VIEWPOINT: Delaware veterans deserve the right VA secretary

“All gave some, some gave all,” painted in red, white and blue on the overpass connecting Dover AFB and base housing says it well, but Delaware owes its veterans more. We need a Secretary of Veterans Affairs appointed as one of the first initiatives of the incoming Gov. Matt Meyer administration.

On Veterans Day it was encouraging to note the tributes to those who selflessly serve our state and nation. We love veterans, especially on Memorial Day, July 4, and Veterans Day. Reduced cost meals, discounts, ceremonies, tributes, and even parades affirm their service and sacrifices. But beyond tributes, veterans are essentially ignored the other 362 days.

Local celebrities included a 102-year-old WWII veteran in Dover who displayed his Congressional Gold Medal as one of only five survivors of his unit; a B-17 pilot from Wilmington who survived 35 missions over Germany is still mentally sharp at 103. Very few Korean War veteran posts are still active, but some members still proudly attend events with walkers and wheelchairs.

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Kent County Vietnam veterans honored an 89-year-old surgeon who sometimes operated under fire in Vietnam. Many of his fellow veterans are slipping away in their 70s from long-term medical and psychological injuries.

The 20 to 25 year-olds who served in the Middle East deserve no less praise. Now in their mid-40s, raising families and making a living, they have carried the burden and embody the selfless service that has run in families since 1776.

Regardless of branch of service or generation, veterans who have faithfully served our nation in all conflicts share common traits of discipline, initiative, courage and loyalty to country. They are highly trained and continue their community leadership after discharge. Some start businesses and new careers in IT, teaching, research, security, sheet metal fabrication, port operations, logistics, mechanics, engineering, and medical and dental specialties. But many leave because the state makes no real effort to recruit them for the expertise needed by the companies Delaware wants to attract.

It’s estimated that about 40 percent of those exposed to gunfire, IEDs, chemicals, rocket, shell, and missile bombardment, return home with PTSD and traumatic brain injuries as different people. Many are affected for life, sometimes ending in suicide while waiting for help because of a shortage of accredited Veteran Service Officers and medical staff in acute and chronic care facilities. The Veterans Administration continues to reach out but they too are limited by underfunding and understaffing.

Delaware’s veterans bring an estimated $4 billion dollars to the state’s economy each year but are only represented by a legislative committee that appropriates less than $1 million dollars to assist veterans’ organizations reaching out on their own. It’s doubtful a company with the same revenue would be taken for granted by the state.

Not all injuries are related to combat or exposure to poisonous substances. Some are permanently injured or die by accident. The Veterans’ Coalition, established as a registered lobbying organization in 2011, has worked pro bono with four generations of veterans from WWII, Korea, Vietnam and the Middle East. All share common traits: love of country, initiative, respect for one another and courage. Their values span generations, but if we don’t look out for those who need help their children won’t continue their tradition of service. Enlistments are down by as much as 25 percent in some branches.

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Ask the veteran who has endured multiple tours in hostile environments where people want to kill you. Ask the man or woman who has lived in mud or sand, or been wounded, held in captivity, seen friends die, or are separated from their loved ones in multiple tours in harm’s way. Meet families of the fallen who have only a folded flag presented “on behalf of a grateful nation.”

In summation, Delaware, like at least 10 other states, needs a veteran at the governor’s table who understands and voices the shared concerns of Delaware’s 70,000 veterans and their families and proactively reaches out to state and federal legislators to bring attention to those who serve.

This dedicated veteran’s position will bring additional federal money into the state far exceeding the cost of the office. Taking care of our protectors is not only a moral issue but a practical one.

A veteran’s last battle must never be begging the government for relief from his or her pain.

Dave Skocik is the president and Paul Davis is the vice president of the Delaware Veterans Coalition.

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