From a Veterans of Foreign Wars News Release
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1, 2013 – Last year, the Veterans of Foreign
Wars of the United States helped 125,000 disabled veterans recoup more
than $3.7 billion in earned compensation and pension from the Department
of Veterans Affairs.
This exceeds 2011’s record totals by 23,000 veterans and almost $1.7
billion, and provides further proof that all eligible veterans and
transitioning military members should seek help from an accredited
service officer before they file a VA disability claim.
“No
wounded, ill or injured veteran should ever complete the detailed
12-page VA claims form without the professional -- and free --
assistance of an accredited veterans’ service officer,” said VFW
National Commander John E. Hamilton, a Vietnam War Marine Corps rifleman
and triple Purple Heart recipient.
“And no military person
should ever separate or retire without first seeking assistance from a
veterans’ service officer stationed on their installation through the
Pentagon’s Benefits Delivery at Discharge program,” Hamilton added. “It
literally means the difference between receiving VA benefits or not.”
The VFW’s nationwide force of 1,200 VA-accredited service officers
includes more than 200 working inside the 57 VA regional offices, as
well as advocates inside the VA Board of Veterans Appeals, who have a
win percentage that surpasses attorney-assisted appeals.
VFW’s
BDD service officers are stationed on Army Forts Bragg, Campbell, Hood,
Lewis and Stewart; Marine Corps Camps Lejeune and Pendleton; and in
military-populated regions like Las Vegas, Orlando, San Diego, Puerto
Rico, and the Military District of Washington, to include Andrews Air
Force Base in Maryland, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center at
Bethesda, Md., and Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia, where the VFW
has a special relationship with the Marine Corps Wounded Warrior
Regiment to assist previously discharged wounded, ill and injured
Marines with their VA claims or appeals.
“Health care is
important to every generation, and with very few exceptions, you cannot
get into the world class VA medical system without an approved claim
first,” Hamilton said. “Seeing an accredited service officer before
filing a VA claim needs to be a mandatory checklist item for every
veteran and every military Transition Assistance Program class.”
Saturday, February 02, 2013
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