Indiana American Legion to Fight Effort to Cut Veterans’ Benefit

INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 4, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Indiana American
Legion has reacted sharply to the vote by the Indiana Senate Appropriations
Committee to drastically reduce the long-standing Indiana veterans’ benefit
commonly referred to as ‘Remission of Fees.’

The strictly party line vote, with eight Republicans voting for the measure and
four Democrats voting against, came February 3, in a hearing in which
representatives of major Veterans Service Organizations voiced the opposition of
their members. Legion leaders vowed to fight the effort “every step of the way.”

The bill, SB 577 authored by Senator Luke Kenley (R-20th) would limit the amount
of the remission of tuition and fees to 20 percent plus a percentage equal to
the disability rating applied to the disabled veteran. Under current law, the
children of veterans with any disability rating adjudicated by the federal
Department of Veterans Affairs is entitled to one hundred percent fee remission.

The financial impact prepared by the State Legislative Services Agency reported
the cost of the fee remission in 2008-2009 was $18.8 million foregone by the
state’s universities for 5,063 students. The agency estimated the cut in the
benefit could result in savings of $2.5 million at current levels, or up to “$9
million depending on the number of scholarships provided,” or put another way,
the VSO argue, “depending on the number of disabled veterans denied the
benefit.”

The Remission of Fees benefit has provided state college tuition to the children
of service connected disabled veterans living in Indiana since it was first
introduced in 1935. The American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, AMVETS and
the Disabled American Veterans as well as other veteran representatives told
members of the Appropriations Committee that to “cut this benefit in a time of
war and with thousands of Indiana Guard and Reserve troops returning home from
combat every month, is unthinkable. We will fight this effort every step of the
way.”

Stephen W. Short, Indiana American Legion Department Adjutant told members of
the committee to “consider that during any American wartime period, including
the one we’re in now, fewer than 10 percent of Americans wear the uniform of
their nation. An even a smaller percentage of our fighting men and women incur
injuries or wounds that bring about their disability rating.

“Now during a war that has more Hoosiers committed to combat operations than any
time since World War II, we have members of the majority political party who
want to scale back benefits to those same Hoosiers who risk everything for us
and ask nothing in return, other than to enjoy the benefits all of your
predecessors saw fit to award.”

In spite of the warnings from the veterans’ groups, all of the Republican
members of the committee voted to move forward with the legislation. The four
Democrats, in unanimously opposing the measure, voiced concerns similar to those
raised by the veterans. A companion bill asking for many of the same cuts will
be introduced in the Indiana House by Rep. Tom Dermody, Republican from LaPorte.

The Commander of 100,000-member Indiana American Legion, Leland Baxter of
Sellersburg, has encouraged all members of the Legion and its affiliated
organizations – some 100,000 Auxiliary and Sons of The American Legion members -
to contact their Senators and Representatives in opposition to the measure.

“This unwarranted cut in an earned benefit – not an entitlement, but an earned
benefit – at a time when unemployment is high and the supply of workers trained
and educated for the jobs of the 21st Century is low is utterly irresponsible,”
Baxter said.

Members of the Senate Appropriations Committee who voted for the measure:

— Chairman Luke Kenley (R-20th), Noblesville
— Ed Charbonneau (R-5th), Valparaiso
— Phil Boots (R-23rd), Crawfordsville
— Connie Lawson (R-24th) Danville
— Patricia Miller (R-32nd), Indianapolis
— Ryan Mishler (R-9th) Bremen
— Tom Wyss (R-15th), Fort Wayne
— Brent Waltz (R-36th), Greenwood

Democrat members voting against SB577 included:

— John Broden (D-10th), South Bend
— Lindel Hume (D-48th), Princeton
— Earline Rogers (D-3rd), Gary
— Karen Tallian (D-4th), Portage

Committee member Brandt Herschman (R-7th) was not present.

SOURCE American Legion Department of Indiana

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