Update: See also... Obama preparing for America's Surrender
The following from: Fox News Other posting here: America's military - being left high and dry
Insult to Injury: Wounded warriors snubbed at Walter Reed dining hall
by Justin Fishel, Jennifer Griffin
If video does not load click here.
In a disturbing revelation about the treatment of America's most severely wounded troops, Fox News has learned the military earlier this month decided to invalidate meal tickets and reduce hours for the sole dining facility in the Walter Reed building where they are recovering.
The decision
affects the Warrior Cafe located inside building 62, home to all multiple
amputees and long-term, recovering patients at Walter Reed National Military
Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
The decision would
mean wounded warriors who would normally have a government-funded meal just
down the hall would have to walk, wheel or limp nearly a half-mile across the
Walter Reed campus to the temporary "food trailer" for breakfast,
lunch and dinner.
"I mean it's
called the Warrior Cafe, you would think it is for us," said Sgt. Josh
Wetzel, who lost both his legs when he stepped on a pressure plate IED outside
Kandahar, Afghanistan in May 2013. He's been recovering at Walter Reed since
and has been a daily customer at the cafe.
The status of the
military's decision may be in flux.
After Fox News
submitted multiple inquiries with senior military officials earlier this week,
the Pentagon responded late Wednesday. Lt. Col. Catherine Wilkinson, a Pentagon
spokesman, told Fox News that Dr. Jonathan Woodson, assistant secretary of
Defense for health affairs, has decided to reverse the changes.
Yet so far, no
patients at Walter Reed have been notified of that decision and there has been
no formal announcement.
"It makes a
lot of people mad that they can't get into their wheelchair and wheel down to
the Warrior Cafe," Wetzel said. "Now they have to wheel all the way
across base to use their meal cards."
'It's called the Warrior Cafe, you would
think it is for us." - Sgt. Josh
Wetzel, who lost both legs in Afghanistan
Wetzel's wife
Paige is nine months pregnant with their first child and is due this coming
Monday. She says she's worried about how much time and effort her husband will
have to spend seeking food between appointments, while she is in the maternity
ward.
"In my
opinion it's a total independence thing," Paige said. "If I were to
leave for a day or two I would know Josh could go right down the hall, feed
himself and he'd be fine. Now the only alternative is to leave our
building."
Walter Reed has
already closed the cafe on weekends. Paige says the Army offered to have Josh
order his meals in advance. "They explained that we could use our squad
leaders to order meals for the weekend, but it has to go through the squad
leader (and then) through the first sergeant," Paige said. "So how do
you plan for that to make sure you get what you need for the weekend?"
In addition to the
weekend closure, the base also decided to reduce the cafe's hours from 60 to 50
a week. Instead of closing at 8 p.m. it now closes at 6 p.m., making it
difficult for those getting occupational therapy to get there in time.
The patients of
building 62, many of whom have endured 50 surgeries or more and are expected to
spend up to two years recovering at Walter Reed, were told of the decision to
end meal tickets at the Cafe in an Aug. 7 text message from their squad leader.
The message explained that the changes to the meal tickets will take place on
Sept. 3. That message was followed by a heated town hall meeting last week.
"I was very
upset," said Carolee Ryan. She is the mother of Marine Staff Sgt. Thomas
McRae, a triple amputee, partially blinded, single father whose wife left him
after he sustained his injuries in January of 2012 in Sangin, Afghanistan.
She was one of the
mothers who made her voice heard during that town hall meeting.
"I felt it
was a slap in my son's face as a service member. As many times as he has been
deployed -- what they were doing to him was a disservice," she said.
Paige Wetzel said
the families felt the decision was made without their input and for reasons
that are hard to understand. "It felt like the money had been deemed
appropriate somewhere else and I don't see how that could happen," Wetzel
said.
Officials in the
Pentagon and at Walter Reed did not respond to questions about why the changes
were made, but congressional sources with knowledge of the decision say it was
based on concerns that government funds for the warrior meals were being
misappropriated. They said that because the cafe is listed as a "self
sustaining" business, it is not allowed to receive government subsidies,
such as the meal tickets and appropriated funds. So the military decided the
cafe could no longer accept the government meal cards.
The families and
patients have a slightly different take. Many of them who spoke to Fox News are
under the impression that the government doesn't like paying for the higher
prices that come with the better food.
"The food
quality is not nearly as good (at the trailer) as it is at the Warrior
Cafe," Josh Wetzel said. "The Warrior Cafe has something for everyone
like a grill, hot food, salad bars, sandwiches and drinks."
Carolee Ryan says
the trailers specialize in "processed food."
Walter Reed plans
to eventually replace the trailers with a new cafeteria, though it's not
expected to be completed for months. But even the new cafeteria will be a haul
for the wounded occupants of building 62. For now, Josh's best options are to
pay for a meal using his modest Army paycheck or to walk on his prosthetics to
the trailer.
"I would say
it's close to half a mile ... for guys who are on their wheelchair or using
prosthetic legs -- you know that is a long way to go," he said.
Adding insult to
injury, there are only two handicap-accessible tables in the trailer, and
neither the bathroom nor the exit doors has push-button access.
"It's quote
unquote handicap accessible, but for guys who have serious mobility injuries --
like they can't use their hands that well -- you know it is tough for
them," Josh Wetzel said.
Thomas McRae's
mother says the whole situation breaks her heart. She said her son told her he
would consider going hungry before wheeling himself to the trailers.
"Now I get
it," Ryan said. "Back in the Vietnam War when all the men and women
were coming home (I understand) how they felt ... and I didn't think it would
come to this."
Mr. Obama is a national disgrace.
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