From Vietnam Veterans Against the War, http://www.vvaw.org/veteran/article/?id=1959&hilite=

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Vets Notes: GI Bill, Need to Know

By VVAW

The "Vets Notes" column of THE VETERAN tries to make some sense of a few of the thousands of VA rules and regulations which are of particular interest to vets. In a least three ways the VA traditionally and consistently attempts to squeeze each and every penny (because there are more crucial ways for the government and the rich to spend their money--VA benefits make no profits) and, in the process, step on as many vets as possible. First, the VA doesn't tell vets about the regulations or problems--the effects of Agent Orange (see article on page 7) are the best current example where, when the demands of vets for compensation, testing and treatment are met, will cost the VA millions, even billons of bucks. Second, the administrators write the regulations to be as confusing as possible. Third, regulations spawn like rabbits, creating more and more regulations so that important items are often buried under a sea of paperwork. Unless vets have some idea of what, according to the regulations, we're entitled to, VA bureaucrats will always try to intimidate us with their "knowledge" and pull out of their ass some new rule or regulation.

For instance, hundreds of thousands of vets whose money has run out because their checks haven't come or there's some foul-up in paperwork, have been told by the VA "We'd like to help but checks have to come from Kansas City (or somewhere else that's a long ways away)." In fact, in every regional VA Office there's some functionary with the power to sign checks on the spot in emergency situations, though the VA will never get around to telling the vet about this bureaucrat. While the VA has, of course, the "power" according to regulations to determine what is and what is not an "emergency," vets who push through the red tape to get to this check-signer have often been able to get the money they need to survive until the VA check finally arrives.

After a big fight with congress, Carter finally signed another bill, one which has hardly been publicized at all; in fact, it's part of the restrictive new bill which includes refusing vets benefits to those who went through the first program. Of some interest to vets, however, is the provision in the new bill which allows veterans with general discharges for "behavior disorders"(which may mean almost anything) to get them upgraded to honorable. This new law covers 90 thousand plus vets and may be one of the easier ways for those vets to get their discharges upgraded. With the general outlook towards Vietnam vets the possibilities of such an upgrading program in the near future are small. For more information contact VVAW or talk to the nearest VA Regional Office; the bill involved is Public Law 95-126 which went into effect on March 31, 1978.

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