Showing posts sorted by relevance for query agent orange awareness month. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query agent orange awareness month. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Agent Orange Awareness Month Observed in the Month(s) of August and October

It's time once again to observe Agent Orange Awareness Month.  Here at Agent Orange Legacy we began observing Agent Orange Awareness not only in the month of August but also October.

I know it's confusing to some but here is a little history behind Agent Orange Awareness Month.
My understanding is that most states have designated October as the month of choice but in Maine, where I live, it's August. Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) introduced and passed a resolution making August Agent Orange Awareness Month>>>http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c111:S.+Res.+248:

FROM SENATOR COLLINS:  Increase Agent Orange Awareness (reprinted here with permission)

“Increase Agent Orange Awareness”
Weekly Column
Senator Susan Collins
August 21, 2009

More than 8.7 million American men and women bravely served our nation during the Vietnam War.  More than 58,000 gave their lives defending freedom, including 339 from Maine.

Some three and a half decades later, an estimated 2.6 million Vietnam veterans bear an awful legacy from that conflict – severe, debilitating, and even fatal health problems that have resulted from their exposure to the herbicide Agent Orange.  Adding to the tragedy is the fact that these health problems at times afflict not only just those who served in Vietnam, but also their children.

As memories of the Vietnam War fade into history, we must never forget those who served all those years ago and who continue to suffer today.  That is why, as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, I am pleased that the U.S. Senate recently unanimously passed my Resolution designating August as “Agent Orange Awareness Month.”  This Resolution was co-sponsored by my Maine colleague, Senator Olympia Snowe, and Senators Mark Begich and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia.  It follows the lead set by the State of Maine, which set aside this month in tribute to these veterans.

Agent Orange was used during the Vietnam War to kill unwanted plant life and remove leaves from trees that provided cover for the enemy.  The United States military sprayed more than 19 million gallons of herbicide throughout South Vietnam.  Agent Orange, an extremely toxic substance that contains dioxin, accounted for approximately eleven million gallons of that total.
While some of our military personnel were sickened immediately upon exposure to the chemical, a great many more did not experience symptoms until they returned home.  In the years since, the Department of Veterans Affairs has recognized that certain cancers and a wide range of other illnesses, from diabetes to neurological disorders, are associated with exposure to Agent Orange.  In addition, the children of some of these veterans suffer from such devastating medical conditions as spina bifida.  Ongoing research continues to uncover more links between Agent Orange exposure and serious health issues.
The deployment of Agent Orange was a tragic mistake, one that unintentionally has caused great harm to both Americans and to the people of Vietnam.  Our nation must continue to undertake further research into the links between Agent Orange and disease and provide our Vietnam veterans and their families with the health care and support they so fully deserve.

Supporting our troops doesn’t stop once they leave the military. Just as no member of our armed forces would leave a comrade behind on the battlefield, we must not leave any more veterans and their families behind on the battlefields of diseases that result from toxic exposures.

Our Resolution, which has the strong support of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, reminds all Americans of our obligation.  It calls attention to those veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange and the adverse effects that such exposure has had on their health.  It recognizes the sacrifices that our veterans and service members have made and continue to make on behalf of our great Nation, especially those veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange.  It reaffirms our commitment to our veterans, of all places of conflict and of all times.

Nothing we can do will ever fully repay the Vietnam veterans for all they gave and all they lost, particularly those who have been damaged by Agent Orange. Our veterans never stopped trying to serve our country under the most difficult and dangerous conditions overseas.  We must never stop trying to serve them when they return home.

VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA DECLARES OCTOBER AS AGENT ORANGE AWARENESS MONTH:  PDF  includes a brief history of Agent Orange Awareness month on page 21:  https://vva.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/VVA-Resolutions-2015.pdf

Unfortunately I can not find the website where I first learned about Agent Orange Awareness Month and all the different states that had passed Resolutions.

Here is some of the info I saved over the years:

States that Observe Agent Orange Awareness Month in August:
Agent Orange Awareness Month is honored in the following states for the month of August:
Maine - Date Unknown

States that Observe Agent Orange Awareness Month in October: Agent Orange Awareness Month is honored in the following states for the month of October:

TEXAS - 1998 - 1999
VERMONT - 1999
COLORADO - 1999
LOUISIANA - 1998
NEW JERSEY - 1998
NEW YORK - 1998
ALABAMA - 1998
FLORIDA - 1998
UTAH - 1998
WASHINGTON - 1998
MARYLAND - 1998
NEW HAMPSHIRE - 1998
MINNESOTA - 1998
WISCONSIN - 1998
RHODE ISLAND - 1998
OHIO - 1998

States Awaiting Governor's Signatures:
ARIZONA
MISSOURI
GEORGIA
OREGON
CALIFORNIA
VIRGINIA
ILLINOIS
MASSACHUSETTS
KANSAS

States that Have Refused to Honor our Agent Orange Veterans:
KENTUCKY

THINGS YOU CAN DO:

1)  IMPORTANT LEGISLATION for our families ACT NOW!!  ATTENTION VETERANS AND THEIR FAMILIES>>>UPDATE S.1602 (S. 2738 has replaced S. 1602)>>>Take Action NOW ask your Senator to Support S. 2738, the Toxic Exposure Research Act of 2014 AT THIS LINK>>>
http://capwiz.com/vva/issues/alert/?alertid=63293526&type=CO

LEARN MORE>>>
http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2014/08/update-s-1602take-action-now-ask-your.html

2)  COMPANION BILL for S. 2738

VVA strongly supports this bill, which reflects positively on one of our foremost legislative goals. Not only would it help achieve a measure of justice for the innocent victims of the use of toxic substances in times of war, but it offers unlimited possibilities for scientific research into the effects of these toxic chemicals.
VVA supports H.R. 5484 the Toxic Exposure Research Act of 2014 at this link:http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2014/09/vva-supports-hr-5484-toxic-exposure.html



3)  BDRC ‘Children Center’ PETITION;  Signing this petition will help thousands of Vietnam Veterans' children that are in dire need of specific medical treatment related to Agent Orange exposure. Be a supporter and sign the petition on the behalf of ALL veterans:  http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2013/05/children-center-petition.html

3)  REGISTER NOW: IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO CHILDREN OF VIETNAM VETERANS; Vietnam Veterans of America Agent Orange/Dioxin Committee is asking the children of Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange; adult children (we recommend you register your children also) who are ill and/or have birth defects, learning disabilities and/or mental health issues; to register with Birth Defect Research for Children, Inc. National Birth Defect Registry:  http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2013/05/register-now-important-message-to.html

4)  FILE FORM 21-0304: IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO CHILDREN OF VIETNAM VETERANS;
Vietnam Veterans of America Agent Orange/Dioxin Committee asks all the children (we suggest grandchildren also) of Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange who are ill and/or suffering from a birth defect, learning disabilities, mental health illness, etc..to file a claim with the VA.
Please use VA Form 21-0304. This is the same form used for the children of women Vietnam veterans. Your claim will be denied, but it will cause a record to be established.
Once this is done, should the VA change it’s policies and allow male veterans’ children more than spina bifida as a presumptive for the veteran’s exposure to Agent Orange, we will then have recourse:
http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2013/05/important-message-to-children-of.html

5)  FAQ; We are usually swamped with emails from people looking for answers to the same types of questions. If you have questions check the FAQs before contacting us. Many of your questions may already have been answered in this forum:  http://agentorangelegacy.blogspot.com/2013/05/frequently-asked-questions.html

6)  PHYSICIANS' RESOURCE 2013; Vietnam veterans have been reporting that their children have been born with birth defects and other health problems for decades. This cry for help has fallen on deaf ears for many years.

We have created this one page document to help educate our doctors about the generational effects of Agent Orange on the Children of Vietnam veterans.

The children of Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange continue to go without adequate medical intervention, without the support and services they so desperately need!

We hope that this informational document that we created for the children of Vietnam veterans will help aid in getting adequate medical intervention.



USE THESE PICTURES TO HELP SPREAD AWARENESS:







HONOR YOUR VETERAN LOST TO AGENT ORANGE;  AGENT ORANGE VIETNAM VETERANS MEMORIAL (AOVVM).  AOVVM is an online memorial. A MEMORIAL TO OUR U.S. VETERANS LOST TO AGENT ORANGE: This page is a memorial of our veterans we loved & lost because of Agent Orange/Dioxin or physical & emotional wounds as a result of their service in Vietnam AND; to their country:  http://www.facebook.com/aovvm

Agent Orange Legacy (c) All rights reserved.

Monday, October 1, 2012

#October is #AgentOrangeAwarenessMonth by #SharonPerry, Founder of #AgentOrangeLegacy

October is Agent Orange Awareness Month



I know some of you will be confused since we recently observed Agent Orange Awareness Month in August.  It's true we did observe AO Awareness Month in August.

My understanding is that in most states have designated October as the month of choice but in Maine, where I live, it's August. Senator Susan Collins (R-ME)  introduced and passed a resolution making August Agent Orange Awareness Month.

I just found this pdf where Vietnam Veterans of America declares October as Agent Orange Awareness Month.  The pdf also has a brief history of Agent Orange Awareness month.


Unfortunately I can not find the website where I first learned about Agent Orange Awareness Month and all the different states that had passed Resolutions.  Here is some of the info I saved over the years:


States that Observe Agent Orange Awareness Month in October:
Agent Orange Awareness Month is honored in the following states for the month of October:
TEXAS - 1998 - 1999
VERMONT - 1999
COLORADO - 1999
LOUISIANA - 1998
NEW JERSEY - 1998
NEW YORK - 1998
ALABAMA - 1998
FLORIDA - 1998
UTAH - 1998
WASHINGTON - 1998
MARYLAND - 1998
NEW HAMPSHIRE - 1998
MINNESOTA - 1998
WISCONSIN - 1998
RHODE ISLAND - 1998
OHIO - 1998


STATES AWAITING GOVERNOR SIGNATURES:
ARIZONA
MISSOURI
GEORGIA
OREGON
CALIFORNIA
VIRGINIA
ILLINOIS
MASSACHUSETTS
KANSAS


THE STATE OF KENTUCKY HAS REFUSED TO HONOR OUR AO VETERANS

Here are some of the things you can do to create awareness:

  1. Get a badge, button or widget on facebook.
  2. Share images from our AO Awareness photo album.
  3. Remember those lost to Agent Orange
  4. The Missing Generation
  5. Follow Agent Orange Legacy's Blog.
  6. Check out Agent Orange Legacy's new website.
  7. Check out FAQs
  8. Vietnam Veterans Children Sought - Learn More.
  9. Join Agent Orange Legacy's new network - Viet vets are welcome!
  10. Living with Agent Orange??  Join our closed Facebook group
  11. Like Faces of Agent Orange, contact Mokie Porter &; tell your story.
  12. Watch our videos on our YouTube Channel
  13. Check out the history behind why the month of August is also designated as Agent Orange Awareness Month by visiting Senator Susan Collins website.
  14. Pass on our Tribute Balloon and help us spread AO Awareness worldwide.
  15. Learn more about agent orange and birth defects visit BDRC.

Significant numbers of Vietnam veterans have children and grandchildren with birth defects related to exposure to Agent Orange. To alert legislators and the media to this ongoing legacy of the war, we are seeking real stories about real people. If you wish to share your family’s health struggles that you believe are due to Agent Orange/dioxin, send an email to mporter@vva.org or call 301-585-4000, Ext. 146

Monday, October 3, 2011

October is Agent Orange Awareness Month




October is Agent Orange Awareness Month

Here are some of the things you can do to create awareness:

  1. Get a badge on facebook to post to your profile and to your page.
  2. Add a widget to your blog or website [Look for the widget on the lower left side of the page.]
  3. Add a button to your blog or website. [Look for the button on the lower left side of the page.]
  4. Visit our FB page and choose any of the pics we have available in our AO Awareness photo album as your profile pic on any social network site, your blog or website.
  5. Spread awareness about Agent Orange by adding this profile pic badge to your FB profile.
  6. We also provide an additional badge which you can post to your FB profile.
    Significant numbers of Vietnam veterans have children and grandchildren with birth defects related to exposure to Agent Orange. To alert legislators and the media to this ongoing legacy of the war, we are seeking real stories about real people. If you wish to share your family’s health struggles that you believe are due to Agent Orange/dioxin, send an email to mporter@vva.org or call 301-585-4000, Ext. 146
  7. Follow Agent Orange Legacy's Blog.
  8. Check out Agent Orange Legacy's new website.
  9. AO Legacy's AO Awareness Education Campaign Parts I & II - If you are the child of a Viet vet you are at RISK!!
  10. Join Agent Orange Legacy's support community - Viet vets are welcome!!
  11. Urge your Senator to vote NO - NO on Senator Coburn's Amendment
  12. Like Faces of Agent Orange, contact Mokie Porter & tell your story.
  13. What Do You Know About Agent Orange Video - Share this please
  14. Check out the history behind why the month of August is also designated as Agent Orange Awareness Month by visiting Senator Susan Collins website.
  15. Pass on our Tribute Balloon and help us spread AO Awareness worldwide.
  16. Learn more about agent orange and birth defects visit BDRC.


Friday, September 30, 2011

October is Agent Orange Awareness Month




October is Agent Orange Awareness Month

Here are some of the things you can do to create awareness:

  1. Get a badge on facebook to post to your profile and to your page.
  2. Add a widget to your blog or website [Look for the widget on the lower left side of the page.]
  3. Add a button to your blog or website. [Look for the button on the lower left side of the page.]
  4. Visit our FB page and choose any of the pics we have available in our AO Awareness photo album as your profile pic on any social network site, your blog or website.
  5. Spread awareness about Agent Orange by adding this profile pic badge to your FB profile.
  6. We also provide an additional badge which you can post to your FB profile.
    Significant numbers of Vietnam veterans have children and grandchildren with birth defects related to exposure to Agent Orange. To alert legislators and the media to this ongoing legacy of the war, we are seeking real stories about real people. If you wish to share your family’s health struggles that you believe are due to Agent Orange/dioxin, send an email to mporter@vva.org or call 301-585-4000, Ext. 146
  7. Follow Agent Orange Legacy's Blog.
  8. Check out Agent Orange Legacy's new website.
  9. AO Legacy's AO Awareness Education Campaign Parts I & II - If you are the child of a Viet vet you are at RISK!!
  10. Join Agent Orange Legacy's support community - Viet vets are welcome!!
  11. Urge your Senator to vote NO - NO on Senator Coburn's Amendment
  12. Like Faces of Agent Orange, contact Mokie Porter & tell your story.
  13. What Do You Know About Agent Orange Video - Share this please
  14. Check out the history behind why the month of August is also designated as Agent Orange Awareness Month by visiting Senator Susan Collins website.
  15. Pass on our Tribute Balloon and help us spread AO Awareness worldwide.
  16. Learn more about agent orange and birth defects visit BDRC.


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

August is Agent Orange - Dioxin Awareness Month




August is Agent Orange Awareness Month

Here are some of the things you can do to create awareness:

  1. Get a badge on facebook to post to your profile and to your page.
  2. Add a widget to your blog or website 
  3. Add a button to your blog or website. 
  4. Visit our FB page and choose any of the pics we have available in our AO Awareness photo album as your profile pic on any social network site, your blog or website.
  5. Spread awareness about Agent Orange by adding this profile pic badge to your FB profile.
  6. We also provide an additional badge which you can post to your FB profile.
  7. Help make Agent Orange History by participating in Agent Orange Day which is 8/10
  8. Like Faces of Agent Orange & contact Mokie Porter & tell your story.
    Significant numbers of Vietnam veterans have children and grandchildren with birth defects related to exposure to Agent Orange. To alert legislators and the media to this ongoing legacy of the war, we are seeking real stories about real people. If you wish to share your family’s health struggles that you believe are due to Agent Orange/dioxin, send an email to mporter@vva.org or call 301-585-4000, Ext. 146
  9. Like Agent Orange Okinawa FB page.
  10. Follow Agent Orange Legacy's Blog.
  11. Check out Agent Orange Legacy's new website.
  12. Join Agent Orange Legacy's support community - Viet vets & all AO victims welcome!!
  13. Watch our videos on Youtube
  14. What Do You Know About Agent Orange Video - Share this please
  15. Check out the history behind why August is designated as Agent Orange Awareness Month by visiting Senator Susan Collins website.
  16. Pass on our Tribute Balloon and help us spread AO Awareness worldwide.
  17. Learn more about agent orange and birth defects visit BDRC.


Saturday, October 9, 2010

Agent Orange Awareness Month - October

Agent Orange Awareness Month
October or August?

Last year we observed Agent Orange Awareness Month in October. We ask that you chose a photo from our album to display as your profile pic during the month of October or chose your own photo.

Help us create awareness about the deadly & toxic affects agent orange has had on our Vietnam veteran, their families & the Vietnamese people.

Still at issue is which month is AO Awareness Month - October or August. The Senate passed a Resolution last year designating August as AO Awareness Month.

Prior to this Resolution a handful of states had already designated October as AO Awareness Month. I believe that many Vietnam veterans & their families normally observe AO Awareness Month in October. Let's hope we are able to resolve this issue very soon.

The State of Maine was the only state to designate August as AO Awareness month. I have written a letter to my Senator since she was the one who
initiated the Resolution passed by the Senate last year designating August as AO Awareness Month. I hope to have this issue resolved long
before next year. Now all I need do is mail the letter!!

In the interim please change your profile picture in observation of AO Awareness Month - October 2010!!

TY - Sharon Perry - Founder

Available Photos to display on your website, blog, or social network of your choice:




















Saturday, August 4, 2012

August is Agent Orange Awareness Month




October is Agent Orange Awareness Month

Here are some of the things you can do to create awareness:

  1. Get a badge on facebook to post to your profile and to your page.
  2. Add a widget to your blog or website
  3. Add a button to your blog or website. 
  4. Visit our FB page and choose any of the pics we have available in our AO Awareness photo album as your profile pic on any social network site, your blog or website.
  5. Spread awareness about Agent Orange by adding this profile pic badge to your FB profile.
    Significant numbers of Vietnam veterans have children and grandchildren with birth defects related to exposure to Agent Orange. To alert legislators and the media to this ongoing legacy of the war, we are seeking real stories about real people. If you wish to share your family’s health struggles that you believe are due to Agent Orange/dioxin, send an email to mporter@vva.org or call 301-585-4000, Ext. 146
  6. Follow Agent Orange Legacy's Blog.
  7. Check out Agent Orange Legacy's new website.
  8. Check out FAQs
  9. Vietnam Veterans Children Sought - Learn More.
  10. Join Agent Orange Legacy's support community - Viet vets are welcome!
  11. Like Faces of Agent Orange, contact Mokie Porter &; tell your story.
  12. Watch our videos on our YouTube Channel
  13. Check out the history behind why the month of August is also designated as Agent Orange Awareness Month by visiting Senator Susan Collins website.
  14. Pass on our Tribute Balloon and help us spread AO Awareness worldwide.
  15. Learn more about agent orange and birth defects visit BDRC.


Saturday, October 5, 2013

News: Agent Orange Zone Blog

 

 
OCTOBER IS AGENT ORANGE AWARENESS MONTH

 

 

AGENT ORANGE ZONE:  Orange Crush - Part 5

USE OF CHEMICALS CONTINUED IN VIETNAM

While the debate over the danger of Agent Orange and dioxin heated up in scientific circles, the U.S. Air Force continued flying defoliation sorties, and the troops on the ground continued to live in the chemical mist of the rainbow herbicides. They slept with it, drank it in their water, ate it in their food and breathed it when it dropped out of the air in a fine, white pungent mist.
Some of the troops in Vietnam used the empty Agent Orange drums for barbecue pits. Others stored watermelons and potatoes in them. Still others rigged the residue-laden drums for showers.  The spraying continued unabated in 1968, even though, according to military records, it apparently was having minimal effects on the enemy. A series of memorandums uncovered in the National Archives and now declassified indicate that defoliation killed a lot of plants, but had little real effect on military operations. 
 
ORANGE AEROSOL DISCOVERED
Meanwhile, the military continued to learn just how toxic Agent Orange could be. On October 23, 1969, an urgent message was sent from Fort Detrick, Maryland, to MACV concerning cleaning of drums containing herbicides. The message provided detailed instructions on how to clean the drums and warned that it was particularly important to clean Agent Orange drums.  "Using the (Agent) Orange drums for storing petroleum products without thoroughly cleaning them can result in creation of an orange aerosol when the contaminated petroleum products are consumed in internal combustion engines. The Orange aerosol thus generated can be most devastating to vegetation in the vicinity of engines. Some critics claim that some of the damage to vegetation along Saigon streets can be attributed to this source. White and Blue residues are less of a problem in this regard since they are not volatile."  Not only was Agent Orange being sprayed from aircraft, but it was unwittingly being sprayed out of the exhausts of trucks, jeeps and gasoline generators. 
 
VETS BEGIN DEVELOPING HEALTH PROBLEMS
As soldiers who had served in Vietnam attempted to settle back into civilian life following their tours, some of them began to develop unusual health problems. There were skin and liver diseases and what seemed to be an abnormal number of cancers to soft tissue organs such as the lungs and stomach. There also seemed to be an unusually high number of birth defects among children born to Vietnam veterans who had been exposed to Agent Orange. Some veterans experienced wild mood swings, while others developed a painful skin rash known as chloracne. Many of these veterans were found to have high levels of dioxin in their blood, but scientists and the U.S. government insisted there was no link between their illnesses and Agent Orange.  In the mid 1970s, there was renewed interest in dioxin and its effects on human health following an industrial accident in Seveso, Italy, in which dioxin was released into the air, causing animal deaths and human sickness. 
 
Paul Sutton
Veteran Advocate
Ssgtusmc6169@yahoo.com

  

Come Celebrate & See What Actually Happened At Love Canal

I hope you can come to this exciting event!

This year marks the 35th anniversary of the Love Canal crisis in Niagara Falls, NY which launched the grassroots environmental health and justice movement and set off the alarm to the public about how environmental chemicals may be impacting health especially children’s health.

For more information see AGENT ORANGE ZONE 


Town hall meeting planned on Agent Orange

"The Legacy of Exposure to Agent Orange on Vietnam Veterans and their Offspring."

That's the subject of a town hall meeting planned this month by Vietnam Veterans of America.

Those who lived through the 60s remember Agent Orange as the dioxin-laden defoliant used by the military to clear away dense vegetation during the war in Vietnam. Even though decades have passed, some Vietnam veterans and their families say Agent Orange continues wreak havoc in their lives. 

For more information see AGENT ORANGE ZONE

 

Vietnam: Environmental Remediation of Dioxin Contamination at Danang Airport

Progress Report: August 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013
USAID and GVN continued successful implementation of the Project, passing an important 1-year anniversary milestone of the Project’s August 2012 launch.


CONSTRUCTION PROGRESS
USAID contractors continued to safely excavate and place soil and sediment from Danang Airport into the containment structure for treatment. 

At the end of August 2013, approximately 90% of the containment structure was filled with soil and sediment.

For more information see AGENT ORANGE ZONE


Understand the war on Agent Orange 

After Al and Sharon Martinelli had their first son who was born with short limbs, they thought they had the assurance they needed before having their second child.


"One of the questions that we asked a team of doctors is, if we have more children, what are the chances (of having another child with a disorder)," Al said. "They looked at me in the eye and said the chances would be a million to one."

 

 

VISIT AGENT ORANGE ZONE

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, October 17, 2013

The Faces of Agent Orange: A Town Hall Meeting to Raise Awareness



NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Faces of Agent Orange: A Town Hall Meeting to Raise Awareness

October is Agent Orange Awareness Month, and the New Jersey State Council of the Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) will hold a town hall meeting on Sunday , Oct.27, 2013 at the Manville, NJ VFW Hall to educate veterans and the public on the many faces of the toxic defoliant and its lasting legacy of illness and health problems.

Millions of American soldiers were exposed to Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, and many have suffered and continue to suffer from cancer, neurological diseases and other maladies because of the dioxin-containing compound.  But Agent Orange also has taken a terrible toll on the children and grandchildren of our veterans.

“Today, more than five decades after the spraying began in the war, birth defects, cancer and other illnesses are still appearing in the descendants of veterans,” said Dennis Beauregard, New Jersey State Council President. “These are innocent victims.  Veterans, their families and the public need to know the Agent Orange facts so that we can get victims the help they deserve.”

The Town Hall meeting in Manville will provide the latest information on Agent Orange’s use in Vietnam, the health problems that have followed and the ways that veterans, their children and their families can cope and get aid.

The Town Hall meeting will be held at VFW Post 2290, 600 Washington Avenue, Manville, NJ, from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m., October 27, 2013.

Contact: Mike Eckstein, Chair, Agent Orange/Dioxin Committee NJSC VVA at:

More information on Agent Orange and its toxic consequences can also be found at the special Agent Orange section of the VVA’s website, http://www.vva.org/Committees/AgentOrange/

The Vietnam Veterans of America has been a leading advocate for the fair treatment for affected veterans and their families.  The VVA is the only national Vietnam veterans’ organization congressionally chartered and exclusively dedicated to Vietnam-era veterans and their families.  VVA is organized as a not-for-profit corporation and is tax exempt under Section 501( C) (19) of the Internal Revenue Service Code.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

ATTENTION VIETNAM VETERANS AND FAMILIES: Faces of Agent Orange - Vietnam Veterans of America Town Hall Meetings Scheduled


Agent Orange Town Hall Meeting 
 
WHEN:  October 26, 2013
TIME:  Meeting begins at 6:30 p.m.
WHERE:  Ramada Inn in State College

CONTACT:  Tim at Susengill@verizon.net 

MORE INFORMATION can be found at the special Agent Orange section on VVA's website about Agent Orange and it's toxic consequences: 
http://www.vva.org/Committees/AgentOrange/



2)  Town Hall - Johnson Creek, Wisconsin, October 26


WHEN:  SATURDAY OCTOBER 26, 2013
TIME:  for your convenience TWO SESSIONS:
Session 1: 9 a.m. - 12 noon
Session 2: 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
WHERE:  Johnson Creek Community Center, 417 Union Stre-et, Johnson Creek, WI 53038
CONTACT:  PAT FURNO - 920-474-4017


October is Agent Orange Awareness Month, and the New Jersey State Council of the Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) will hold a town hall meeting to educate veterans and the public on the many faces of the toxic defoliant and its lasting legacy of illness and health problems. :
WHEN:  Sunday , Oct. 27, 2013
TIME:  2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
WHERE: VFW Post 2290, 600 Washington Avenue; Hall Manville, NJ
CONTACT:  Mike Eckstein:  Phone 201-803-2943
EMAIL:  me1065@verizon.net
MORE INFORMATION can be found at the special Agent Orange section on VVA's website about Agent Orange and it's toxic consequences: 




WHEN:  October 29, 2013
TIME:   6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
WHERE:  Cornerstone Church, 726 W. Old Hickory Blvd.
Madison, Tennessee


The meeting will inform, provide a platform for asking questions and an opportunity for veterans, their children, grandchildren or surviving spouse to speak with veteran service officers about filing claims for VA benefits.Veterans from all conflicts are urged to attend. 
MORE INFORMATION can be found at the special Agent Orange section on VVA's website about Agent Orange and it's toxic consequences: 
 AGENT ORANGE BENEFITS INFORMATION GO TO:   



Source