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NOTICE: Jan 14 is the 60% Target Date. Please transmit your membership so that it will arrive at Department HQ no later than Jan 11.
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Legislative Alert!
Important Message from our Judge Advocate!

Operation Comfort Warriors: Meet the Challenge

By American Legion National Commander David K. Rehbein, American Legion Auxiliary National President Desiree´ A. Stoy, and Sons of the American Legion National Commander Tommie Cisna.

We need your help. Most importantly they need you. They are our warriors, our guardians, our protectors. They are liberators, peacekeepers and nation-builders. They are our neighbors, friends and family members. They are the men and women of the United States Armed Forces. And now they are hurting.

The U.S. government does a good job providing for the essential needs of the men and women recovering from war injuries in hospitals like Walter Reed, Brooke Army Medical Center and Bethesda Naval Medical Center, just to name a few. But what about the so-called nonessentials, the items that don’t show up as a budget-line on a government spreadsheet? Nonessential comfort items such as loose-fitting sweat suits that can cover a soldier’s healing body without adding pressure to the burns he suffered during an RPG attack in Ramadi? Or an I-Pod to help drown out the tinnitus that has plagued the medic ever since she drove too close to a roadside bomb in Afghanistan?

In 2007, Past National Commander Paul Morin, Auxiliary National President JoAnn Cronin and SAL Commander Earl Ruttkofsky challenged The American Legion family to raise $50,000 to purchase comfort items for our wounded warriors at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany. Legion family members and other caring Americans responded in a big way.

In fact, Operation Landstuhl was so successful that we want to accomplish a similar endeavor at other military and VA medical centers. We are calling on you to once again help us meet our goal of raising $50,000 by the holidays.

When the Red Cross notified The American Legion that zip-up sweatsuits were in shortly supply at Walter Reed, the Legion immediately ordered 100 sets. But it’s just a drop in the bucket. We have been told there is an even greater need for items at Fort Hood and Fort Bragg. Consider that there are 67 other U.S. military inpatient facilities and 1,369 VA inpatient and outpatient centers, and you can grasp the enormous need. Their size and needs, however, are dwarfed by the obligation that America has to these heroes.
The American Legion family is calling this effort Operation Comfort Warriors. - Contributing is effortless. No trips to the post office or packaging of comfort items are needed. We will handle all of that. You can use your credit card to make an online donation at www.legion.org/ocw or you can mail a check to Operation Comfort Warriors, PO Box 1055, Indianapolis, IN 46206.
Administrative and promotional costs for Operation Comfort Warriors will be paid by The American Legion, so you can be sure that your entire donation will go directly to the troops. Many centers are not equipped to store large quantities of care packages, so monetary donations are needed in order to purchase items that are truly needed.
Shortly after the bombing of the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, Gen. P.X. Kelley visited a severely injured Marine in the hospital. Gen. Kelley said the young Marine had “more tubes going in and out of his body than I have ever seen in one body.” The injured Marine could not see his Commandant very well. Gen. Kelley recalled, ”He reached up and grabbed my four stars, just to make sure I was who I said I was. He held my hand with a firm grip. He was making signals, and we realized he wanted to tell me something. We put a pad of paper in his hand – and he wrote ‘Semper Fi.’”
Semper Fi, or Semper Fidelis, is the Marine Corps motto meaning “Always Faithful.” Well today’s wounded warriors in all service branches remain faithful. Faithful to their country, their comrades in arms and their loved ones back home. Operation Comfort Warrior will never be able to compensate these heroes for their sacrifices. But it will show them that we care.

Purple Heart Forever stamp needs support from veterans 2008-11-26
"Published in the Online Update on October 9, 2008"

Earlier this year, Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., and Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., introduced a bill in Congress to create the Purple Heart Forever stamp, eliminating the need to keep reissuing such stamps with specific postage rates. As long as the U.S. Postal Service must decide whether to reissue the stamp, it may eventually be retired from circulation.


The Perpetual Purple Heart Stamp Act sought to create a stamp that would forever honor U.S. servicemembers killed or wounded in combat. The American Legion endorsed the legislation.


But the Purple Heart Forever stamp can no longer be created via legislation, since congressional committees on oversight and government reform no longer consider such bills. So King and Clinton need a groundswell of national support, directed at the Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee (CSAC), to convince the Postal Service to issue the “forever” version of the Purple Heart stamp.


“I am grateful for The American Legion’s dedication to the creation of the stamp,” King told the Online Update. “Its endorsement demonstrates the wide range of support for making the Purple Heart stamp a permanent fixture. I am certain that the support from our nation’s veterans will resonate even stronger.”


Sen. Clinton also commended The American Legion for its strong support of the Purple Heart Forever stamp. “I hope that by working together, we can ensure that this tribute receives the permanence it deserves,” she told the Online Update. “I have urged the Postal Service to make it a permanent ‘forever’ stamp. Our gratitude for the sacrifices of our heroes is eternal.”


On Oct. 6, DoD announced that an estimated 17,000 deceased U.S. prisoners of war could be awarded Purple Hearts under a new policy. The medals have been denied in the past to POWs who died in captivity, if it could not be proven they had been wounded or killed by the enemy. The revised Pentagon policy, retroactive to Dec. 7, 1941, presumes that such deaths were the result of enemy action, unless compelling evidence is presented to the contrary.


King and Clinton are asking Legionnaires to help make the Purple Heart Forever stamp a reality by sending a letter of support to the CSAC. In July, King wrote to the committee and received this reply from Katherine A. Sitterle, government relations representative for the Postal Service:


“Your letter of support for the issuance of the Purple Heart stamp as a ‘forever stamp’ is being included in the Committee’s files. If it is approved for issuance in the future, the announcement will be made publicly, in keeping with our standard practice.” Sitterle did not indicate whether CSAC would make a determination anytime soon, and new stamp designs are already locked in through the end of 2010.


Letters of support for the Purple Heart Forever stamp should be mailed to: Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee, c/o Stamp Development, U.S. Postal Service, Suite 5013, 1735 N. Lynn St., Arlington, VA  22209.

Wanted: a few good veterans 2008-11-16
"The Times of Trenton (NJ)"

It's not your dad's military anymore.

Today's veterans who are returning from war zones in Iraq and Afghanistan seem to be reluctant to join veterans' organizations such as the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. That's certainly the observation of the aging handful of World War II and Korean War veterans who run American Legion Post 339 on Van Dyke Road in Hopewell Township.

"Today's vets don't come out," lamented Jim Hall, 82, a World War II veteran who fought in Europe and a longtime member of Post 339.

In its heyday in the '60s and '70s, Post 339 was up to 425 members strong. Today, the membership is half that and only about a dozen members regularly come to meetings. The post building is now up for sale. Without new blood coming in, Post 339 will see its graying membership die away.

That's a shame, but it's a reflection of a different set of circumstances with which today's veterans are faced.

For one thing, many veterans returning from combat zones are members of National Guard and Reserve units that have been activated for one or more deployments. These veterans tend to be older, many married with families. Unlike the young conscripted veterans of previous wars, today's volunteer service members come home to hectic lifestyles of longer work hours and raising children. They are too busy to be hanging out at a Legion post, swapping war stories with retired warriors.

Another problem is that older organizations are not al ways ready to bend to the needs of a younger generation. This was evident when some established veterans groups gave a cold shoulder to return ing Vietnam veterans, who were looked down upon. That gave rise to the Vietnam Veterans of America, an organization that was more attuned to such is sues as homeless vets, the ravages of exposure to Agent Orange and efforts to find the re mains of comrades missing in action.

The American Legion, which was founded after World War I, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, which dates back to the Spanish-American War, realize that if they are to survive they must recruit younger veterans to replenish the thinning ranks of older vets.

Unlike the Vietnam era, veterans organizations now actively seek out and welcome younger veterans. There's hope yet that Post 339 and other struggling chapters can re bound. As the newer corps of veterans age, it's likely that they will need the services offered by large veterans groups that can effectively lobby for health, housing, education and retirement benefits.

Although today's veterans may have different interests and concerns from their older comrades in arms, one thing has not changed: their commit ment to serve their country. For that, all of us should be eternally grateful and never for get the service and sacrifices they have made and continue to make.

Rehbein: Legislative success due to Legion’s members 2008-10-22
By ERIC SWANSON

DODGE CITY DAILY GLOBE



FORT DODGE — The American Legion's success in convincing Congress to pass an appropriations bill for the Veterans Administration was due to the strength of the Legion's members, the organization's national commander said Tuesday.

"You made a difference in the appropriations bill for the VA because in two weeks, it went from 'It's not going to happen, no way,' to 'It's a done deal,'" David K. Rehbein said during a visit to Fort Dodge. "And I think as we talked about Capitol Hill, we had something to do with that. But myself and the legislative director, all by ourselves, we wouldn't have gotten anything done. It's only because of the strength out here."

Rehbein was apparently referring to a bill that called for boosting spending on VA health programs by $3.1 billion over current levels. President Bush signed the bill into law on Sept. 30.

Rehbein came to Fort Dodge as part of a statewide tour, which began Sunday in Kansas City, Kan., and will wrap up at the end of the week. The tour was designed to address issues affecting veterans and inspire American Legion members.

During his visit, he posed for photos with Kansas American Legion officials and chatted with members of the American Legion Post 107 and the American Legion Auxiliary Post 107 at Fort Dodge.

As the national commander of the American Legion, Rehbein represents about 2.6 million members across the United States. The American Legion family includes the auxiliary, which boasts about 1 million members, and the Sons of the American Legion.

About 300,000 people belong to the Sons of the American Legion, making the total membership of the three organizations about 4 million.
Rehbein, who is from Ames, Iowa, said that the Kansas Soldiers' Home compared favorably with a similar facility in his home state.

"You have people that enjoy living here, and the people that work here care about the people that live here," he said. "And that's important."

American Legion Auxiliary 107 President Dorothy Beemer said afterwards that she had enjoyed Rehbein's remarks, particularly concerning the VA appropriations bill.
"He had spoken for us veterans to get something done up there for our veterans that have been in the hospitals and all," she said. "It didn't look too rosy for them for a long time."

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