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Frank Bergquist
Frank Bergquist graduated from Eddyville, IA, high school in 1958. After graduation, he entered the Army, serving 20 years in Missouri, Maryland, New Mexico, Germany, Iowa, Turkey, Kansas, S.E. Asia, and finally retiring in 1978 in Louisiana. Before retiring, Frank was assigned as an ROTC instructor at WSU and Kemper Military School until 1974. In 1978 he served as the Non-Commissioned officer in charge of operations at Fort Polk, LA. He has served as the Veterans Counselor (DVOP) with the Kansas Job Service Center National Service Office, with the Disabled American Veterans at the VA Regional Office in Wichita; Veterans Employment and Training Coordinator with the US Dept. of Labor at Ft. Riley, KS; Service Coordinator with Cerebral Palsy Research Foundation; Dept Adjutant-Treasurer and the Dept. Executive Director Dept. of Kansas Disabled American Veterans; and past President of the Wichita Civil War Round Table. Currently he is doing graduate work as an instructor in Genealogy and Military History at Wichita State and Kansas State Universities, and is the CEO for the Disabled American Veterans Thrift Stores in Wichita, KS. Bergquist has an AA from Kemper Military School and College from Boonville, MO. and a BGS from Wichita State University. He can be reached by telephone at 316-262-6501. He is located at 926 N. Mosley Wichita 67214.
Veteran Affairs
2007-02-01 16:23:00
Is the government helping veterans?
How much is our government really helping veterans?
ANSWER: Each year about this time Congress, meaning both the House and Senate, start telling us what they did for veterans in the last congressional session. Here’s some of what went on and how the President treated it: PRESIDENT BUSH SIGNS CRAIG'S VETERANS BILL INTO LAW $3.2 billion measure will improve health delivery, overturns historic ban on Attorneys, and expands benefits. On Friday President George Bush signed into law a $3.2 billion Comprehensive benefits and health care bill for veterans sponsored by U.S. Senator Larry Craig, the outgoing chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs. "I hope veterans will rest a little easier this Christmas knowing that Congress did its job. We passed legislation that will enable this country to move forward with major construction projects for veterans and also will make some significant changes that will benefit veterans and their loved ones for generations to come," said Sen. Craig from his home near Boise, Idaho. The bill the President signed is S. 3421, the Veterans Benefits, Healthcare, and Information Technology Act of 2006. Among its many provisions, the new law partially overturns a policy dating back to the Civil War era that has prohibited veterans from hiring attorneys to help them seek veterans' benefits until they have spent months - sometimes years - exhausting the administrative process. The original policy came during a time when lawyers were often self trained and notoriously unscrupulous. As signed into law, this bill will now allow veterans or other VA claimants to hire Attorneys during VA's appeal process. "The old law may have made sense in 1866, but 140 years later it was time to reexamine that outdated policy. Veterans will still have the option of utilizing the representation services provided without charge by many veterans’ organizations, but in addition they will have the option of hiring an attorney if they so choose," Craig said. The legislation will also require VA to establish an Office of Rural Health. "For rural states like Idaho, the addition of this office should ensure that VA continues to focus on the needs and challenges of veterans who live in outlying areas," Craig said. The new law should also help rural states by allowing VA to create a pilot program which makes non-VA facilities - such as private nursing homes or community hospitals - eligible for state veterans' home per diem payments. "This change will allow veterans to stay closer to home and loved ones. I think that's important," Craig said. Among its many provisions, the bill adds $65 million to increase the number of clinicians treating post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and $2 million for additional blind rehabilitation specialists and increases the number of facilities where the specialists will be located. It also authorizes VA to designate six Parkinson's disease Research, Education, and Clinical Centers of Excellence, and at least two Multiple Sclerosis Centers of Excellence. The bill contains provisions that will provide VA with additional tools to help it contract with veteran and disabled veteran-owned small businesses. "We want to make sure that veterans who do business with VA get high priority," Craig said. The new veterans' law authorizes the replacement of the VA facilities in New Orleans, which were wiped out during Hurricane Katrina, and move forward with new hospital projects in Denver, Las Vegas, and Orlando. The bill also includes a provision sought by Sen. Craig which requires the removal of the remains of a double murderer - Russell Wayne Wagner - from Arlington National Cemetery. Wagner brutally murdered Daniel Davis, 84, and Wilda Davis, 80, in Maryland in 1994. Their son, Vernon Davis, is a veteran and he had sought help from Sen. Craig and Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski to have his parents' killer removed from that hallowed ground. The new law will also enable the spouse or child of a service member who is hospitalized or receiving outpatient medical care to begin receiving financial help through VA for their education. Sen. Craig crafted that portion of the legislation earlier this year after meeting with Army Sgt. Jeff Mittman who was blinded during an attack in Iraq. The new law will also enable tribal organizations to obtain grants from VA to help them establish, expand, or improve veterans' cemeteries on trust lands. "We accomplished a lot for veterans with this bill. It's a great way to finish the year," Craig said. The U.S. Constitution requires that a population tabulation be taken of our citizenry every decade. The search is on for WWI veterans. One WWI veteran in South Florida recently died; and the VA is rushing to find other WWI veterans that are still alive. Homer Anderson's death on September 23, at 108 years old, was a few month's shy of his 109th birthday. His passing left 12 men - soldiers and sailors, who 90 years ago lived through trench and early chemical warfare. Believe it or not, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs just began compiling the list a year ago. The authorities and historians believe there may be more WWI veterans whose ages are well past 100 years. SEC Delegate Joe Delgado, PC of Abe Wolkofsky - Bronx Chapter #23 comes from the same village as Emilio Mercado, of Puerto Rico, who at 115 is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's oldest human being. If he is able to travel, I hope that Joe Delgado can help us arrange to bring this surviving hero to New York, so that we may honor him. Records from WWI, are on paper and not in a database, which makes it more difficult to find those WWI veterans still living. We should salute the men and women who were the last of their kind: American Revolution 1775-1783 Number Served - 217,000 Battle Deaths - 4,435 Last Veteran - Daniel Bakeman (Died in 1869 at the age of 109) War of 1812 1812-1815 Number Served - 286,730 Battle Deaths - 2,260 Last Veteran - Hiram Crank (Died in 1905 at the age of 105) Civil War 1861-1865 Total Number Served (Union and Confederate) - 3.2 million Total Battle Deaths - About 215,000 Last Veteran - John Sailing, Confederate (Died in 1958 at the age of 112) Spanish American War 1889-1902 Number Served - 306,760 Battle Deaths - 385 Last Veteran - Nathan E. Cook (Died in 1992 at the age of 106) I am never sure if a Government can do too much for its veterans. You can see bumper stickers that say just about anything. But my favorite is one that simply says: “Thanks Veterans”.
 
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