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A few months ago the hospital which was built like a fortress was flattened by a wrecker's ball. I have tried unsuccessfully tried to find a photo of the hospital to post. This hospital was still needed. It was only closed and flattened to save money so the rich could have their taxes cut. Proposed shutdown of VA hospitals sparks torrent of protests
By Ben Dobbin ASSOCIATED PRESS
2:08 a.m. October 28, 2003
CANANDAIGUA, N.Y. – Once a week, Frank Woods meets up with a dozen fellow World War II veterans to exorcise the nightmares and other chilling aftereffects of battles they fought more than a half-century ago.
"It really helps when you've got somebody to talk to," said Woods, 79, leaning on a cane in a courtyard at the Veterans Affairs hospital in this lake-shore town in western New York.
The 70-year-old hospital, which sits on 170 acres of tranquil parkland on the edge of open country, is one of seven around the country that could be closed as the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs looks for ways to streamline its $26 billion health care network.
That threat drew more than 1,500 protesters, many in uniform, to a boisterous hearing last week before a federal commission charged with overseeing the biggest overhaul of the VA system since the end of World War II. ...
The proposed $4.6 billion restructuring would shutter hospitals in Canandaigua; Pittsburgh; Lexington, Ky.; Brecksville, Ohio; Gulfport, Miss.; Livermore, Calif.; and Waco, Texas. It would also downsize another dozen health centers around the country.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/military/20031028-0208-veteranshospitals.html
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AUGUST 12, 2003 CAPITAL ASSET REALIGNMENT FOR ENHANCED SERVICES (CARES) HEARING
TESTIMONY OF
CONGRESSMAN TIM RYAN
AUGUST 12, 2003
As a Member of Congress who represents more than 150,000 veterans and who is proud to serve on the House of Representatives Veterans Affairs Committee, I oppose the Department of Veterans' Affairs' (VA) plan to reorganize the health care delivery system for our nation's veterans. The draft proposal, now before the Capital Asset Realignment for Enhancement Services (CARES) Commission, calls for the closing of seven VA hospitals – including the VA facility in Brecksville, Ohio.
I urge the Commission to reject the VA proposal. I believe that the Department of Veterans Affairs' realignment plan is more than just bad policy, it is shameful. The veterans of our nation do not need less access to services, they need and deserve more.
Presently, there is a huge crisis in veterans' medical care. Veterans often wait six months or more to get a medical appointment. Tragically, some die before seeing a doctor. Even the Department of Veterans' Affairs (VA) estimates that there are more 110,000 veterans waiting for initial appointments for non-service related medical problems and, because of excessive delays in getting appropriate and timely treatment, the conditions are often more serious and the costs are significantly greater.
Veterans are feeling betrayed, and sadly, they have every reason to feel that way. On the heels of the largest tax cut in our nation's history, veterans are being told to wait longer, travel further, and pay more for the medical services they were promised. And now, the veterans of our nation and their families are asked to embrace a proposal that will eliminate VA facilities and, in turn, pose greater challenges to getting quality health care. Our veterans deserve better.
For northeastern Ohio, the closing of the Brecksville Veterans' Hospital will force the 48,000 veterans who are served by that facility to go elsewhere. In more immediate terms, it will mean the VA will displace 190 nursing home veterans, 175 homeless veterans and 80 inpatient veterans receiving mental health services. Under the draft plan, it remains unclear as to where most of these veterans will go. The proposal calls for the expansion of the Wade Park medical center complex. Yet even if construction funding materialized—which few have confidence will—the consolidation plan fails to recognize that Wade Park is already facing huge and growing patient backlogs. The draft plan also proposes to contract out some nursing home, inpatient mental health care, and homeless services to existing state and local programs. Again, the plan is flawed as it incorrectly assumes that the region has excess capacity. Like most areas of the country, such services and facilities are stretched beyond their limits. ...
http://timryan.house.gov/NR/exeres/0D9B535A-E28D-4F88-AD13-87B31BF90677.htm
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