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jalexand

Third Class Petty Officers
  • Posts

    45
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About jalexand

  • Birthday 07/08/1947

Profile Information

  • Interests
    autos, antiques, politics, travel

Previous Fields

  • Service Connected Disability
    90
  • Hobby
    Antique clocks

jalexand's Achievements

  1. Thank you, this is what I was looking for. Jim
  2. Well, I must say this SMC-s would be good news for me. This is the first I have been aware of this and I really appreciate the information. Personally, I have been unable to locate where to find this information on SMC-s (oither than the rate table which I was able to locate), can someone point me in the right direction as to where I can find this in the reg's? Thanks
  3. Getting back to the original post on this thread, I am intrigued by this information, especially as it might or might not relate to my specific situation. I suppose that I am one of the individuals referred to when it comes to believing that 100% is the maximum compensation one can get. At least under certain circumstances. I am aware of SMC, but from what I have been able to determine by reading the reg's I have not found it to be applicable to my situation, which is as follows: I currently receive 90% Disability Compensation as a direct result of wounds received in Combat. Under the guidelines of the new IHD Presumptive, as I understand them, I will likely be rated 100% for AO IHD. This in effect would make me 190% disabled? But, going back to my original understanding of what is the "maximum", I will receive only the basic 100% Compensation. Is this not correct thinking? Jim
  4. It indeed will be interesting to see what kind of SNAFU the DAV can come up with to delay claims payments? Still, to rate and award to Vet's who have completed the claims process should be a simple matter? Personally, as noted in a post I made to this forum several months ago regarding my "C" file, I just this week finally received the copy of my file. The good side of the delay in getting the copy of my file is that it now includes my IHD Claim and I received a copy of the C&P Exam that I underwent in July. The C&P report, which states that it is "Final" in it's conclusion finds that I am diagnosed with IHD and that my LV Dysfunction equates to an ejection fraction of less than 30%. I assume that based upon this report rating my claim under the current guidelines should be a no-brainer? How long could it possibly take to have the computer cut an award letter and begin payments? I guess we will see? Jim
  5. I have searched the web for any article addressing this situation and found none. Perhaps because Congress is set to adjourn until November 15 without having taken any action to block the program this is all the DAV needs to start implementing the program? Of course that assumption requires that one apply logic and we all know how logical government agencies are?
  6. So anyone with any inside information or is anyone willing to make an educated guess on what is happening at present on award ratings and claims while we await the CRA period? Do you think that the VA might be going ahead with rating claims and drawing award letters that will be issued immediately following the CRA delay period of 60 days (now 39 days remaining)? Jim
  7. jalexand

    "trouble Looms"

    This system contract does not bode well for Vets to begin with. The State of Indiana got involved in a big contract with IBM where IBM was to take over tha run Indianas Welfare System. This contract ended up being a SNAFU that did not work from the beginning. Heck faulty programing was resulting in otherwise qualified individuals being thrown off the system by the computers and the system was in melt down when the state was forced to fire IBM costing the taxpayors millions. This simply does not bode well for vets expecting a system that will speed anything up. More likely it will cause delays beyond belief.
  8. jalexand

    Scars

    How would this work? I have always assumed that 100% compensation rated is as far as one can go, with the exception of special care requirements that you can receive SMC for. Doesn't seem quite fair, such as a case like mine where I will likely receive 100% IHD on top of my already existing 90% rating for wounds received in combat, but will still end up only getting the same as someone who receives a 100% rating for IHD alone. But, to my understanding that is the way it works? I too have suffered from IHD for over 25 years but never filed for compensation as I had been informed that no awards were given nor expected to be for IHD developed post service. Heck I wasn't even aware of Agent Orange exposure until this year and I found that out thru the VFW not from the VA. I suppose that I am to blaim for not keeping informed about the latest findings over the years, but as much as I hate to say it, I was always under the impression that as a retired Marine and Nam Vet drawing Disability Comp for combat wounds that the VA or Department of the Navy might keep me informed on changes that would or might effect me. Certainly wrong about that!
  9. I am assuming that any Claim number is the same as your existing file number, at least that is the way it appears on the documantation I have received. I have an 8 digit file number that was extablished back in 1969 and it has never changed. The only thing different is that prior to the file number it says "In reply, refer to: 326/pre/ab" and then lists my 8 diget file number. Of course I have no idea what the 326/pre/ab stands for. I wonder now that they have published the rule if they will begin processing and rating the claims, or will they continue to sit on them pending the 60 day CRA? Jim
  10. Following my claim for compensation based upon IHD as a result of AO exposure which was filed in June of this year and having completed both the C & P exams and having provided the VA with extensive medical records substantiating the IHD I have now received official notification of my claim being placed on hold pending the out come of the legal requirements associated with placing the disease on the list of presumptives. Here is the content of a letter I received from the DVA today. Qoute: We are working on your claim for: . ischemic heart disease "We have received your compensation claim for ischemic heart disease based on herbicide exposure. However, this disease has not yet been added to the Department of Veternans Affairs regulatons governing diseases presumptively associated with herbicide exposure. In order to add this disease, we must follow a series of legal requirements, including publishing a notice in the Federal Register. We have begun this process, but are holding your claim until these legal requrements have been met. When the process is complete, we will make a determination on your claim and provide you with notice of our desicion." I would assume that everyone who has filed a claim thus far will receive a similar letter pending outcome of the proposed regulation. Jim
  11. Yes, I filed my IHD claim as a result of exposure to AO on June 2, received my C & P exam on July 10 and received my VCAA letter which was dated July 15, 2010. I have complied with all requirements of the VCAA regarding documentation and my individual statement and returned this information to the RO via Certified Mail last week. Now I wait.
  12. I get the point and I do apologize to anyone I might have offended by my rant in my post. This was not the proper forum for me to make those comments, again I apologize. Jim
  13. I didn't mean to suggest that there are not legitimate PTSD veterans out there. What I meant to indicate is that there are many that are not and those are the ones that clog the system and make it more difficult for those with legitimate claims to receive just and fair compensation without a fight with the VA. If you don't believe that there are many "trumped up" claims, then you are not living in the real world. I have a lot of Vietnam Vet friends and we talk among ourselves a lot. We know who those of us are that experienced a lot of trauma in Nam and we know who the guys are that came home after the war and put the war behind them and moved on with their lives, who the ones are that have legitimate problems and who the few are that have the attitude that they are owed a living because they served one tour in Nam. PTSD is obvioulsy the most abused because while you can't fake a bullet or schrapnel wound, you can fake PTSD and there are some that try in hopes that they will receive a pension check from the VA. This is not pretty, but it is reality!
  14. Berta, I am sorry to hear of your situation regarding your and your husbands experience with the VA over the years. I for one have avoided contact with the VA for over 40 years due to just the sort of thing you sescribe. I had always heard horror stories of mis-diagnosis and just plain poor treatment from the VA and because I have always had private medical insurance I steered completly away from the VA. This claim for IHD is really my only contact with the VA I have really ever had and I am finding it to be just the sort of "circus" that I had alwasy heard about. It is a sad commendary that the VA treats Vet's claims as an adversarial relationship rather than one of assistance? I can only assume that this adversarial attitude of the VA is a direct result of the thousands of illegitimate, trumped up claims that they receive all the time. Looks like the latest quick way to a free paycheck is via the PTSD route. I personally know of a Vet who continued to file under that one until he finally got something, even though I know that there is absolutely nothing wrong with him. Unfortunately the VA compensation program has been turned into one of the latest "entitlement" programs. I believe that most any Vet coming back from Afganistan or Iraq that applies will receive some form of PTSD comp. Many will proably deserve some compensation, most will not but will get it anyway. Meanwhile many RVN Vets, like myself who had real dibilitating disfiguring wounds that have caused us to loose the best periods of our lives and leave us deteriorating and suffering in pain as we age don't receive half what we deserve. In my day, sure most of us had PTSD, it wasn't called that in those days, but was the same thing. I can't tell you the number of nightmares I had for the first couple of years after I came home from that was, but I handled it in my own way as did most of us, we didn't go off running around crying about it ans looking for a free hand out from Uncle Sam. In this days it was also considered a bit of a stigma and I can guarantee you that I would NEVER have held the job I had were it known I even had any negative thoughts about the war, let alone admit to nightmares and night-sweats. Not today. Some of these later guys wear it like a badge of honor. I basically think we live in a "sissy" culture and as a result we lack the kind of American Fighting Men we had just a few short years ago. In my case, the fact that I suffer IHD, in the form of CAD is a given and the fact that I already receive compensation for Service Connected Combat wounds received in RVN in 1968 while situated at KHE SANH, where I endured the Siege of the Tet of '68 and that it is a documented fact that in addition to the "presumption" of exposure just by serving in RVN it is known that over 46,000 gal of AO were sprayed in the Khe Sanh area during that period leave no doubt of my exposure. Since the VA is not now and will never pay any back claims regarding this disease, I see no point in my even trying to locate and transmit 25 years of medical records to them to establish the onset of the disease in 1985. Therefore, I have decided to file my current documents in the form of stress tests, echo's and ekg's that are current and just let that evidence speak for itself. I see no point in adding the additional stress to my life that any further "fight" would either be justified or necessary in this case. The only question in my case will be as to what degree I will be awarded. I have tests that show EF of 28% with 2.00 MET's, but other tests have shown EF of 30-35%, depends upon when and where the tests were taken. What is really unfair about this situation is if I receive the 60% rating on award (if and when it comes) due to the combined rating table I will still be 90% disabled receiving not on CENT of increase in pension.
  15. Berta, I am sorry to hear of your situation regarding your and your husbands experience with the VA over the years. I for one have avoided contact with the VA for over 40 years due to just the sort of thing you sescribe. I had always heard horror stories of mis-diagnosis and just plain poor treatment from the VA and because I have always had private medical insurance I steered completly away from the VA. This claim for IHD is really my only contact with the VA I have really ever had and I am finding it to be just the sort of "circus" that I had alwasy heard about. It is a sad commendary that the VA treats Vet's claims as an adversarial relationship rather than one of assistance? I can only assume that this adversarial attitude of the VA is a direct result of the thousands of illegitimate, trumped up claims that they receive all the time. Looks like the latest quick way to a free paycheck is via the PTSD route. I personally know of a Vet who continued to file under that one until he finally got something, even though I know that there is absolutely nothing wrong with him. Unfortunately the VA compensation program has been turned into one of the latest "entitlement" programs. I believe that most any Vet coming back from Afganistan or Iraq that applies will receive some form of PTSD comp. Many will proably deserve some compensation, most will not but will get it anyway. Meanwhile many RVN Vets, like myself who had real dibilitating disfiguring wounds that have caused us to loose the best periods of our lives and leave us deteriorating and suffering in pain as we age don't receive half what we deserve. In my day, sure most of us had PTSD, it wasn't called that in those days, but was the same thing. I can't tell you the number of nightmares I had for the first couple of years after I came home from that was, but I handled it in my own way as did most of us, we didn't go off running around crying about it ans looking for a free hand out from Uncle Sam. In this days it was also considered a bit of a stigma and I can guarantee you that I would NEVER have held the job I had were it known I even had any negative thoughts about the war, let alone admit to nightmares and night-sweats. Not today. Some of these later guys wear it like a badge of honor. I basically think we live in a "sissy" culture and as a result we lack the kind of American Fighting Men we had just a few short years ago. In my case, the fact that I suffer IHD, in the form of CAD is a given and the fact that I already receive compensation for Service Connected Combat wounds received in RVN in 1968 while situated at KHE SANH, where I endured the Siege of the Tet of '68 and that it is a documented fact that in addition to the "presumption" of exposure just by serving in RVN it is known that over 46,000 gal of AO were sprayed in the Khe Sanh area during that period leave no doubt of my exposure. Since the VA is not now and will never pay any back claims regarding this disease, I see no point in my even trying to locate and transmit 25 years of medical records to them to establish the onset of the disease in 1985. Therefore, I have decided to file my current documents in the form of stress tests, echo's and ekg's that are current and just let that evidence speak for itself. I see no point in adding the additional stress to my life that any further "fight" would either be justified or necessary in this case. The only question in my case will be as to what degree I will be awarded. I have tests that show EF of 28% with 2.00 MET's, but other tests have shown EF of 30-35%, depends upon when and where the tests were taken. What is really unfair about this situation is if I receive the 60% rating on award (if and when it comes) due to the combined rating table I will still be 90% disabled receiving not on CENT of increase in pension.
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