[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 150 (2004), Part 17]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages 23508-23509]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                      THE DEBT WE OWE OUR WOUNDED

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                          HON. ADAM B. SCHIFF

                             of california

                    in the house of representatives

                       Saturday, October 9, 2004

  Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Speaker, in his 1917 poem, Disabled, the British poet 
Wilfred Owen, whose haunting verse brought the horror of the First 
World War to millions throughout the English-speaking world, described 
the loneliness and emptiness of a soldier who had lost his leg in war.
  Alone, in a wheelchair by a window, the soldier remembers all that he 
has lost and how the cheers that accompanied his departure for the 
front were not so loud upon his return--how

     only a solemn man who brought him fruits Thanked him; and 
     then enquired about his soul.

  Today thousands of young Americans face many of the same challenges 
of the young amputee in Owen's poem. Thanks to vastly improved 
battlefield medicine and body armor, fewer of our troops in Iraq and 
Afghanistan die from their wounds than in any of America's previous 
wars. But this improved survival rate does not come without a price: 
Thousands of young Americans are returning home paralyzed or without 
limbs. More than 7,000 Americans have been wounded in Iraq according to 
the Defense Department and many hundreds more have been wounded in 
Afghanistan.
  Last month, when I visited our troops in Iraq, I spent some time at a 
military field hospital near Baghdad. It was a deeply moving experience 
to confront the costs of war. Two weeks ago, I shared with this House a 
discussion I had had with two young Marines whose armored Humvee had 
been blown up by a roadside bomb. Nearby there was another soldier 
whose spine had been severed by shrapnel. He was unconscious when I was 
there, but his doctor told me that he will be a quadriplegic for the 
rest of his life.
  We have asked so much from the young people we send into battle and 
they have the right to expect that if they are wounded that we as a 
nation and as a people will be there for them. That is the covenant 
that we have made with them.
  The vast majority of our most severely wounded will receive cutting-
edge medical care; many will convalesce right here in the Washington 
area at Walter Reed or the Bethesda Naval Hospital. During my visits to 
Walter Reed I have been impressed by the work of the doctors, nurses 
and therapists who are doing a marvelous job for the troops there, many 
of who stay for months as they recover from their wounds and begin a 
new life--often with prosthetic limbs.
  Many of the troops who are treated at Walter Reed or Bethesda are 
discharged from the military shortly after leaving the hospital. As 
they continue their recovery most of these former soldiers will still 
require medical treatment, physical therapy, and counseling. Some will 
need care for the rest of their lives.
  For many veterans, especially the severely wounded, navigating the 
labyrinthine bureaucracy of the Department of Veterans Affairs is a 
frustrating challenge in itself. Yet, even as the VA is taking on 
thousands of newly disabled veterans, the largest such group since 
Vietnam, three VA hospitals are slated for closure, while another eight 
will be partially closed.
  The backlog of disability claims is growing and now exceeds 330,000, 
while the backlog of veterans claims pending before the Board of 
Veterans Appeals has nearly doubled in the last four years. Even though 
it now takes the VA about 160 days to process a claim--more than 5 
months, the Administration wants to cut 500 claims processors in FY 
2005.
  I see no reason why, at a time when we should be adding to the VA's 
162 medical facilities, we are shutting them down. In a survey released 
in March of last year by the American Legion, patients wait an average 
of seven months to see a primary care physician at VA facilities and 
more than half reported that they had an appointment postponed by the 
VA, with an average wait of an additional 2\1/2\ months.
  When they finally receive care at VA facilities, some of our veterans 
receive substandard care. In April of this year, an ABC News aired 
investigation of two VA facilities in the Cleveland area, found dirty 
bathrooms, halls filled with dirty linens, unclean examination rooms, 
and memos discussing broken sterilization machines. Former patients 
spoke of insensitive staff who often ignored patient needs; one woman 
spoke of patients begging for food and water.
  As bad as conditions were before, they are likely to be worse now as 
the influx of wounded from Iraq grows. In August alone, more than 1,100 
U.S. troops were wounded.
  The treatment of those wounded in battle is a good measure of a 
nation, and Congress, and the president must take corrective action 
now. I realize that fixing a problem of the magnitude of that facing 
our veterans cannot happen overnight, but we can begin now. The House 
should do is to pass immediately H.R. 5057, which will expand the 
Army's innovative Disabled Soldier Support System to all of the 
military services. The bill was introduced by my colleagues, Mr. 
Ruppersberger, Mr. Hoyer, and Mr. Jones, and enjoys support on both 
sides of the aisle. The DS3 program has helped more than 200 severely 
wounded soldiers to adjust to their new lives, but there are thousands 
more who need help.
  We must also rely on the generosity of the American people to help 
wounded soldiers. Local communities, service clubs, religious 
congregations, schools and individuals can pitch in to help new 
veterans. Medical professionals, social workers, and therapists can 
volunteer to help until we can get the VA medical system into shape. 
Contractors can donate their services to remodel homes for soldiers who 
are paralyzed or have lost a limb. Automobile dealers can donate 
vehicles that are modified for the needs of their new owners. Students 
can volunteer their time to run errands, do laundry or just visit with 
these heroes, many of whom are only a few years older than they are.
  Mr. Speaker, no American who has served this Nation in the armed 
services and been grievously wounded should ever be left to stare out a 
window and dream of a life that could have been. We are a stronger, 
prouder and more grateful nation than that.

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