Veterans' Issues News
Supreme Court weighs veterans’ disability denials, affecting ‘untold numbers’ of vets
By Volunteer Editor |
Here Is the 2025 Pay Raise for Disabled Veterans and Military Retirees
By Volunteer Editor |
Kansas Legal Services helped Navy veteran, attacked by pirates, secure disability benefits
By Volunteer Editor |
VA and the Biden-Harris Administration announce new government-wide website, call center to protect Veterans from fraud and scams
By Volunteer Editor |
VA takes steps to expand access to benefits for Veterans who served at K2 and their survivors
By Volunteer Editor |
VA accepting proposals for new graduate medical education initiative to expand health care access for Veterans
By Volunteer Editor |
Featured Charities for Veterans' Issues
The Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund serves United States military personnel experiencing the invisible wounds of war: traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post-traumatic stress (PTS). When our servicemen and women return from the battlefield, we help them fight the war within by building world-class, advanced treatment centers providing the best TBI and PTS care, enabling these heroes to continue to serve on active duty and enjoy a full and productive life.
There are currently over 1,000 veterans waiting to receive a care package. By contributing to our charity, you’re offering a lifeline support to those who bravely served our nation, creating a powerful bond that transcends words and echoes the profound impact of giving back.
You can make a difference in the lives of our veterans.
Fisher House Foundation builds comfort homes where military & veteran families can stay free of charge, while a loved one is in the hospital. These homes are located at military and VA medical centers around the world. Fisher Houses have up to 21 suites, with private bedrooms and baths. Families share a common kitchen, laundry facilities, a warm dining room, and an inviting living room.
We believe those touched by military service can succeed at home by restoring their sense of self, family, and hope. Nationally, Hope For The Warriors provides comprehensive support programs for service members, veterans, and military families that are focused on transition, health and wellness, peer engagement, and connections to community resources.
The Bob Woodruff Foundation has partnerships in communities across the country. We are able to identify and invest in best-in-class programs that are serving the diverse needs of impacted service members, veterans, families, and caregivers right in their communities. Their mission is to ensure that our nation’s impacted veterans, service members, and their families have access to the highest level of support and resources they deserve, for as long as they need it. Today the Bob Woodruff Foundation complements the work of our government, ensuring that our veterans are thriving long after they return home.
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Ways to Take Action
Disabled American Veterans (DAV) is a nonprofit that drives veterans to medical appointments, assist them in filing benefit claims (e.g., VA health benefits or Medicare health insurance) with the government and helps vets with medical, employment and other general needs. The DAV needs volunteers to:
- Drive veterans to appointments at Veterans Affairs hospitals around the country.
- Volunteer at VA hospitals.
- Assist veterans in your community with needs such as grocery shopping, running errands or helping with yard work.
A couple of different organizations build new homes or adapt existing homes for veterans with severe injuries. If you’re a contractor or tradesman, Building Homes for Heroes and Homes for Our Troops can both use your skills to help build homes for injured vets. If you don’t have building expertise, you can still get involved by donating funds, goods and services or land.
Stand Down programs for veterans who are homeless are local one- to three-day events that provide a single spot for vets to receive food, shelter, health screenings and other needs. To volunteer for a Stand Down event near you, check with the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans.
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Recommended Media
The Best Years of Our Lives is a 1946 American epic drama film directed by William Wyler, and starring Myrna Loy, Fredric March, Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright, Virginia Mayo and Harold Russell. The film is about three United States servicemen re-adjusting to civilian life after coming home from World War II.
In 1989, The Best Years of Our Lives was one of the first 25 films selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
Where to Watch: Pluto TV, Amazon Prime Video
This harrowing Best Picture Oscar winner examines the devastating impact of the Vietnam War on an entire community. Small-town buddies Mike (Robert De Niro), Steven (John Savage), and Nick (Christopher Walken) are captured together and brutalized. Mike returns home relatively unscathed, but Steven comes back a self-pitying paraplegic, while the tragic Nick doesn't come back at all, remaining in Saigon and ritualistically re-enacting his torture for money. The film's Vietnam sequences are hyperbolically surreal, but its meditation on survivor's guilt and a generation's loss of innocence is genuine. The movie is credited with inspiring the drive to build the Vietnam War memorial on the Washington Mall.
Where to Watch: YouTube, Google Play, Apple TV
The documentary, directed by Meg McLagan and Daria Sommers, follows the first group of women sent into direct combat. These five women were originally supposed to deal with terrorized Iraqi women and families but ended up being sent, unprepared, into combat. The filmmakers interview the quintet about their combat experience and their work in adjusting to home life.
Where to Watch: Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video