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Paul
Wellstone has been one of the Senate's leading voices for America's veterans.
As a member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs
Committee, Wellstone often helps Minnesota veterans
cut through bureaucratic red tape in order to ensure that the government
provides the benefits to veterans that they deserve. Wellstone introduced
and successfully pushed into law the Hmong Veterans' Naturalization Act,
helping thousands of veterans and their families receive U.S. citizenship.
Wellstone has pushed time and again for additional funding for veterans'
health care and has also introduced the Veterans' Bill of Rights, a major
piece of legislation that would ensure that veterans receive the quality
of health care that they deserve.
Wellstone Serves On the Veterans' Affairs Committee.
Paul Wellstone serves on the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, where
he has worked on behalf of Minnesota's veterans to increase health care
benefits, expand citizenship, and provide additional benefits to those
veterans who have been overlooked by Washington bureaucrats and politicians.
Wellstone's
Office Frequently Helps Veterans Cut Through Bureaucratic Red Tape In
Order to Provide Benefits.
Paul Wellstone's Minnesota Senate Office regularly helps veterans in need
of compensation and benefits cut through bureaucratic red tape in Washington
at the Department of Veterans' Affairs in order to provide them those
benefits.
Wellstone
Authored the 'Homeless Veterans Assistance Act,' Which Will Help Thousands
of America's Veterans.
Paul Wellstone authored, pushed, and enacted into law in 2001 a measure
to improve the living conditions of hundreds of thousands of American
veterans. Wellstone's new law helps treat homeless veterans who
suffer with alcohol and drug addiction and provide one-stop shopping places
for community-based care, mental health services, treatment, and assistance
in getting affordable housing. With more than 500,000 American veterans
roaming the streets homeless in any given year, a large portion of whom
served during the Vietnam era, Wellstone fought passionately for this
critical assistance package. When Republicans blocked Wellstone's
attempt to enact the measure into law, he retaliated by blocking all Republican
legislation. The Republicans caved, Wellstone's measure was passed,
and now America's homeless veterans will be getting the assistance they
deserve.
Wellstone
Called for GAO Investigation Into Delays Of Veterans Records. In
June 2000, Paul Wellstone joined Senator Tom Harkin in calling on the
General Accounting Office (GAO) to investigate delays in responding to
requests for veterans' records from the National Personnel Records Center
(NPRC) in St. Louis, Missouri. NPRC holds the complete records of
discharged members of each branch of the military. Wellstone said his
staff and others have experienced long delays in response to their regular
communication with NPRC on behalf of veterans and their families.
Wellstone
Was Chosen 1995 'Legislator Of the Year' By the Vietnam Veterans of America.
In 1995, Paul Wellstone was chosen a 'Legislator of the Year' by the Vietnam
Veterans of America for his tireless crusade on behalf of veterans across
the country.
FIGHTING
FOR VETERANS' HEALTH CARE
Wellstone
Succeeded In Providing $17 Billion Over 10 Years To Veterans Health Care
In 2002.
In April 2001, Paul Wellstone successfully pushed through an amendment
to the FY '02 Budget Resolution, a non-binding budget blueprint, that
provided $17 billion over 10 years to boost health care funding for veterans.
The measure provided $1.7 billion in the FY '02 budget resolution for
veterans health care over President Bush's proposed $900 million
Wellstone
Introduced A 'Veterans Bill of Rights.'
Paul Wellstone has introduced and called for the enactment of a 'Veterans
Bill of Rights,' for every veteran who receives care in the hundreds of
Veterans Administration medical facilities across the country. Under
the proposal, the VA would have to provide: (1) high quality health care
in a timely manner; (2) improved access for preventative and primary care;
(3) the ability to see health care specialists in a timely manner; (4)
a stronger voice in ensuring the courteous and compassionate reception
of veterans at VA facilities; (5) the ability to use Medicare at VA facilities.
Wellstone
Introduced Legislation Providing For A Nationwide VA-Medicare Program.
Paul Wellstone introduced the 'Veterans' Health Care Preservation and
Improvement Act of 1998,' which if passed would have authorized the Department
of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Health and Human Services to
develop a nationwide Medicare Reimbursement program to provide more veterans
the opportunity to use the VA medical system while securing an additional
revenue stream for the financially strapped hospital system.
Wellstone
Has Repeatedly Called For Full Funding of Veterans' Health Care.
Paul Wellstone has continually called for full funding of veterans'
health care and inserted into his 'Veterans Health Care Preservation and
Improvement Act of 1998' language that protected the VA medical system
against any shortfall in collections from 3rd party payments
by guaranteeing that Congressional appropriations would make up the difference.
The bill declares that Congress should appropriate sufficient funds to
provide quality health care for all veterans who use the VA medical system
through the year 2002.
Wellstone
Has Repeatedly Pushed To Provide Compensation To 'Atomic Veterans.'
For several years, Paul Wellstone has repeatedly pushed to provide
justice to so-called 'Atomic Veterans,' who were exposed to radiation
at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and at atmospheric nuclear tests. For
more than 50 years, many of them have been denied compensation for diseases
that the Veterans' Administration recognizes as being linked to their
exposure to radiation - otherwise known as radiogenic diseases. Many of
these diseases are lethal forms of cancer. Wellstone has introduced
the 'Justice for Atomic Veterans'' legislation that would have added 3
radiogenic diseases - brain, lung, and colon cancers - to the list of
diseases that VA presumes to be service-connected. The measure has
passed the Senate, but has never made it into law, partly because of opposition
from the Clinton Administration. In June 2000, Wellstone sent a letter
to then-VA Secretary Togo West criticizing the Clinton Administration's
position on compensation for 'Atomic Veterans.'
Wellstone
Cosponsored The 'Radiation Exposure Compensation Act Amendments of 2000.'
Paul Wellstone cosponsored the 'Radiation Exposure Compensation Amendments
of 2000,' a new law that allows veterans who apply for compensation from
the Department of Justice for brain, lung, and colon cancers to be given
the benefit of the doubt. However, unless additional legislation
is passed, such as that introduced several times by Wellstone, that same
veteran could be denied service connection by the VA.
Wellstone
Sponsored A Measure Expressing the Sense of the Senate That Certain Types
of Cancer Should Be Added to Veterans Affairs' Department Service-Connected
Disabilities.
Paul Wellstone sponsored and voted in favor of an amendment to the V.A.-HUD
FY '00 Appropriations that expressed the sense of the Senate that "lung
cancer, colon cancer, and brain and central nervous system cancer should
be added to the list of radiogenic diseases that are presumed by the Department
of Veterans Affairs to be service-connected disabilities."
Wellstone
Pushed For Veterans' Health Care 'Rainy Day Fund.'
Paul Wellstone introduced and pushed for a $3 billion veterans' health
care 'Rainy Day' reserve fund to help veterans' health care programs in
addition to the other normally appropriated VA funding. Under the Wellstone
plan, decreasing the proposed 1999 GOP tax cuts that would have gone to
individuals earning over $200,000 annually would have paid for the veterans'
reserve funds.
Wellstone
Introduced The 'Persian Gulf War Veterans Compensation Act of 1997.
Paul Wellstone introduced the 'Persian Gulf War Veterans Compensation
Act of 1997,' which would have extended until ten years after the date
on which a veteran last performed active military duty in the Persian
Gulf War the time period in which a chronic disability resulting from
undiagnosed illness could be compensated through veterans' disability
compensation. The legislation died in the Senate.
Wellstone
Blasted Legislation Restricting Gulf War Veterans From Filing Claims Against
Frozen Iraqi Funds.
In September 1997, Paul Wellstone blasted a foreign relations bill
introduced in the Senate that would have let tobacco companies but not
gulf war veterans file claims against $1.3 billion in frozen Iraqi funds.
Wellstone sent a letter to House and Senate conferees urging it be killed.
'If you think about what's happening to the vets, this little provision
is just outrageous,' he said of the language that eliminated veterans
from the pool of possible claimants and moved tobacco companies to the
fore for the Iraqi assets frozen in American banks since the end of the
1991 gulf war.
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