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President
signs $3.2 billion bill enhancing veterans' benefits and health
care
Steve
Buyer, Chairman, 335 Cannon House Office Building, Washington D.C. 20515
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
December 22, 2006
Contact
Jeff Phillips 202-228-9559
Washington,
D.C. - President Bush today signed legislation that will improve benefits
and health care for America's veterans and their families along
a broad front. The legislation, S. 3421, the Veterans Benefits, Healthcare,
and Information Technology Act of 2006, was pushed through the
U.S. House of Representatives in the final days of the 109th Congress
by Committee on Veterans' Affairs Chairman Steve Buyer (R-Ind.).
Passed
by the House on December 8, the legislation includes
$3.2 billion in funding to enhance veterans' benefits and health care,
secure sensitive personal information and authorize VA health
care facility construction nationwide. Included in the legislation
is $36.8 million for advance planning of a collaboration project between
the Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center in Charleston, S.C., and the
adjacent Medical University of South Carolina.
"This
legislation is for the veterans returning home today, and
those who served in the past," Buyer said. "From expanded health care
benefits, to improved information technology, and the construction
of medical centers across the country, the passage of this legislation
is a tribute to the sacrifice of America's veterans."
The
legislation includes increased support for servicemembers
returning from the war on terror, improved VA outreach, and $65 million
to increase the number of clinicians treating post traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD). The funds also expand tele-health
initiatives invaluable to rural veterans and increase the number of community-based
outpatient clinics able to treat mental illnesses. It
further authorizes spending for collaboration in PTSD diagnosis and
treatment between VA and the Department of Defense. Families
contending with the loss of a loved one will benefit
from increased access to bereavement counseling, authorized under the
bill.
The
May 3, 2006, theft of a VA employee's laptop
computer put at risk the personal data of more than 25 million veterans
and 2.2 million active duty members of the Guard and Reserves.
This
was the government's largest information security
breach, and the second largest in the nation's history. Responding
to congressional oversight, VA has since centralized
its management of information technology and security systems.
The
enacted legislation includes provisions to further
protect veterans and servicemembers from the misuse of their
sensitive personal information. The
bill directs VA to provide breach notification
to individuals, reports to Congress, fraud alerts,
data breach analysis, credit monitoring services and
identity theft insurance. It
also provides for an Information Security
Education Assistance program, an incentive to allow
VA the ability to recruit personnel with the information
skills necessary to meet department requirements.
"Nearly
a decade of committee oversight, including
16 hearings, is paying off with Secretary Nicholson's
commendable decision to centralize the management
of VA's information technology and security systems," Buyer
said.
Nationwide,
veterans' health care construction is boosted with authorization
of more than $600 million for repair
or replacement of flood-damaged facilities in New
Orleans and elsewhere on the Gulf
Coast. Twenty-two major construction projects across
the country are also authorized in the bill, which
also approves continued leasing of eight medical
facilities and requires VA to explore options for
construction of a medical facility in San Juan, Puerto
Rico.
The
legislation also creates a VA office
of rural health and improves outreach for rural veterans.
State veterans homes will now be reimbursed by VA for
the costs of care provided to veterans with a 70 percent
or higher service-connected condition; further, veterans
in these homes with service-connected conditions
rated at least 50 percent would get their medications
free of charge. Increasing access to long-term care,
VA will pilot a program that makes non-VA facilities
such as community hospitals eligible for state veterans'
home per diem payments.
Eligibility
is expanded for Dependants Education
Assistance to the spouse or child of a servicemember hospitalized
or receiving outpatient care before
the servicemember's discharge for a total and permanent service-connected
disability. The provision's intent
is to help enhance the spouse's earning power as early as possible
before discharge of the servicemember.
Also
included in the bill are provisions that
will provide VA with additional tools to help it contract
with veteran and disabled veteran-owned small businesses.
"Veteran
and disabled veteran-owned businesses have not been
getting their fair share of federal contracts," Buyer
said. "This
will allow VA to set the standard for the rest
of the federal government."
Complete
details of S. 3421 can be read at: http://veterans.house.gov
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Additional
information regarding how to utilize the new legislation
for the success of Veteran and Service Disabled Veteran Businesses
will be presented at the January 17 - 18, 2007 "National
Conference for Veterans' Entrepreneurship" in San Francisco,
CA.
Register
at www.asdv.org
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