State Summary: California
California
and the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
General Information
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) offers a wide variety of programs and services for the nation’s 23.5 million veterans. In 2007, about 5.5 million people were treated in VA health care facilities, 3.6 million veterans and survivors received VA disability compensation or pensions, more than 500,000 used GI Bill education benefits and more than 2.2 million owned homes purchased with GI Bill home loan benefits. Some 90,000 veterans took advantage of VA’s vocational rehabilitation and employment service in 2007. More than 100,000 veterans and family members were buried in VA’s national cemeteries and more than 360,000 headstones and markers were provided for veterans’ graves worldwide.
General Information – California
- Number of veterans: 2,132,000
- VA expenditures in California: $6.3 billion
- Compensation and pensions: $2.7 billion
- Readjustment benefits: $303 million
- Medical and construction programs: $3 billion
- Insurance and indemnities: $165 million
- Number of veterans and survivors receiving disability compensation or pension payments in California: 296,815
- Number of California veterans using GI Bill education benefits: 47,073
- Number of veterans owning homes backed by VA loan guarantees: 148,580
- Value of California home loans guaranteed by VA: $5.2 billion
- Number of VA life insurance policies held by California residents: 140,449
- Value of VA life insurance policies held by California residents: $1.65 billion
- Number of California participants in VA’s vocational rehabilitation: 6,163
- Number of veterans buried in California’s VA national cemeteries: 14,787
- Number of headstones and markers provided for graves of California veterans and survivors: 25,530
Health Care
One of the most visible of all VA benefits is health care. VA has 153 hospitals, 732 community-based outpatient clinics, 232 Vet Centers, 135 nursing homes, 47 residential rehabilitation treatment programs and 121 comprehensive home care programs. To improve patients’ ability to access care, VA has changed from a hospital-based system to a primarily outpatient-focused system over the past decade. Veterans will make more than 60 million outpatient visits to VA health care facilities this year.
Health Care - California
- Inpatient admissions, statewide, fiscal year 2007: 45,358
- Central California (Fresno): 2,716
- Northern California (Sacramento): 3,272
- Palo Alto (including Livermore and Menlo Park): 7,257
- San Francisco: 5,012
- Loma Linda: 7,530
- Long Beach: 5,486
- San Diego: 6,367
- Greater Los Angeles: 7,718
- Outpatient visits, statewide, fiscal year 2007: 4,533,117
- Outpatient clinic locations
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Anaheim
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Lancaster
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San Jose
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Atwater
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Long Beach
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San Luis Obispo
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Auburn
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Los Angeles(2)
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Santa Ana
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Bakersfield
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Lynwood
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Santa Barbara
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Capitola
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Martinez
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Santa Fe Springs
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Chico
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Modesto
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Santa Maria
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Chula Vista
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North Hills
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Santa Rosa
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City of Commerce
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Oakland(2)
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Seaside
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Corona
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Oxnard
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Sonora
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El Centro
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PalmDesert
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Sun City
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Escondido
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Redding
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Tulare
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Eureka
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Sacramento(3)
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Ukiah
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Fairfield
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San Bruno
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Upland
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French Camp
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San Diego
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Vallejo
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Gardena
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San Francisco
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Victorville
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Laguna Hills
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San Gabriel
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Vista
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Post-Conflict Care
VA has launched special efforts to provide a "seamless transition" for those returning from service in Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF). Each VA medical facility and benefits regional office has a point of contact to coordinate activities locally to help meet the needs of these returning combat service members and veterans. In addition, VA increased the staffing of benefits counselors at key military hospitals where severely wounded service members from Iraq and Afghanistan are frequently sent. Once home, recent Iraq and Afghan veterans have ready access to VA health care, which is free of charge for five years following separation for any health problem possibly related to wartime service. Some 300,000 veterans from the Global War on Terror have sought VA health care since returning stateside, about one-third of the total number of men and women leaving military service.
Post-Conflict Care - California
- Number of veterans from the Global War on Terror seeking treatment in 2007: 20,929
- Central California: 1,248
- Northern California: 2,972
- Palo Alto: 2,094
- San Francisco: 999
- Loma Linda: 2,602
- Long Beach: 2,423
- San Diego: 5,668
- Greater Los Angeles: 2,923
- Veterans Readjustment Counseling Centers (Vet Centers) Locations:
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Capitola
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Oakland
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Chico
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Redwood City
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Commerce
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Rohnert Park
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Concord
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Sacramento
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Corona
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San Bernardino
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Culver City
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San Diego
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Eureka
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San Francisco
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Fresno
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San Jose
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Garden Grove
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San Marcos
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Gardena
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Sepulveda
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Modesto
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Ventura
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Disabilities and Pensions
Not all military service-related issues end when people are discharged from active duty. About 2.7 million veterans receive monthly VA disability compensation for medical conditions related to their service in uniform. VA pensions go to about 323,000 wartime veterans with limited means. Family members of about 524,000 veterans qualify for monthly VA payments as the survivors of disabled veterans or pension recipients.
Disabilities and Pensions - California
- Number of veterans receiving monthly disability compensation: 235,588
- Number of VA pensions to veterans in California: 23,335
- Number of death compensation or pension payments made to survivors: 37,892
- Number of disability compensation claims processed: 48,787
Memorial Affairs
Most men and women who have been in the military are eligible for burial in a national cemetery, as are their dependent children and usually their spouses. VA manages the country’s network of national cemeteries with more than 2.9 million gravesites at 125 national cemeteries in 39 states and Puerto Rico, as well as in 33 soldier’s lots and monument sites. In 2007, more than 100,000 veterans and dependents were buried in VA's national cemeteries. Additionally, VA provided more than 359,000 headstones and markers and 423,000 Presidential Memorial Certificates to the loved ones of deceased veterans. VA-assisted state veterans cemeteries provided more than 23,000 interments.
Memorial Affairs – California
- National cemetery burials in California, 2007: 14,787
- Fort Rosecrans: 2,552
- Golden Gate: 518
- Los Angeles: 155
- Riverside: 8,257
- Sacramento Valley: 1,721
- San Francisco: 65
- San Joaquin Valley: 1,519
- State cemetery burials (cemeteries receiving VA grants):
- Northern California Veterans: 457
- Headstones and markers provided in 2007 (statewide): 25,530
- Presidential Memorial Certificates issued in 2007 (statewide): 12,949
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List of State Summaries
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