director for Disabled American Veterans, who opposes the idea. While there could be savings, Violante warned it also could lead to an increase in premiums for veterans with private coverage.

""We cannot and would not agree to any proposal that would expand this concept any further," the heads of the 11 groups wrote in the letter.

"While we understand the fiscal difficulties this country faces right now, placing the burden of those fiscal problems on the men angand women who have already sacrificed a great deal for this country is unconscionable."

Currently, veterans' private insurance is only charged when they receive health care from the VA for medical issues that are not related to service injuries, like getting the flu.

Charging for service-related injuries would violate "a sacred trust," said Veterans of Foreign Wars spokesman Joe Davis. Davis said the move would risk private health care for veterans and their families by potentially maxing out benefits paying for costly war injury treatments.

It could also make it harder for veterans to get private insurance if the companies decide to reject them for pre-existing conditions, rather than be billed for service-connected injuries, Davis said.

"This seems like bad politics and bad policy," said IAVA Policy Director Vanessa Williamson, noting that every veterans group opposes it and warns it will adversely affect veterans. "I don't see this as a tenable option."

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/03/vets.health.care/index.html?iref=newssearch

Main Points:

Possible change in billing angers veterans groups

White House would neither confirm nor deny the option is being considered

Argument for the proposal would be to free up more money for VA

Spokesman: Charging for service-related injuries would violate "a sacred trust"
How I feel about it:
     I mean I understand what the  veterans are talking about how they don't like the change, and how that they sacrificed a lot for this country, but this is a time where everybody are going through troubles.  I mean not everybody wants to be unemployed and  having trouble making money; being fired.   Even though you get old and you are impatient, I just think through these times they need to be wise and not just think for themselves.  We are all going through this change through the stimulus bill, but you just have to wait.  Just need to go through this big hill and we'll be back on track.  So if i was Obama, i wouldn't make any big changes, because we have to think about the future, not the present or couple of years from now.   I mean if we keep it the way we have it now, our country is going to go down the drain, and our economy might suffer another depression, so for that not t happen we have to sacrifice some things.

Summary:
This summary is about how in the bill, there is a change that would effect the veterans with the private health and the service injuries, which the veterans are very angry about.  And expressing it and warning Obama about this issue.  The white house that they don't even plan to change the bill with the complaints they have.  The white house is thinking about it, taking that into consideration. The veterans spokesman believes that charging the service related injuries would violate a " scared trust."  This what they had to say.    And then it talks about the argument for both sides in how they feel.