From Military.com:
“Severely Disabled Veterans Will
Soon Be Eligible for Bigger Adaptive Housing Grants”
Congress on Monday approved
legislation that raises the amount of money awarded to severely injured
veterans to make their homes disability-friendly and increases the number of
times they can apply for the benefit. The Ryan Kules and Paul Benne Specially
Adaptive Housing Improvement Act will increase the cap on grants awarded to
some veterans to purchase or adapt their homes and will let them apply for the
funding up to six times. The bill also quadruples the number of grants
available each year from the Department of Veterans Affairs, from 30 to 120,
and adds legally blind veterans to the list of former service members eligible
to apply. Under the legislation, the total amount an eligible veteran could
access would be $98,492, an increase of nearly $13,000, to go to the purchase
of a house with special features. The amount of assistance for adaptations to
veterans' residences also has been increased, from $12,756 to $19,733. The
bill, which is expected to be signed by President Donald Trump, is named for
retired Army Capt. Ryan Kules, now the director of combat stress recovery at
Wounded Warrior Project, and retired Army Col. Paul Benne. Kules, who lost his
right arm and left leg to a roadside bomb in Taji, Iraq, in 2005, lobbied for
the legislation to expand access to the funding for roughly 2,000 veterans, not
including those who are blind. Benne, who died Dec. 7 at age 54, was forced to
retire from the Army after he was diagnosed with a rare degenerative disease,
multi-symptom atrophy, cerebellar Type-C, that left him unable to walk. "This
bill has what we set out to accomplish and even more, being able to ensure that
blinded veterans were extended the opportunity to be able to benefit from the
program," Kules said. "Knowing it also provides benefits across
generations -- that's something that cannot be said enough." The VA's
Specially Adapted Housing program is for veterans who have lost at least two
limbs to amputation to help cover the cost of housing renovations. After Kules
was medically retired from the service, he and his wife bought a home with the
intention of making it wheelchair friendly, to include widening hallways,
changing doorknobs and countertops, altering bathrooms and renovating the
kitchen. The renovations cost roughly $100,000 -- $36,000 more than was covered
by the VA SAH grants at the time. Kules realized that as his life changed, with
a growing family and then, eventually, with age, he would need different living
accommodations, which may all require alterations. The Ryan Kules Act gives
veterans flexibility, he said. "This gives my family the peace of mind,
knowing that it reinstates in 10 years, and my disabilities may have become
worse or I may be more impacted by them. It's peace of mind knowing we can make
any changes to adapt the house to additional needs," Kules said. Also, he
added, he thinks more veterans will apply for the program who may not have
previously considered it. "Veterans
out there that wouldn't have used the benefit knowing it's a one-time use now
can go ahead and do so," Kules said. "They'll be set up down the
road." The House bill was sponsored by Reps. Gus Bilirakis, R-Florida, and
Mike Levin, D-California. The Senate version was introduced by Sens. Jerry
Moran, R-Kansas, and Kyrsten Sinema, D-Arizona. "When I heard of the
challenges Ryan faced when he wanted to buy a new home to accommodate his
growing family, because he could not use the SAH benefit a second time due to
program limitations, I knew something needed to be done," Bilirakis said
in a release. "Our bipartisan bill breaks down barriers to help veterans
access the specially adaptive housing benefits they've earned -- and its
passage shows what we can accomplish when we put aside politics and focus on
getting results for America's veterans," said Sinema, a member of the
Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee. More information on the VA's Specially
Adapted Housing Grant Program can be found on the department's web site.
^ I really hope this piece of legislation
gets signed into law really soon so that it can start helping the Veterans that
need it. ^
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