[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 138 (Thursday, September 24, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H6220-H6222]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VETERAN SUICIDE PREVENTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Arizona (Ms.
Sinema) for 30 minutes.
Ms. SINEMA. Mr. Speaker, I am very happy to open the Special Order
this evening with my colleague and friend, Congressman Dan Benishek of
Michigan.
We have some colleagues who are joining us here this evening to
continue the discussion we have been enjoying for the last hour of
talking about the scourge of veteran suicides and how to stop this
scourge.
We know that there are brave whistleblowers around this country who
have told us and the Nation about the problems at the VA.
If it weren't for brave whistleblowers, we may not have learned about
the tragedies at my VA, the Phoenix VA, and we could have lost even
more lives than we have lost already.
In order for the VA to change, it has to put its veterans first and
change the culture. We believe that VA employees must continue to speak
up and speak out.
Brandon Coleman, a Marine Corps veteran, has seen firsthand the
important role the VA can play in helping veterans. A decade ago he
received help from a dedicated VA counselor, who helped him overcome
substance abuse issues and get his life back on track.
Wanting to help his fellow veterans, Brandon began working as an
addiction counselor with the Phoenix VA in 2009.
In January of this year, Brandon approached his supervisor after,
over the course of a single week, five suicidal veterans walked out of
the Phoenix VA hospital without getting the help they needed from the
emergency room.
After coming forward with his concerns about how the VA handled
suicidal patients, Brandon was placed on administrative leave for
adverse behavior and his program was shut down.
Mr. Speaker, no one should fear the risk of losing his or her job for
speaking out. That is why we introduced the VA Accountability Act, a
bipartisan bill to hold poor-performing employees accountable and to
increase protections for whistleblowers.
Empowering whistleblowers helps our veterans and their families get
the answers they deserve. The VA must respond to this challenge with a
culture of accountability that protects veterans, not its own
bureaucracy.
Brandon testified before the Senate Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee earlier this week on improving
accountability within the VA. He is committed to fixing the VA to
ensure that all veterans get the same help that he got.
I would like to take some time now to turn the podium over to the
gentleman from Oklahoma (Mr. Russell).
Mr. RUSSELL. I thank the Congresswoman.
Mr. Speaker, it is a serious issue that our Nation faces when we
imagine the sacrifice that our veterans make only to see them become
casualties in a battle with the mind.
Those of us who have borne the burden of battle carry the weight of
that burden the rest of our lives. As a warrior, I have seen the worst
things that human beings can do to one another. I have had to take
human life. I have had to watch fellow warriors lose theirs. I have
caressed wounded brothers as they have been bleeding.
We recall these things and carry these things, and, as warriors, we
attempt to process it all when we come home. When we do come home,
others attempt to interact with us not quite knowing how that
interaction should play out or how to treat the Americans we really
are.
So, as we address this issue of veteran suicide and as we stand here
to speak in support of the many good measures that we have heard today,
Mr. Speaker, I would also like to provide a couple of things worth
noting with which we could reach out to the community at large, to our
States, to all of America.
For the population that deals with returning battle veterans, purpose
matters. We don't want to come home as victims. We don't want to be put
in some special class.
We have maintained the stresses of battle, and we have fought our
Nation's wars, but purpose matters as we come home.
If that purpose is somehow denied us because of fear of capacity or
fear of being able to interact with other Americans in employment or in
whatever it is that we put our hand to, then we will miss a great
opportunity early on to engage returning veterans in things that will
help them heal.
Secondly, we should treat our returning veterans as the Americans
they really are. We somehow unintendedly imagine them as damaged goods,
or maybe they have had something happen to them that does not make them
quite like we are. That is a mistake.
Thirdly, when we look at the stresses of battle and how they shape
our lives, we must remember this, that post-traumatic stress is
treatable. As we deal with those who have faced battle as they struggle
through this, it is important to note that the returning warrior has
not lost his mind or her mind. It is treatable.
Mr. Speaker, one can easily relate when you think about, in my home
State, maybe surviving a tornado or maybe, across America, being in a
horrific car accident or losing a loved one in some capacity.
It creates stress on the human being, yet no one in that scenario
would say, ``Well, they have been through quite a lot, so I am not sure
that they can engage with the public anymore and be employed'' or, ``I
am not sure they will be able to handle the daily stresses.''
Instead, we look at them, and we realize that these are life-altering
experiences, whether it be through a car accident or a tornado, and we
say, ``Wow, that is terrible, but they have really bounced back, and
they have done a good job of recovering.'' We need to look at it in the
same capacity.
I am no physician, but I am a warrior who has come home. For the
warrior, as he or she does come home, Mr. Speaker, we must urge all of
our warriors, especially as they face insurmountable pressure about
``Does life have a purpose?'' to not live in isolation, and we must
understand that the adrenalin of survival at our peak in battle, which
is all around us--every sense alive to protect us as we survive--
physiologically doesn't instantly change when we come home.
Those levels of adrenalin stay, and we crave them. That is why your
returning veteran may ride his motorcycle at 120 miles an hour or
pursue a dangerous activity. As the warrior processes it, he must
understand as well that it takes time to abate that and to adjust.
I also want to point out, Mr. Speaker, that our returning veterans
should band together with their fellow warriors. Above all, don't quit.
Only we can take ourselves out of that fight.
To all of us, I think it is best to recall what Solomon tells us in
Ecclesiastes in that two are better than one because they have good
reward for their labor, for, if they fall, the one will lift up his
fellow; but woe to him that is alone when he falls, for he does not
have another to help him up.
Again, if two lie together, then they have heat. But how can one be
warm alone? And if one prevails against him, two shall withstand him,
and a threefold cord is not quickly broken.
As we attempt here in government to bind up the wounds, we must also
realize it is not the government's sole responsibility. As an American
community, we need to bind together as those wounds are bound up to
heal.
Ms. SINEMA. Thank you so much, Representative Russell, for your
thoughts and your participation.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Lamborn).
Thank you for being here this evening.
Mr. LAMBORN. I want to thank my colleagues Representative Sinema and
Representative Benishek for their leadership on this issue today and
for organizing this time together.
I also want to thank Representative Russell for his hard-earned
insights that he has shared with us.
Mr. Speaker, it is critical that we raise awareness for veteran
suicide prevention. Unfortunately, this much-needed awareness comes too
late for one of my Colorado Springs families.
I would like to tell you the story of Noah, a former marine, who
served with honor in Iraq in 2009 and in Afghanistan in 2011. I will
not use his last name, but his parents have offered the use of his
picture.
After leaving the Marine Corps, Noah began working on a business
degree at
[[Page H6221]]
the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, and started his own
online business.
Now, Noah comes from a military family, his dad having honorably
served for 23 years. He chose to put off college so that he could serve
this great Nation.
Unfortunately, his parents are appalled by the care their son did not
receive from the VA. They believe their son would still be alive had he
received better care. Noah was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress
disorder and received a 50 percent disability rating due to PTSD.
On April 2 of this year, he went to the Colorado Springs VA clinic,
where medical notes from his visit state that he had had suicidal
thoughts.
Noah was prescribed a psychotropic drug and was sent on his way. He
was not referred for suicide prevention; he was not offered counseling;
and there was no follow-up from the VA.
He went missing on May 4 and was found dead from an apparent suicide
on May 12 of this year. As you can imagine, his family is devastated.
They are asking a lot of serious questions.
I had the opportunity to ask some of their questions on their behalf
during a June 10 hearing by the Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on
Oversight & Investigations.
During the hearing, two top-level VA officials stated that they would
personally look into the case and ``make sure this family had been
reached out to directly.''
However, a month after the hearing, no contact had been made, and my
office had to once again engage the VA on behalf of this grieving
family.
The VA has since stated that Noah should have been seen within 2
weeks of his medical appointment and that they are modifying their
procedures to, hopefully, make sure this doesn't happen in the future.
It should not take the death of a marine to get procedures right in
regards to suicide prevention. We owe it to our veterans to get it
right the first time.
Hopefully, this Special Order and the added awareness of veteran
suicide will help prevent another tragedy like Noah's.
Ms. SINEMA. Thank you, Congressman Lamborn, for your contribution
this evening.
Mr. Speaker, before we close this evening, I yield to the gentleman
from Michigan (Mr. Benishek), my friend, who has been gracious to
cohost our Special Orders this evening.
Mr. BENISHEK. Yes. It was great. It was a wonderful Special Order
this evening.
I want to thank all of my colleagues who took the time to come down
and talk about this serious issue that faces our country.
Mr. Lamborn discusses a case of suicide that he is very familiar with
in his district. That story moves each and every one of us, and it is
emblematic of the 22 suicides that occur every day amongst our
veterans.
There are stories as moving as this one and as tragic as this one as
Mr. Lamborn brings up the fact that this patient was seen at the VA and
was not helped at the VA.
{time} 1715
We need to make sure that the Veterans Administration and this
administration puts our veterans not on the back burner as something
that is ongoing, but make this a crisis. This is an emergency.
This needs to be dealt with now not with reassurances from
bureaucrats that it is all going to be better or ``We are changing our
policies.'' They have been changing their policies for a long time and
nothing has happened. This needs to be an emergency response.
As friends and family members of our veterans and those serving our
country, there are some things that we can do. We can work to recognize
the symptoms that could indicate serious problems and identify where
and how to get assistance when we may need it.
To all veterans struggling with whether to take your own life, know
that there is no shame in asking for help. You are not broken, and God
has not forgotten you.
You have volunteered to go to war for us, and we have failed to
provide you adequate support when you have returned home. That is
changing. I beg you to reach out to your local VA, your veterans
center, your veterans service organization, or your Congressman to ask
for help.
I mean, I had two calls today on my cell phone, which I give my
number out freely, from veterans that did not get appropriate help at
the VA, and I refer them to my staff to get the ball rolling, get
moving.
Together we can begin to turn the tide on veterans' suicide.
Everyone, though, can help fight this epidemic and be there for those
that were there for us.
I thank my colleague from Arizona (Ms. Sinema) for closing this
Special Order hour for us.
Ms. SINEMA. Thank you so much, Congressman Benishek.
Before we close, we have one more person who has joined us.
I yield to the gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Coffman).
Mr. COFFMAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to voice my unrelenting
support for our Nation's veterans who are suffering, often silently,
with depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and profound emotional
pain. It is absolutely vital that we, as a Nation, address the crisis
of veteran suicide.
As a Marine Corps combat veteran, I can tell you firsthand that
returning home to civilian life can be a difficult transition. Many
troops used to the constant daily support of their comrades come home
feeling isolated and alone. Many find themselves needing help that too
often isn't there.
Some units are hit particularly hard, like the 2nd Battalion, 7th
Marine Regiment, a group that saw intense combat in Afghanistan and has
continued to suffer casualties to suicide years after they have
returned. 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, has seen a suicide rate 14 times
higher than that of all other Americans.
It is essential that, when our men and women in uniform return to the
civilian world and need to reach out for help, somebody reaches back.
We need to ensure that veterans get the mental health care they need,
when they need it, not after waiting weeks or months for an
appointment.
We need to ensure that veterans who need medication get it and
veterans who don't need medication aren't unnecessarily prescribed
drugs with volatile side effects.
We need to ensure that, when a veteran calls the VA's Veterans Crisis
Line, somebody is available on the other end to listen.
But I don't believe this is a problem that begins and ends with the
Department of Defense or the Department of Veterans Affairs. Veterans
are in all of our communities, our schools, our places of worship, and
our social clubs. All Americans should be willing to lend a hand when a
veteran may be suffering silently.
I share the sentiment expressed by VA Secretary McDonald earlier this
year, and I know it is a statement in which my colleagues on both sides
of the aisle would uniformly agree: ``Losing just one veteran to
suicide is one veteran too many.''
Ms. SINEMA. Mr. Speaker and Members, before I close with the closing
statements, I want to take a moment and honor and thank Congressman
Benishek not just for the work he has done tonight or the work he has
done on the Veterans Committee, but for the great work he has done in
Congress for the last three terms.
We are sad that you are retiring. We will miss you. But we have one
more chance to do this Special Order again next year, and I look
forward to that time. So thank you for your help and for your service.
Congressman Benishek has not just been a partner to me in the work
that we have been doing to help and support veterans, he has been a
leader in the Veterans Committee and in his conference and in this
House of Representatives.
I know, when he leaves this body, he will continue to be a shining
light for veterans around this country. Thank you, Congressman.
I want to close with a story about a veteran in my district. We
recently received a call from David, a constituent of mine who is an
Army veteran and a survivor of two suicide attempts.
David told us: My mind was plagued with feelings that my parents and
siblings would be better off without me because of who I had become as
a person. I felt savage and inhuman. No matter what good I did, I
couldn't face going back to a normal existence. I had never felt more
alone in my life.
[[Page H6222]]
Through much time and assistance from organizations like the Wounded
Warrior Project and mental and physical rehabilitation programs, David
gained a new mission in life. He is helping his fellow veterans
navigate a daunting system and reintegrate back into civilian life.
David wants his fellow warriors to understand that suicide is a
permanent solution to a temporary problem.
His mission of supporting veterans led David to Rally Point, a
Phoenix nonprofit veteran service organization working to assist
veterans in crisis.
Rally Point employs veterans like David who understand the unique
needs of fellow veterans, servicemembers, and their families. These are
the kinds of solutions we need to ensure that no veteran ever feels
like he or she has nowhere to turn.
We have made some progress. In February of this year, the President
signed the Clay Hunt SAV Act into law, an important step toward
improving mental health services for veterans and their families.
This bipartisan legislation requires annual third-party evaluations
of the VA's mental healthcare and suicide prevention programs to
determine which programs are successful and to recommend improvements.
It also requires collaboration on suicide prevention efforts between
the VA and nonprofit mental health organizations, and it establishes a
pilot program using peer support and community outreach to assist
veterans transitions from Active Duty.
We cannot leave our heroes to fight their toughest battles alone.
Thank you again to all of our colleagues who joined us this evening.
Our thoughts are with all the families who have lost a loved one to
suicide. Each of us can do something to raise awareness, to be that
light for a struggling veteran in our community.
Businesses can display signs to let veterans know that help is always
available. Mental health professionals can volunteer with organizations
like Give an Hour to provide free counseling to veterans and their
families. We can all learn to recognize the signs of crisis by visiting
veteranscrisisline.net and reaching out to the vets in our life.
Here in Congress, we can do more. We need a VA that provides real and
meaningful help to veterans in need that puts veterans first and works
aggressively with community providers to improve the quality and
accessibility of care.
We need a VA that is transparent and open to restore the trust and
credibility it has lost. We, who enjoy freedom every day thanks to the
sacrifices of our military servicemembers, must all step up to end the
epidemic of veteran suicide.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________