State of the Union Address by President Donald J. Trump February 5th, 2019
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Bipartisan Congressional Veterans Leaders Urge President to Block VA’s Plan to Limit Support for Caregivers of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans

(Washington, D.C.) – Leaders of the Senate and House
Veterans’ Affairs Committee sent a bi-partisan, bi-cameral letter to President
Barack Obama yesterday calling on him to ensure that eligibility for a law
Congress passed to support veterans caregivers is not limited and that the law
is implemented in a timely manner. In the letter, the Chairmen and Ranking
Members of the Congressional Committees that oversee the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) expressed their frustration over VA and Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) delays in moving forward with caregivers support, and with
additional criteria that will severely limit the ability for some family
caregivers to access the benefit. Specifically, the Congressional leaders asked
the President to direct OMB to “ensure that the regulations or other elements
of the program’s implementation comply with the specific eligibility criteria
that are set out in the law.”

“It’s simply unacceptable that the VA would limit a
program Congress designed to support family members of veterans who have left
behind careers, lives, and responsibilities to see that their loved one can
recover at home,”
said Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Patty
Murray
. “We are calling on the President to make sure that the will of
Congress and the needs of these veterans are not being ignored.  Caring
for our veterans is part of the cost of war.  This program is part of the
cost of war.”

“When he signed the Caregiver Law, President Obama stood
with wounded veterans and caregivers in promising that they’d be getting the
help they needed,”
said House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jeff
Miller
. “We’re now calling on him to fulfill that pledge and direct his
administration to hear the will of Congress, veterans, and caregivers to get
this program right.”

“This legislation was originally designed to provide a
path forward for caregivers who are already sacrificing their own aspirations
in order to make the lives of severely wounded veterans easier to bear,”

said Senator Richard Burr, Ranking Member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs
Committee
“I urge the President to work with VA to get this bill
right so that caregivers in dire need of assistance can receive the benefits
promised to them,”

“VA’s continued delay in the implementation of such a
vital program is inexcusable.  Many of these caregivers have wiped out
their savings, have had to forego their own health care coverage and have given
up their careers in order to care for their loved one,”
said Rep. Bob
Filner Ranking Member of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee
. “Last
year, Congress saw fit to extend critical benefits to the Caregivers of our
nation’s veterans and we will not stand idly by as VA prolongs the
process.  Too much time has passed already.”

The full text of the letter follows:

March 8, 2011


The President
The White House
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President:

We are writing regarding the family caregivers assistance program established
in Public Law 111-163, the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act
of 2010, which you signed into law on May 5, 2010.  To date,
implementation of this program is significantly behind the schedule mandated in
law.  The statutory deadline for the full implementation of this program
was January 30, 2011.  Our concerns were raised with you about this
previously, and after conversations with members of your senior staff, we
understand that you are directing your Administration to get this program back
on track such that services should commence early this summer.

We ask that you direct the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Office of
Management and Budget to implement the necessary interim-final regulations for
this program within 60 days of the date of this letter.  We also ask that
you direct OMB to ensure that the regulations and other elements of the
program’s implementation comply with the specific eligibility criteria that are
set out in the law.  VA’s reluctance to work with Congress and veterans
advocates has led to a situation where caregivers remain unclear if they will
receive the support Congress intended for them.

Further delay of this program hurts
veterans and caregivers in need of these critical benefits and services. 
Further, limiting eligibility to arbitrary and stringent criteria, contrary to
the intent of the law, creates undue hardship for veterans and family
caregivers meant to be helped by the new program.  Instruction and
training in the provision of care, respite, technical assistance, counseling,
and a living stipend for those who are forced to leave their jobs or work fewer
hours to provide care to their loved ones are all being withheld as some in VA
attempt to stymie this program.  VA and OMB need your leadership to
implement this program.

Thank you for your attention to
this matter.

Sincerely,

Senator Patty Murray (D-WA),

Chairman, Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committees

Rep. Jeff Miller (R-FL 1st),
Chairman, House Veterans’ Affairs Committee

Senator Richard Burr (R-NC),
Ranking Member, Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee


Rep. Bob Filner (D-CA 51st),
Ranking Member, House Veterans’ Affairs Committee

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