Sen. Obama Hears Ill. Veterans' Concerns
01/21/05 18:54 EST
By NICOLE ZIEGLER DIZON
.c The Associated Press
EVERGREEN PARK, Ill. (AP) - Vietnam veteran Samuel Miller Jr. filed his
first disability claim for post traumatic stress disorder more than 11 years
ago,
but he has yet to see any money from the government.
Jose Juachon receives $48 a month for his service to the United States
during World War II - about the amount he was making in pesos when he left the
Philippines decades ago.
The two Chicago men and dozens of other veterans shared their stories with
U.S. Sen. Barack Obama on Friday during a meeting at an American Legion post
in suburban Chicago.
``The only thing I've gotten is denials,'' Miller told Obama at the session
attended by more than 300 veterans.
Obama called the meeting and another in Springfield on Saturday following a
Chicago Sun-Times investigation that found Illinois veterans receive some of
the lowest disability benefits in the nation.
The veterans who crowded the hall complained not only about the way
disability claims are treated, but also about issues ranging from the closure
of
veterans hospitals to the lack of services for mentally ill veterans.
The freshman senator and rising Democratic star, who sits on the Veterans
Affairs Committee, said he plans to raise the veterans' concerns at a
confirmation hearing next week for Jim Nicholson, President Bush's nominee for
secretary of the Veterans Affairs Department.
``When we send troops to war, it is our solemn obligation to care for them
upon their return ... and to treat them with the respect and dignity they
deserve for protecting us,'' Obama told the crowd. ``Unfortunately, in
Illinois,
we have not been living up to that obligation.''
Obama and fellow Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin said they met with Nicholson
earlier this month, and he promised to investigate discrepancies in disability
payments.
The Sun-Times reported that Illinois veterans received an average of $6,802
in disability pay in 2003, putting the state 50th among 52 states and
territories.
Outgoing Veterans Affairs Secretary Anthony Principi has ordered the
agency's inspector general to review how disability claims are rated.