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 Home > News & Policies > November 2008

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
November 7, 2008

Fact Sheet: President Bush Has Provided Unprecedented Support for Our Veterans

     Fact sheet In Focus: Veterans

"We have a moral obligation to provide the best possible care and treatment to the men and women who have served our country." 
President George W. Bush (March 6, 2007)

Dramatically Increased Funding To Support And Care For Those Who Have Served Our Nation

  • Increased funding for veterans' medical care by more than 115 percent since 2001.

  • FY 2009 funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) totals more than $97 billion, nearly double the level of funding when the President took office and the highest level of support for veterans in history.

  • Provided more than $6 billion to modernize and expand VA medical facilities and more than $1 billion over the past three years to support traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder treatment and research.

  • Honored our veterans with a hallowed, final resting place by implementing and fully funding the largest expansion in the national cemetery system since the Civil War.

chart showing funding increases

Improved Care And Services For Wounded Warriors

  • Created the Commission on Care for America's Returning Wounded Warriors – co-chaired by former Senator Bob Dole and former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala – to ensure that wounded service members and veterans receive quality care and services and can live lives of hope, promise, and dignity.  Nearly all of the Commission's recommendations have already been implemented, such as:

    • Expanded training, screening, and staff resources to help service members and veterans suffering from mental health disorders.

    • Created a joint Recovery Coordinator Program for seriously injured service members.

    • Initiated a pilot program to replace the cumbersome system of two separate disability examinations with a single, comprehensive medical exam.

  • Established a Center of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury and expanded VA's polytrauma system of care to 21 network sites and clinic support teams to provide state-of-the-art treatment to injured veterans at facilities closer to their homes.

Ensured Those Who Have Served Our Country Receive The Benefits They Deserve

  • Called for and signed a GI Bill for the 21st century, which expanded education benefits for service members and veterans and made it easier for those who defend our Nation to transfer unused education benefits to their spouses or children.

  • Increased career counseling services for returning veterans, particularly those wounded in combat.

  • Signed legislation that increased from two to five years a combat veteran's eligibility to enroll for lifetime VA medical care and allowed family members of injured service members to take additional time away from their jobs to care for their loved ones.

  • Signed legislation to ensure military retirees with severe disabilities receive both their military retired pay and their VA disability compensation.

  • Helped more than 1.9 million veterans enroll in the VA health care system since 2001.

  • Reduced the average length of time to process a veteran's disability claim to under 180 days, down from 230 days when the President took office.

"The President has done his job since the first day he took office
on behalf of veterans."
Senator John Warner (R-VA) (Sept. 20, 2004)

Worked To Decrease The Number Of Homeless Veterans

  • Expanded Federal grants and worked extensively with faith-based and community organizations to help homeless veterans. 

  • Cut the number of homeless veterans by nearly 40 percent from 2001 to 2007.

 

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