-
Veterans Cards
Taken from the Forces reunited news letter.
Veterans win fight for cards
Four million former servicemen and women are to be given veterans' cards to ensure they get priority treatment for NHS healthcare and housing, and discounts for services such as transport.
The Ministry of Defence plans to introduce the cards at the beginning of 2010, The Independent has learnt, in an attempt to begin repairing the damage done to the military covenant between nation and armed forces under New Labour.
The launch is expected to be formally announced this autumn with the first veterans' cards handed to new armed forces leavers in spring next year, before being rolled out to the country's four million former service personnel.
The aim is to ensure that those who have risked their lives in combat get front-of-the-queue treatment and financial benefits. Similar systems in the US and France offer veterans subsidised travel and discounts from private companies.
At a time when the armed forces have been stretched to breaking point in two bloody conflicts, there has been mounting anger that the priority treatment promised by the Government 18 months ago has failed to materialise. "We now need to make it happen," the Defence minister Kevan Jones told this newspaper. "We will provide veterans' ID cards so the person can say 'I have served in the services' and get priority access to treatment." Mr Jones spoke in response to this newspaper's campaign to get better mental health treatment for traumatised troops, launched after the Victoria Cross winner Johnson Beharry – the country's most decorated serving soldier – revealed his own combat-related trauma and urged the Government to stop failing his fellow soldiers with sub-standard or non-existent care.
Lieutenant General Sir Freddie Viggers, who until last year was Adjutant-General in charge of personnel, welcomed the veterans' card. "It is about value and self worth, not about a piece of plastic," he said. "We carry these cards for the whole of our service and when we leave we are required to hand them in. Psychologically, it is a bad thing. It is a little bit of plastic but it represents who you are and what you did."
The Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, former commanding officer with the Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters Regiment, said: "It is about bloody time. At last, a reasonable, sensible minister [Mr Jones] who listens to ideas from across the political spectrum."
The categories in the Forces Discount Scheme currently include some retraining, sports clubs, childcare, insurance, holidays and travel.
Veterans and senior soldiers have called on the Government to acknowledge a predicted "explosion" of traumatised troops from recent conflicts and provide specialist mental healthcare. "No one is suggesting there is not a problem," Mr Jones said, "but we need a grounded debate to understand it."
He admitted that many former servicemen were "lost" in the NHS system and vowed to ensure every GP was made to record whether or not a patient had served in the forces.
However, he refused to concede that former service personnel needed separate, dedicated care and risked the wrath of charities by suggesting they should fund provision of military health advisers. "Combat Stress [the charity] gets £3m of taxpayers' money. I don't think the Government should do it all. It is not about money. It is about the system working better."
-
Post Thanks / Like - 8 Thanks, 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Re: Veterans Cards
Well spotted John,
It will be interesting to see how this story pans out. Lots of "could" and "Should" in the MOD announcement, but no substance. My fear is that it will turn into another token gesture by the Gov, and we will end up with a worthless piece of plastic, which saves us 20% on tyres at Kwik Fit, but not much else.
I was chatting with a Yank a couple of days ago, he was telling me that in the US, many youngsters elect to join up for 4 yrs, because of the benfits a Veterans Card brings in later life, healthcare, housing etc.
Having said that, the govenment know's it has a ticking timebomb on its hands, with the effect on service personnel from recent conflicts. Perhaps they may just do something constructive now, in preperation for the future.
-
Post Thanks / Like - 3 Thanks, 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Re: Veterans Cards
The Veterans card has allready been rolled out across Germany, see report:
http://cdn.streamcdn.com/cdn.asp?c_id=bfbs&mt=bfbs&fn=250309-1.wmv
Last edited by ap1; 01-04-2009 at 11:14.
Reason: attempt to repair link
-
Re: Veterans Cards
Typical of a left wing Government....
Members of HM Forces cant even get priority treatment now, they are placed on and get treatment on a 'Tier' system within the NHS....would a "Veterens Card" make any difference? I dont know, but if it does go ahead....will it work?
I can see it now:
Former Serviceman:
"Doctor, I hold a "Former Service Personnel" card, can I get Priority treatment?"
Doctor:
"Errrrrm, no. This is the NHS. If there is a civilian, LIKE YOU, outside with a worse condition they will get priority. I am a Doctor, I treat everyone the same, I do not treat any one different, no one gets special treatment. You will have to wait like everyone else and be treated according to your priority and needs like everyone else"
To me it seems like another "Labour Party" smoke screen to distract everyone from seeing how incompetent they are and have been in supporting HM Armed forces....
Bookmarks