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More than 1,000 Veterans apply for PACT Act-related benefits via VA-county partnership

Veteran getting screened for toxic exposures
Army Veteran David Krall, of Colorado Springs, completes a toxic-exposure screening with Germaine Franciosi, a VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System nurse, during a three-day claims clinic Aug. 9 at the Colorado Army National Guard Readiness Center in Colorado Springs.
By Dustin Senger, Deputy Public Affairs Officer

During a fishing trip three years ago, Army Veteran David Krall, of Colorado Springs, noticed his balance slipping. As a forward observer in Vietnam from 1970 to 1971, the long-term impact of chemical exposures was not often considered.

“I noticed my quality of life going down,” said Krall, 75, diagnosed this year with Parkinson’s disease, which VA can presume was caused by his exposure to Agent Orange when determining his eligibility for disability compensation and health care.

Krall was one of more than 1,000 Veterans attending the El Paso County PACT Act claims clinics Aug. 7-9 in Colorado Springs. The three-day event culminated months of coordination between VA and El Paso County, prompted by The Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act, or PACT Act.

“We are a prime example of how partnerships between local and federal agencies can maximize resources and better serve the needs of the Veteran community," said Marshall Bosworth, El Paso County Veteran service officer (VSO), who also coordinated monthly PACT Act briefs with VA support from March to July.

The Pikes Peak area is known for military service. It is home to Fort Carson, Peterson Space Force Base, Schriever Space Force Base, Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station and U.S. Air Force Academy. Of the more than 730,000 people who live in El Paso County, roughly 15% are Veterans, nearly twice the state rate, according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates.

PACT Act further expanded VA health care eligibility and benefits for Veterans with toxic exposures during the Vietnam, Gulf War and post-9/11 eras. Veterans and survivors who applied before Aug. 10 may get their benefits backdated to Aug. 10, 2022—the day the bill was signed. VA later pushed that deadline out five more days.

“This law helps us provide generations of Veterans—and their survivors—with the care and benefits they've earned and deserve,” said Michael Kilmer, VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System (ECHCS) director. “VA will not rest until every Veteran gets the toxic exposure-related care and benefits they deserve.”

After filing a claim, Krall sat with a nurse trained in identifying and documenting potential exposures to toxins during military service, enabling Veterans to benefit from exposure-informed care.

“We didn’t get this sort of help after Vietnam—to get help, we had to fight for it,” said Krall.

“I knew it was going to be busy here,” he said, "but they simplified the process. We have such a big Veteran population here, a lot of Gulf War issues, so this is very helpful.”

From noon to 8 p.m. each day, Veterans and their survivors drove along the Interstate 25 corridor, equipped with discharge papers and medical records. They exited on Briargate Parkway, then pulled into the Colorado Army National Guard Readiness Center.

They checked in below a 20-by-38-foot U.S. flag, which draped one of the armory’s cinder block walls. Roughly 100 chairs were unfolded in a central seating area, flanked by tables with accredited county VSOs. Supported by VA benefits specialists, they filed hundreds of claims.

Outside the bay door, VA-contracted, mobile exam units would help close more than 300 of the claims, setting two records for the most completed in a single day. The highest demand involved sinusitis, rhinitis and other respiratory conditions, then hypertension.

In another room, VA nurses would complete nearly 400 toxic exposure screenings. As part of implementing PACT Act, VA ECHCS made it a standard clinical practice in November 2022. Of the more than 52,000 Veterans screened in the Denver metro, Pikes Peak and rural areas, at least one exposure concern was endorsed in roughly 24,000, or nearly half.

VA personnel were also checking in Veterans for health care enrollments and scheduling, while social workers discussed caregiver support and extended-care services. Researchers explained how participating in studies may improve health outcomes for Veterans.

“It was beneficial to me,” said Karen Bolden, a retired Army staff sergeant who served in Saudi Arabia in 1991. She recalled the moments when sirens prompted sprints to bunkers, as Patriot air defense missiles intercepted Scuds less than a mile away.

“These clinics were important to our community,” said Bolden. “I tried to start the claim process on my own but was so confused. Here we’re around people with similar experiences, which makes you more comfortable with starting the process.”

“This took away the confusion and I got everything done today,” she said.

In the event’s final hours, county and federal executives huddled with their multi-agency workforce, which assisted twice as many Veterans than originally anticipated.

“When we come together as a community, where our Veterans live, we get results,” said Kilmer. “This really showed what can happen when we bring our community together.”

To apply today for benefits or learn more about PACT Act claims and care, call 1-800-MYVA411 or visit VA.gov/PACT. Veterans enrolled in VA ECHCS may request an initial screening by sending a message in MyHealtheVet or leaving a voicemail at 720-857-2511.

For more information on how to apply for VA health care, including the documents needed to determine eligibility, visit VA.gov/health-care/how-to-apply.