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‘Every American Should Be Absolutely Disgusted’

March 21, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-21-DUFF-WND-COROMBOS.mp3

A new report shows the Department of Veterans Affairs is failing to answer calls on the Veteran Crisis Line, leaving many veterans waiting 30 minutes, a federal performance that one prominent veterans advocate says should leave the American people “disgusted.”

The VA’s own inspector general issued the report Monday.  First created in 2007, the Veterans Crisis Line is designed to have 10 percent or fewer of the calls roll over into overflow call centers.  However, from April through November of 2016, 28.4 percent of calls went to those call centers, with many waiting 30 minutes for someone to speak to them.  In October, the rate was 34.9 percent.

“It’s disgusting.  Every American should be absolutely disgusted with this rate for a suicide hotline.  I’m just kind of numb to a point where the VA is just the gift that keeps on giving when it comes to giving me an opportunity to come out ans scream and yell,” said retired U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Jessie Jane Duff, who is now a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.

“I am frustrated beyond belief.  I understand this is a new administration.  I’m willing to give the new secretary of the Veterans Administration an opportunity to correct these issues.  But I do hope that bringing this forward in the first 50 some odd days of this administration, they’d take it very seriously,” said Duff.

She says veteran suicides are a major problem and forcing vets in crisis to wait long periods is not helpful.

“They have 20 veterans a day killing themselves.  Twenty veterans a day; this is by the VA’s own stats themselves.  So then to put them on hold for 30 minutes.  Do you not think that’s not potentially contributing to the suicide rate?” asked Duff.

The report also shows the VA is distorting the wait time for veterans by declaring that calls forwarded to overflow centers are never really on hold.

“To have them wait 30 minutes is ridiculous.  And then the excuses they give.  They said they’re not being put on hold because they were re-routed to an overflow center.  They said, ‘Well, we didn’t put them on hold.’  Quit patting yourself on the back.  To a caller, that was waiting 30 minutes.  In that time they could have pulled the trigger or driven off the bridge,” said Duff.

Deflecting blame infuriates Duff as much as the incompetence.

“Who is going to be held accountable for this.  The staff obviously doesn’t get fired.  There’s obviously minimal recourse for the veterans who are left on hold.  What are they left to do.  Reporting it doesn’t seem to be getting them anywhere,” said Duff.

Duff says this seems like an easy fix.

“You would have to centralize where this system is located and you would have to enable it with an efficient and effective staff.  They should be like a 911 call center.  911 does not place you on hold.  It’s as simple as that.  It should be considered an emergency,” said Duff.

Duff says something like this should be effectively addressed in three months or less.  She also wants the VA to focus on care for veterans instead of trying to take away their second amendment rights because they’ve been deemed mentally incapable of handling their own financial affairs.  The Justice Department imposed such an order and legislation is now underway to reverse that ruling.

“Mentally defective does not equate suicide, and if the VA cares so much about suicide, why aren’t they answering their phones,” said Duff.

When it comes to confronting union and freeing up the VA secretary to remove ineffective or incompetent personnel, Duff wants to see major results within a year.  She says Secretary David Shulkin deserves a chance to do the job, but she says results should determine how long he stays there.

“For the bigger things. I expect (results) in a year.  I’m not even talking midterms.  If this doesn’t get corrected, somebody needs to be removed from this position and we need someone who’s willing to do the deep dive and go in there and dig,” said Duff.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: crisis, line, news, Shulkin, VA, veterans

Three Martini Lunch 3/21/17

March 21, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-Martini-Lunch-3-21-17.mp3

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America get a kick out of Dianne Feinstein declaring Roe v. Wade of being a “superprecedent.”  They’re also frustrated as the VA’s inspector general shows far too many veterans are being forced to wait a long time on the Veterans Crisis Line.  And they weigh in on the Blaze suspending Tomi Lahren for telling ‘The View’ that being pro-choice is consistent with conservatism.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: abortion, Blaze, crisis, delay, Feinstein, Lahren, Martini, National, Review, superprecedent, veterans

Congressional GOP Pumped to Work with Trump

December 1, 2016 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/12-1-yoho-blog.mp3

Republicans in Congress are fired up  by the chance to accomplish big things in the early days of the upcoming Trump administration and move away from the crisis budgeting that faces them once again in the lame duck session.

Rep. Ted Yoho, R-Fla, who gained notoriety nearly two years ago by posing an intraparty challenge to then-House Speaker John Boehner, says GOP members are itching to get things done.

“I can tell you the enthusiasm and the excitement up here of getting things done is higher than I’ve ever seen,” said Yoho, who is wrapping up his second two-year term.  “The optimism is tremendous.  Even the members that served under (George W.) Bush said they’ve never seen it like this.”

He says part of the excitement was the promise from Vice President-Elect Mike Pence that lawmakers would be very busy in the early days of the Trump administration.

“He said, ‘I hope you guys are holding on and you’re ready to work because this guy that is going to be president is unlike anybody you’ve ever worked with before.  He’s got unlimited energy.  We want to roll back the majority, if not all, of the executive orders.  We want to repeal and replace Obamacare and we want to adapt the tax reforms that the Republicans have teed up and ready to go,'” said Yoho.

“He said we’re going to do all that in the first 100 days,” said Yoho.

Even thornier issues such as entitlements lie ahead, but Yoho says a united GOP can make progress on those elusive goals as well.

“The biggest thing is having a common vision and goal that you’re trying to accomplish.  We’re at a point in this country where in 5-10 years our mandatory spending is going to consume over 80 percent of what we spend as a nation,” said Yoho.

“We’ll be at a situation like Greece, Spain, or Portugal, where the situation dictates what you have to do as far as austerity measures and the reforms you have to make in programs.  We have time to be proactive and change that,” said Yoho, who says this GOP Congress will not end up spending more and growing government like it did from 2005-2007, the last time Republicans controlled Congress and the White House.

While admitting some tough decisions will have to made on some aspects of entitlement and spending reform, he says some parts of the solution should be easy, starting with mandatory spending that isn’t essential.

“One of the things that’s mandatory spending is $88 million to save the wild horses out West.  I’m a veterinarian, worked on horses all my life.  I’m very cognizant and want to take care of the horses, but it shouldn’t be mandatory spending,” said Yoho.

He also sees places to trim entitlement spending.

“We’ve got people receiving Social Security benefits that have never paid into it.  We’ve got people from other countries getting Social Security Disability Insurance.  These things have to be looked at.  Then you take the fraud and abuse out of these things.  There are billions of dollars that can be saved by doing some very simple things and fixing the low-hanging fruit,” said Yoho.

Even before Trump takes office, Congress must work with President Obama to pass a short-term government funding bill.  Current funding runs out Dec. 9.  Yoho expects a continuing resolution to pass that would extend government funding until March.  The Trump administration would then be in office to negotiate future spending.  However, Yoho points out that subsequent spending debate would coincide with a high stakes debate over raising the debt ceiling.

Yoho hopes that a Trump administration will bring an end to omnibus budgeting that often end up with Republicans holding their noses and voting for prominent Obama priorities such as funding Planned Parenthood and sanctuary cities.

The current lame duck session is already a success for Yoho.  Earlier in the week, the House passed his WINGMAN legislation, also known as H.R. 5166.  The bill gives Congress access to claims filed by veterans with the Department of Veterans Affairs and gives lawmakers and their staffs the ability to explain what else veterans need to fill out or put members in position to pressure the VA for resolution of the claims.

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Filed Under: Podcasts Tagged With: congress, continuing, entitlements, news, resolution, Trump, veterans, Yoho

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