The Indiana Veterans Affairs Commission holds four regular
meetings a year. At the end of the January 11 agenda listed “Public comment:
Please complete the required form prior to meeting.”
The Indiana Veterans Affairs Commission meeting ended in anger Friday afternoon as the governor-appointed panel decided not to accept public comment from veterans. Photo by: Kenney, Kara
However, commission chairman Erika Steuterman said the meeting was running well past the two-hour mark, and she had allowed veterans to interject comments throughout, so she concluded the meeting without allowing public comment. “I know there's people who drove an hour, made arrangements for child care to be able to come to this public veterans commission meeting,” said veteran Lisa Wilken to the commission after the meeting. “It's very disconcerting that the public is not given the opportunity to speak to you."
Veterans Lisa Wilken and Will Henry, the two veterans who
blew the whistle with Call 6 Investigates back in November about misuse of the
Military Family Relief Fund, spoke at the end of the meeting.
Henry stood up after the meeting and shared his thoughts as
the commission members and IDVA staff walked out of the room. “I am a warrior, my brothers and sisters are warriors and we
are not going away,” said Henry. “I haven’t heard one apology to the veterans
in this state. Not by the commission, the governor’s office, not from anyone
for the misconduct or should I say ‘non-conduct’ of the commission.”
The commission and the Indiana Department of Veterans Affairs are both looking to make changes following a Call 6 Investigation into several problems within IDVA, including that the agency failed to adopt rules that could have helped homeless veterans and those with brain injuries.
A scathing audit just released by the State Board of
Accounts said the Indiana Department of Veterans Affairs and its oversight
panel, the Indiana Veterans’ Affairs Commission, failed to adopt rules and
written procedures for several funds.
IDVA’s acting director Matt Vincent told the commission he
had drafted rules that will help homeless veterans get services, and the
commission and public will now have an opportunity to provide input on those
rules. Vincent told the commission that the money meant to help
veterans will not expire, although veterans Lisa Wilken and brigadier general
James Bauerle both expressed concerned about losing the funds.
The Indiana State Department of Health is currently finalizing
an agreement with a provider for the state’s hyperbaric oxygen treatment
program, which will help veterans with brain injuries.
Call 6 Investigates also found IDVA allowed its own
employees to receive benefits from the Military Family Relief Fund beyond the
$2,500 limit as the agency denied other veterans. The commission discussed Friday whether it should use an
administrative law judge (ALJ) to handle appeals for veterans who are denied.
However, the commission did not make a final decision on how
to handle appeals, so pending appeals will likely have to wait another three
months until the next commission meeting, said Steuterman. Just last week, the commission adopted new rules that
stripped IDVA from allowing staff to approve veterans receive more than the
$2,500 from the Military Family Relief Fund.
Vincent said Friday the Attorney General and Governor had
already approved the Military Family Relief Fund rules, and the rules will soon
be published in the state’s register. The new rules say for a veteran to receive more than $2,500
through the Military Family Relief Fund, the case has to go through the
veterans affairs commission, which will scrutinize each case individually.
Former IDVA director Jim Brown resigned effective December
28.
Steuterman said Friday a new IDVA director will be named
soon and that interviews had already taken place.
The commission’s next regular meeting will be held April 5
in South Bend.
SOURCE: RTV6