| Wednesday, March 9, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, protests continue,  the US House and Senate VA Committee leaders call on President Barack Obama to  stop the VA from short changing veterans and their caregivers, Nouri plans to  announce nominees for his leader-less ministries tomorrow, and more.   For most of us in the United States, imaging a loved one injured in the  Iraq or Afghanistan Wars (or any future wars) is a mental exercise detached from  reality.  How fortunate for us if we (that includes me) do not have to picture  someone in their immediate family who could be wounded, return home and require  that we become the primary caregiver.  Again, for most of us, we're very lucky  -- most, but not all.  And addressing the realities of what a caregiver caring  for a wounded veteran and what the veteran has to face is something that the  Congress has spent several years working on.  The House and the Senate Veterans  Affairs Committee have held hearings, taken testimony, worked up proposals       And after all of those many hearings and many meetings with the effected  populations, both houses of Congress agreed upon the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus  Health Services Act of 2010  (May 5, 2010) which was to go into effect  January 30, 2011.  This  bill had support from both political parties -- and  support from independent Senator Joe Lieberman, Socialist Senator Bernie  Sanders.  In the Senate it passed by 98 votes (all present voted for it).  In  the House, it passed by 419 votes with all present voting in favor of it.  President Barack Obama signed it into law May 5, 2010.  It shouldn't have caused  any problems because of the huge Congressional support it had -- universal  support -- and because the Congress took so much care in investigating the  issues, in taking testimonies from stakeholders, in evaluating and re-evaluating  before they wrote the bill. But as the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee made  clear March 2nd, there were huge differences between what the Congress passed  and what the VA was planning to do with the law.  This afternoon the Senate  Veterans Affairs Committee released the following statement:   Leaders of the Senate and House Veterans' Affairs Committees call  on President Obama to stop the VA from severely limiting a benefit for those who  are forced to leave careers, health care behind to care for their loved  ones
 (Washington, D.C.) – Leaders of the Senate and House Veterans'  Affairs Committee sent a bi-partisan, bi-cameral letter to President Barack  Obama yesterday calling on him to ensure that eligibility for a law Congress  passed to support veterans caregivers is not limited and that the law is  implemented in a timely manner. In the letter, the Chairmen and Ranking Members  of the Congressional Committees that oversee the Department of Veterans Affairs  (VA) expressed their frustration over VA and Office of Management and Budget  (OMB) delays in moving forward with caregivers support, and with additional  criteria that will severely limit the ability for some family caregivers to  access the benefit. Specifically, the Congressional leaders asked the President  to direct OMB to "ensure that the regulations or other elements of the program's  implementation comply with the specific eligibility criteria that are set out in  the law."
 "It's simply unacceptable that the VA would limit a program  Congress designed to support family members of veterans who have left behind  careers, lives, and responsibilities to see that their loved one can recover at  home," said Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Patty Murray. "We are  calling on the President to make sure that the will of Congress and the needs of  these veterans are not being ignored. Caring for our veterans is part of the  cost of war. This program is part of the cost of war."
 "When he signed the  Caregiver Law, President Obama stood with wounded veterans and caregivers in  promising that they'd be getting the help they needed," said House Veterans'  Affairs Committee Chairman Jeff Miller. "We're now calling on him to fulfill  that pledge and direct his administration to hear the will of Congress,  veterans, and caregivers to get this program right."
 "This legislation was  originally designed to provide a path forward for caregivers who are already  sacrificing their own aspirations in order to make the lives of severely wounded  veterans easier to bear," said Senator Richard Burr, Ranking Member of the  Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee. "I urge the President to work with VA to get  this bill right so that caregivers in dire need of assistance can receive the  benefits promised to them,"
 "VA's continued delay in the implementation of  such a vital program is inexcusable. Many of these caregivers have wiped out  their savings, have had to forego their own health care coverage and have given  up their careers in order to care for their loved one," said Rep. Bob Filner  Ranking Member of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee. "Last year, Congress  saw fit to extend critical benefits to the Caregivers of our nation's veterans  and we will not stand idly by as VA prolongs the process. Too much time has  passed already."
 
 We'll note the letter in full at the end of the  snapshot. But I'm having to juggle things to make this the opening -- and it's  important enough that it should be the opening.  Today
 Christopher Caskey (Auburn Citizen) reports on a  send-off ceremony in Auburn (upstate New York) yesterday for 15 members of the  Auburn National Guard Armory who are part of 115 soldiers with the 105th  Military Police Company of the New York Army National Guard deploying to Iraq.  Before deploying to Iraq, the soldiers will receive additional training at  Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station. The Iraq War hasn't ended. And, as noted in  yesterday's snapshot ,  on Tuesday's Talk of the Nation (NPR), Ted Koppel  explained  why the Iraq War continues (and continues and continues and  . . .):
 Ted Koppel: We're there  because of U.S. interests, and those U.S. interests can be summarized quite  simply in one or two words: oil and natural gas. The stability of the Persian  Gulf is of enormous national interest to the United State. No politician wants  to send young men and women to die for oil. But the fact of the matter is that  it is one of the politically most - no pun intended - inflammable issues. When  the price of gasoline goes up, as it is going up right now, to $4 a gallon, if  we were to leave before there is genuine stability in Iraq, if that area no  longer had the oversight of American military, I think you could very easily see  the price of oil go up to seven, eight, nine dollars a gallon. And the fact of  the matter is then you would have all kinds of political yelling and screaming  on Capitol Hill, all kinds of pressure being raised by the American public,  which would not want to see that happen to its economy.      Jane Arraf:  This is what's left of the Rasheed family's alcohol  store, one of the few that was still open in Baghdad.  It was bombed, along with  seven others recently just after Aid Rasheed closed up for the day.  Aid is a  Yazidi -- an ancient religion here.  Yazidis and Christians have always owned  liquor stores in Iraq.  But as the government embraces a stricter interpretation  of Islam, Aid says there's no room for them anymore    Aid Rasheed: Especially the Christians and the Yazidis, we don't  know how we will live. In the north if we open a restaurant, no one will come to  it.  In the south, we have these shops they attack us and steal from us and kill  us.   Jane Arraf: It's not just drinking that's under threat.  The  cultural heart of Baghdad, al-Mutanabbi Street, has been rebuilt since it was  bombed in 2007.  But many of the cities writers, artists and intellectuals have  left the country Baghdad has always been known for its diversity, for its  cultural tolerance. It's a part of the national identity but many people fear  it's being crushed.  Hadi al-Mahdi is an out spoken radio host but his criticism  of the government has cost him dearly.  He was one of dozens of media people  arrested  and beaten after a recent protest.  Iraq is at a crossroads he said  between freedom and dictatorship. Zena Hatab is a television presenter. She felt  free enough to enter and win a local beauty pagent.  That could be harder if a  new warning seen in the al-Kadhimiya district is heeded. The display warns women  of the dangers that await them if their bodies aren't covered  head-to-toe.   Abass Ali Hussein: This shows this life and behind it is the after  life. Being tortured by fire for those who are unveiled or wear too much make  up.  The Koran says we have to cover the chest and the arms. Only the face and  the hands should show.    Jane Arraf: Many Iraqi Muslims dispute that reading of the Koran  but it's a sign of changing time that few in this neighborhood will openly say  so. Jane Arraf, Al Jazeera, Baghdad.    Religious minorities have been among the targeted groups in Iraq since the  start of the illegal war. "Among" -- there is a long, long list of targeted  groups in Iraq.  Aswat al-Iraq reports  that the country's  Journalistic Freedoms Observatory released a statement today: "A total of 160  attacks took place against journalists throughout the country, including 60 in  Kurdistan region. Security authorities waged a big campaign on media  institutions in Baghdad and other provinces, and arrested journalists and ceased  al-Diyar satellite channel."  Sunday, Nouri al-Maliki sent police and military  forces to throw the Communist Party out of their headquarters.  The Party also  produced their newspaper at the headquarters and were most likely targeted  because they've been strong supporters and organizers of the protests.  Al Mada reports  that Hamid Majid Moussa held a press  conference today in Baghdad, not far from where the Party's Newspaper By The  People was produced, and declared that the government cannot justify the  eviction of the Communist Party because the Party is not terrorists but they are  instead being punished for their politics in violation of their Constitutional  guarantees so the government must immediately return the Party's property. Patrick Martin (WSWS via Global  Research) provides  an overview of some of the recent attacks on the  press, "Journalists covering an anti-government protest March 4 in Basra, in  southern Iraq, were seized and beaten by police.  Gunman in military uniforms  raided an independent radio station in the Kurdish town of Kalar. The station's  director, Azad Othman, told the Associated Press the volunteer station had been  reporting extensively on demonstrations in Sulaimaniyah against the two ruling  parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.  These attacks follow nationwide raids the previous Sunday, in which Iraqi police  detained 300 people, mainly journalists, artists, lawyers and other  intellectuals [. . .]"  The National Newspaper's editorial board  observes , "Iraq's democratic exuberance is in tatters. A year ago this week,  the US president Barack Obama praised elections as an 'important milestone in  Iraqi history'. Today, diplomats cross their fingers that the country's mounting  protests don't spiral out of control.  More than anything, though, Iraq's  popular uprisings underscore that an unhappy public is no longer content idly  watching a kleptocracy emerge.  Iraq's leader should take heed."  Al Mada reports  that the US government expects  protests to continue but that the US government -- citing Michael Corbin, Deputy  Assistant Secretary of State for Iraq -- does not feel the protests will call  for the overthrow of the (puppet) government in Iraq.  Alsumaria TV quotes  Corbin declaring, "People are  protesting not for regime change, but for services, against corruption, for  better government response to their needs."    Along with the press, protesters have also faced the crackdown and Aswat al-Iraq reports  that the protesters in  Ninewah who have been demonstrating demanding the release of 'detainees' saw 12  protesters released from police custody.  Al Jazeera reports  that today in Baghdad,  "hundreds of Iraqi workers rallied in central Baghdad, calling for improved  salaries and better economic conditions. The demonstration came after thousands  of Iraqis had taken to the streets in recent days to protest against corruption,  unemployment and the lack of public services."  Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports  that Barham Saleh,  Prime Minister in the KRG, has declared if the Kurdistan Parliament asks him to  resign, he will do so and quotes him stating, "Acts of violence that accompanied  the protests should not be repeated again."    Protests have been taking place in the Kurdistan Region as well; however,  Kirkuk is not (or not yet) part of the KRG.  Sean Kane's "Iraqi protests and the need for a  political strategy on Kirkuk " (Foreign Policy ):
 Somewhat lost in the wave of protests sweeping through  the Middle East, which are now washing up on Iraq's shores, has been the recent  deployment of two brigades of Kurdish peshmerga troops in the disputed province  of Kirkuk in northern Iraq. There has been a peshmerga presence in Kirkuk since  2003, but stationed north of the provincial capital of Kirkuk city. However,  following Iraq's own "Day of Rage" on Feb. 25, peshmerga forces moved to take up  positions along a line south of the city. Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)  officials have stated that the deployment is needed to protect Kurdish  populations in the disputed areas from the threat posed by what they claim are  terrorist-infiltrated demonstrations. The Iraqi government's response to the  move has so far been muted, but local Arab leaders in Kirkuk and some of their  Turkoman counterparts are expressing alarm that the move will fuel intercommunal  tension and requesting intervention by the national government. Underscoring the  potential seriousness of the situation, on Sunday, U.S. Ambassador James Jeffrey  and U.S. Forces Commanding General Lloyd Austin met with KRG President Massoud  Barzani to discuss security arrangements in Kirkuk.
 The status of Kirkuk and other disputed territories in  northern Iraq is perhaps the major unresolved potential political driver of  conflict in Iraq as American troops prepare to withdraw later this year, and at  various points since 2008 the Iraqi Army and the Kurdish peshmerga have come  close to an armed confrontation. The current situation in Kirkuk is likely to be  defused without further escalation, but it raises important questions about the  consolidation of U.S.-backed conflict-prevention mechanisms aimed at  forestalling the use of military units to resolve territorial disputes as well  as the lack of a viable Iraqi political process to begin to resolve the core  elements underlying the territorial conflict. Without any political road map or  vision existing for addressing the fate of the disputed territories, there is  the risk that parties are tempted to take matters into their own hands and that  moments of social unrest, such as the current demonstrations around poor  services and unemployment, quickly degenerate into ethnic tension.   Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports  that Talabani  spoke Monday in Sulaimaniya and declared Kurkuk to be "Kurdistan's sanctity."   The problem with interpreting that comment is that (a) Talabani was before a  crowd and (b) he always goes back on his statments -- especially when it comes  to Kirkuk.  That hasn't prevented many from attempting to decipher where  Talabani is leading. The Brookings Institution's Michael E. O'Hanlon has a new  column  where he (as usual) advocates for the US to stay in Iraq and  notes:
 But the most vivid way to  understand the continued desirability of a calming U.S. military presence is to  focus on the contested city of Kirkuk and its environs in the north of the  country, just below the autonomous region of Kurdistan proper. This is the  oil-rich and history-laden city where Kurds, Turkomen and Arabs come into  contact - and compete for claims to the land and its resources. According to the  Iraqi constitution, written with American help and passed in 2005, there is  supposed to be a referendum on Kirkuk's future. In fact, it was supposed to have  happened by 2007, but disputes over who should be allowed to vote and what  options should be presented to voters have continued to delay the resolution of  the matter.
 
 
     Hisham Rikabi (Al Mada) reports that Nouri  al-Maliki will, according to whispers, offer up some names to fill empty Cabinet  posts when he joins Parliament tomorrow. There are rumors on top of the rumors  including that the names he proposes have no consensus behind them and that  Nouri will be pushing his job off onto the Parliament (which will allow him an  out, now won't it?). Among the names being whispered as nominees are Ahmed  Chalabi, Lt Gen Abboud Qanbar and Turaihi Aqeel who, supposedly, will be  competing for the post of Minister of the Interior. Citing Kurdish press  reports, Rikabi notes rumors that Nouri intends to toss out ten names for the  posts of Minister of Defense, Minister of Interior and Minister of National  Security (and Intelligence). Dar Addustour adds  that an unnamed  person with the State Of Law political slate (Nouri's slate) has stated ISCI,  Iraqiya and Moqtada al-Sadr's supporters will not be voting on the names due to  the lack of political consenus. If that's true, who will be voting? That's a  huge chunk of the MPs. Iraqiya won the most seats. The other two hold a  significant number of seats and came together to back Nouri as prime  minister-designate last year. If the rumor is true about withholding votes being  planned for Thursday, that would explain why Moqtada al-Sadr was all over Iraq  yesterday -- Sadr City in Baghdad as well as Kadhimiyah).  Kadhim Ajrash and Nayla Razzouk (Bloomberg  News) report  State Of Law's Ali Shlah has gone on record and told them  that Nouri "will present his candidates for the defense, interior and national  security ministries to parliament" on Thursday.
 In other news of  Parliament, the National Alliance held a press conference today. Al  Mada reports  that they are threatening to walk -- all 80 of  them -- if Parliament doesn't stop 'reading speeches and statements and failing  to legislate.' The report also notes that although Parliament was to go into  recess April 14th, they've extended the session to run through May 14th. Yesterday's snapshot   included this: "Aswat al-Iraq  reports  that a member of the Iraqiya slate is stating over '200 draft  laws are defunct inside the Iraqi parliment'. " This is the  inaction that the National Alliance is objecting to.    Aswat al-Iraq  notes that the President of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, made congratulatory  statements yesterday towards Iraqi women in observance of International Women's  Day. Sally Jawdat (Al Mada)  reports  from Irbil on the day and notes that Massoud Barzani,  President of the KRG, congratulated women (all women) and then moved on to note  women in the Kurdistan region and spoke of the role that they have played in the  liberation of Kurdistan. He declared that the KRG is always a defender of  women's rights. Meanwhile, Al Rafidayn  reports  that there has been an increase in the number of suicides  among Karbala women who are the victims of assault. Dr. Amer Haidar is quoted  stating that al-Hussein Hospital is receiving at least two women a week who have  attempted suicide and that the women display fractures, burns and other signs of  abuse. Dr. Sana Abdul speculates that some women may see suicide as the only way  to be free of physically abusive husbands. Suha Alsaikli (Al Mada)  reports  on Iraqi women who gathered in Baghdad yesterday to mark  International Women's Day including women with the Iraqi Communist Party, the  Association of Iraqi Women and Peace and Solidarity Organization. Passing out  sweets, the women drew attention to the status of women in Iraq, particularly  widows and divorcees. Umm Ammar, with the Communist Party, decried Nouri's  orders to seize the Party's headquarters on Sunday and noted that other parties  were not targeted.    Larisa Epatko (PBS' NewsHour) writes  this introduction to a photo essay at the website, "Women came together on March  8 to express a message of soldiarity on International Women's Day by dancing in  Iraq, protesting in Ivory Coast and dressing as men in Lebanon.  This year  marked the 100th anniversary of the designated day, bringing with it a theme of  'decent work for women.' Events are planned throughout the month."  One of the  women of Iraq is Haifa Zangana who was born in Baghdad, raised there, attended  Baghdad University, received her diploma in 1974 and continued her political  activism as a member of the Communist Party.  Escaping imprisonment and  execution, she left Iraq. Since the start of the Iraq War, she's returned to  Iraq twice.  She's also an author of many books and, March 19th, she speaks at  the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair.  She shares her memories with Tahira Yaqoob (The  National Newspaper) :    
 At that time, everything was indicating that the Baath regime was a  fascist party so I joined a faction of  young people, who represented socialism  with democracy, everything we thought we were missing. My mother did not say  much but whatever I did, she would be in tears and one time, she begged me to  give up.  She said it was going to lead us into trouble and worried about the  whole family being affected but I was a stubborn woman. [. . .] The Seventies  were great. It was a time when we had the liberation movement, a time of hope  and aspirations. You felt if you took part in this movement you were taking part  in changing things.  We were full of hopes. I was not unique. Most people were  involved politically, it was part of daily life. You could not lie back and  rest. [. . .] Dreaming of Baghdad is part of our collective memory. It was very  important to document that part for the group of people involved and was very  painful to write.  When I had the time in the 1980s to look back at what  happened in the early 1970s, even then it was really painful. I spent more than  a decade trying to bury it. I wanted to come to terms and seek to forget.  [. .  .] I thought, this is an important part, not just of my life, but of the group  of people I was involved with. It was an important experience as a woman. For a  few years I was the only one. Some people suggested while I was writing the  chapters that it was going to help me on a personal level as a kind of  therapy.      Studies on the ground of the war's impact  on women and girls come to vastly different conclusions. In October 2002, Saddam  Hussein released criminals from Iraqi prisons. This and the soon-to-follow 2003  US-led assault on Baghdad, created conditions for bloodletting, for a sharp  increase in organized crime trafficking in drugs, stolen cars, and women and  girls; and for the ascendancy of armed Islamist conservatism. Saddam's tightly  controlled violence and reign of terror were replaced by unpredictable,  widespread violence against Iraqi women. The immediate consequences for women:  hejabs worn by Muslim and Christian women alike (and abayas in some regions) to  avoid being harassed and beaten in public; an epidemic of women killed in the  city of Basra by fundamentalist men, who leave them in the street as a lesson to  other women; increased rape, including of women in detention; abduction into  prostitution; and a dramatic rise in "honor" killings, or the murder of women  and girls by male family members to restore family honor. Muta'a - Sharia  law-permitted exploitation of women by men in so-called temporary marriages,  which serve as fronts for prostitution - rose after the war began, with men  targeting desperate, penniless widows and the Shia militia targeting single  girls. The real ruler in Iraq today, according to Iraqi Professor Maha Sabria,  "is the rule of old traditions and tribal, backward law" with a US-brokered  Constitution based in Islamic law, one which does not assure women basic rights  or protections.   The Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq  (OWFI), which investigated women's deaths in Basra by visiting city morgues,  found that most of the women killed by fundamentalist "vice squads" in Basra  were largely professionals, activists and PhDs. The lesson to other women: end  any participation in the public, political and social spheres and stay home  under male surveillance. By early 2008, only 20 percent of primary and secondary  students countrywide were female; the rest were prisoners in their homes. Houzan  Mahmoud, who has risked her life to organize a petition against the introduction  of Islamic law in Kurdistan, summed up the impact of the war: "If before there  were one dictator persecuting people, now almost everyone is persecuting  women."       Mary Jane Lavigne (Twin Cities Daily Planet)  reports on attorney Suaad Allami whom the US State dept recognized in 2009  as an International Women of Courage and quotes her stating:     I was living under the three wars, 1980, 1991 and 2003.  I know  what it means for the people.  The worst impact of all the wars is on poor  people.  Since 2003, we had the Sectarian Violence -- how that has displaced  people! They leave their homes, structures fall, corruption, violence, many  diseases. Cancers are increasing because of the prohibited weapons they used  during the war. I live in east Baghdad.  Sadr City has 40 percent of the  population, close to 2 million, mostly poor.  Fifteen or twenty people, living  in a small area, these are small houses, many members of an extended family  living in one house.          Fran Kelly: Manal Omar is an activist and scholar working at the US  Institute of Peace in America. She lived in Iraq from 2003 to 2005 and wrote a  book about her experiences called Barefoot in Baghdad.  Manal Omar is  in Australia this week.  Manal, welcome to ABC Radio National  Breakfast.   Manal Omar: Thank you, thank you for having me.   Fran Kelly: And happy International Women's Day.    Manal Omar: Thank you.  Likewise.   Fran Kelly: Talking about women in Iraq, Manal, has democracy in  Iraq delivered better outcomes for women there?   Manal Omar: Well the jury's still out on what the improvement for  women will look like.  Iraq has a very strong legacy of women's rights. If you  look at the 40s and the 50s, it's something that Iraqi women are very proud of.   In 2003, Iraqi women were talking about how they were going to leap forward and  ways that they were going to reclaim that legacy of women's rights but  unfortunately it has panned out quite like that.  They're still struggling and  unfortunately they're in a situation of just trying to maintain the status quo.   And I'm cautiously optimistic that they'll be able to reclaim that legacy  But  it's been a very difficult path.   Fran Kelly: And what about improvement in terms of -- clear  improvement that you can measure -- women's representation in the Parliament or  in the top echelons of that Parliament in Iraq?   Manal Omar: That's a great question.  You do have a quota so 25% of  the Parliament are women and they are emerging over the last few government  formations as being very strong, powerful women that are articulating not only  the issues for women but for youth and other important issues that are important  to the country as a whole.   Fran Kelly: Well is it true to say that though, in the recent  Ministry there were no women ministers?   Manal Omar: That's right and --   Fran Kelly: That's a change isn't it?   Manal Omar: It is a change. In the last Iraq government formation  there were no women that were no women that were appointed.  And you know, I  think it had more to do with the fact that when you're negotiating  and looking  at the political process it's often that leaders of the political parties who  are almost always men that come out an take the seats.  And so it wasn't  necessarily targeting women but it's a very typical situation where women and in  my book, I call it the negotiating chip where they're negotiated away and become  assets during these times.     Fran Kelly: Tell me a little more about that. What do you mean the  negotiating chip?   Manal Omar: I mean most often a lot of the political parties might  not just be against women's rights or anti-women, but they're thinking about  their own political interests. And when you're negotiating whether it's with  tribal leaders or with the heads of politcal parties and in the case of Iraq  religious leaders, what tends to fall through the cracks are women because no  one wants to have their position filled by a woman they're going to have the  head of the tribe or the head of the political party come and take the seat.   And unfortunately and consistently the people who pay the price are the women  representatives.    March 2nd, the US Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held a hearing to  address the differences between the law the Congress passed to aid veterans and  their caregivers and the meager and miserly way the VA intended to 'follow' it.   The hearing was covered in that day's snapshot  and  Kat covered it in "Burr promises VA 'one hell of a  fight' " and Ava  covered it at Trina's site with "The VA still can't get it  together. " Leadership of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee  and the House Veterans Affairs Committee have written US President Barack Obama  to ask him to prevent the VA from distorting the law Congress passed which would  prevent many veterans and their caregivers from receiving the help Congress said  they deserved.  This is the letter the leadership of the Veterans Affairs  Committee -- both houses -- sent Barack:  
March 8, 2011
 The President
 The White  House
 Washington, DC 20500
 
 
 Dear Mr. President:
 We are writing  regarding the family caregivers assistance program established in Public Law  111-163, the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act of 2010, which  you signed into law on May 5, 2010. To date, implementation of this program is  significantly behind the schedule mandated in law. The statutory deadline for  the full implementation of this program was January 30, 2011. Our concerns were  raised with you about this previously, and after conversations with members of  your senior staff, we understand that you are directing your Administration to  get this program back on track such that services should commence early this  summer.
 
 We ask that you direct the Department of Veterans Affairs and the  Office of Management and Budget to implement the necessary interim-final  regulations for this program within 60 days of the date of this letter. We also  ask that you direct OMB to ensure that the regulations and other elements of the  program's implementation comply with the specific eligibility criteria that are  set out in the law. VA's reluctance to work with Congress and veterans advocates  has led to a situation where caregivers remain unclear if they will receive the  support Congress intended for them.
 
 Further delay of this program hurts  veterans and caregivers in need of these critical benefits and services.  Further, limiting eligibility to arbitrary and stringent criteria, contrary to  the intent of the law, creates undue hardship for veterans and family caregivers  meant to be helped by the new program. Instruction and training in the provision  of care, respite, technical assistance, counseling, and a living stipend for  those who are forced to leave their jobs or work fewer hours to provide care to  their loved ones are all being withheld as some in VA attempt to stymie this  program. VA and OMB need your leadership to implement this program.
 
 Thank you for your attention to this  matter.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 
 Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Chairman,  Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee
 
 Rep. Jeff Miller (R-FL 1st),  Chairman, House Veterans' Affairs Committee
 Senator Richard Burr (R-NC),  Ranking Member, Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee
 
 Rep. Bob Filner (D-CA  51st), Ranking Member, House Veterans' Affairs Committee
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