Page 2 The INDEPENDENT, April 19, 2007 The INDEPENDENT Published on the first and third Thursdays of each month by The Independent, LLC, 725 Bridge St., Vernonia, OR 97064. Phone/Fax: 503-429-9410. Publisher Clark McGaugh, clark@the-independent.net Editor Rebecca McGaugh, rebecca@the-independent.net Assoc. Editor Noni Andersen, noni@the-independent.net Opinion Open letter to the Mayor Dear Madame Mayor: You are interesting and creative, but sometimes your creativity seems to be applied to stifling ideas that don’t coincide with yours, or conversely, to applying pressure to bring about a result you promote. A leader works to find ways to incorporate others’ ideas. Example: The Airport Committee, now in compliance with all city regulations, recommended that model air- plane enthusiasts be allowed to use the municipal air- port. You obviously disagreed with the recommenda- tion, saying any change should be done in a “proper and rightful way.” Councilor Whiteman, who is council liaison to the airport committee, then suggested that consideration be given for summer use, so the subject should return to the council for discussion. Example: The Learning Center Committee decided at their February meeting that The INDEPENDENT is “biased against” the Learning Center. This incredible statement was in committee minutes that were includ- ed in the City Council packets. Both you and Councilor Whiteman have been active on that committee. Since no one could demonstrate the “bias,” we were in- formed that an apology would be forthcoming. The apology, however, was for letting unapproved minutes get into the council packets, not for the false charge. When asked about it, you said some committee members would not sign the apology unless it was changed, or even after it was changed – a remarkable statement, since they voted to do so. You said some refused to sign, apparently due to objections they had to our April 5 Editorial. Equally disturbing was your comment to the committee that they could talk about anything – as long as they were careful about what went into the minutes. Has it occurred to you that there is an ethical lapse in such a statement? Is this “proper and rightful”? Also disturbing is that the content of the minutes was changed, deleting all reference to The IN- DEPENDENT, by the time they were presented to the committee for approval. We know the Learning Center is important to you, but also to the community. That doesn’t explain why you think it merits publicity when they fail to provide a press release. Other organizations know that publicity is freely given when the information is provided. Madam Mayor, there is nothing creative about capri- cious and inconsistent actions. There is nothing cre- ative about ethical lapses. Out of My Mind… By Noni Andersen Along with growing awareness of our govern- ment’s appalling treatment of wounded soldiers and veterans – reducing support at military hos- pitals, and making it so difficult for wounded vet- erans to get follow-up care at VA facilities that many give up – the Army has found another way to deny help. Here is a very small part of a well-document- ed report by Jonathan Kors in The Nation (April 9, 2007). In order to bring this to our readers’ at- tention, I have edited to fit available space; at the end of this column there is an internet address for the whole article. The story of Army Spec. Jon Town: In Octo- ber, 2004, in Ramadi, Iraq, Town was standing in the doorway of his battalion’s headquarters when a 107-millimeter rocket struck two feet above his head. It punched a piano-sized hole in the concrete facade, sparked a huge fireball and slammed 25-year-old Town to the floor, where he lay blacked out. Men from his unit gathered around Town and were screaming his name. “…I was numb all over,” he said. “I could see them, but I couldn’t hear them. I couldn’t hear anything. I thought I was dead.” Eventually, the shrapnel was removed from Town’s neck and his ears stopped leaking blood. But his hearing never really recovered, neither has his life. Honored twelve times during seven years in uniform, Town has spent the last three struggling with deafness, memory failure and de- pression. By September, 2006, he and the Army agreed he was no longer combat-ready. Instead of sending Town to a medical board and discharging him because of his injuries, doc- tors at Fort Carson, Colorado, claimed his wounds were caused by a “personality disorder.” Town was discharged from the Army and told that, under a personality disorder discharge, he would never receive disability or medical bene- fits. Regulation 635-200, Chapter 5-13 in the Army separations manual is called: “Separation Be- cause of Personality Disorder.” It is quick and cheap, and the Dep‘t. of Veterans Affairs doesn’t have to provide medical care because a 5-13 personality disorder is a pre-existing condition . The VA is required to treat only those wounds sustained during service. Soldiers discharged under 5-13 can’t collect disability pay either. Disability benefits require evaluation by a medical board, which must con- firm that a soldier is wounded and that his wounds stem from combat. The process takes several months, in contrast to a 5-13 discharge, which can be wrapped up in a few days. If a soldier dismissed under 5-13 hasn’t served his contract, he also has to return some of his re-enlistment bonus, an amount often larg- er than the soldier’s final paycheck. As a result, on the day of their discharge, many injured vets learn that they owe the Army several thousand dollars. Town would not get disability pay or receive long-term VA medical care. He also had to give Please see page 3