From GMA:
“Army proposes changes to who
qualifies for burial at Arlington National Cemetery”
The Army is proposing changes to
who is eligible for burial at Arlington National Cemetery amid a nationwide
effort to increase access to burial options for America's veterans as existing
cemeteries, including Arlington, run out of space. According to the proposed
changes published by the Army last week, service members who die on active
duty, but not in combat, would no longer be eligible for burial at Arlington.
There are fewer than 95,000 remaining burial spaces there for nearly all of the
22 million living service members and veterans currently eligible, the Army
said. The proposed changes come as a new Government Accountability Office (GAO)
report found additional actions are needed to increase veterans' burial access
across the country. Currently, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
estimates that 92% of veterans have reasonable access to burial options,
defined as a national or state veterans' cemetery located within 75 miles of
the veterans' home, the GAO said. While the National Cemetery Administration
has plans to establish 18 new national cemeteries in urban and rural areas to
increase that access, the GAO described the office's progress as
"limited" and "years behind its original schedule for opening
new cemeteries." The primary challenge delaying the completion of cemeteries
has been acquiring suitable land, the GAO found. Arlington National Cemetery,
the final resting place of more than 400,000 service members and their family
members, is expected to break ground on a 37-acre expansion next year. But that
change will not be enough to address the shortage in burial sites there.
Congress directed the Army to revise its eligibility criteria to ensure the
cemetery could remain an active burial ground. At the current pace of burials,
Arlington could be closed to new interments by the mid-2050s, including Medal
of Honor recipients, the Army said. The new guidelines proposed by the Army set
aside 1,000 grave sites for current and future Medal of Honor recipients.
Below-ground interment would be reserved for service members killed in action,
recipients of the Silver Star and higher awards who served in combat, Purple
Heart recipients, combat-related deaths and former prisoners of war. Presidents
and vice presidents, as well as "veterans with combat service who also
served out of uniform as a government official and made significant contributions
to the nation's security at the highest levels of public service," would
also qualify. "Arlington National Cemetery is a national shrine for all
Americans, but especially those who have served our great nation," said
Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy. "We must ensure it can honor those we have
lost for many years to come." The proposed changes will now begin the
federal government's public rule-making process, which includes soliciting
feedback from the public. The full list of proposed changes is available
online. The proposed changes would not affect previously scheduled services,
veterans' burial benefits or veteran eligibility at VA national and state
cemeteries, the Army said.
^ Arlington National Cemetery
needs to change its burial policies if it wants to stay open. While it is a
really nice cemetery (I’ve been there many times) people tend to want to be
buried there because it is considered the unofficial “National” cemetery (meaning
the best cemetery of the US.) I have been to National cemeteries around the
country and they are really well preserved and give the same respect that
soldiers, veterans and their spouses buried there deserve. ^
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