12.26.04
Disabled Veterans Regain Independence
Learning to live with a disability is difficult
enough. Factor in a wheelchair and living accommodations that aren't so
accommodating, and the result is frustration and a loss of some independence.
Founded by Roger Chapin, the Coalition to Salute America's Heroes is working to
lessen the frustrations of severely injured veterans and return their
independence.
The goal of the "Homes for Wheelchair-Bound Heroes" program is to help veterans
have a home fully adapted to their needs but in a way that also provides
access, ease and comfort for family members, said CSA's executive vice
president, Douglas Plank.
"Whether it's an adjustment of the height of countertops or width of doorways,
it's done in a way that is not only practical for our wounded hero," Plank
said, "but also takes into consideration comfort and ease … for the rest of the
family."
Thanks to this program, the cost of independence can be pretty affordable.
Chapin said the average home built under the program will cost $300,000. The
families are required incur a $50,000 mortgage that can be financed over 30
years. Chapin said he wanted the families to have "some skin in the game."
The Department of Veterans Affairs will provide up to another $50,000 toward
the costs of adapting the homes, and the coalition and other sponsors will
cover remaining costs.
The coalition is seeking organizations and individuals to guarantee the balance
of each home until it is paid off. So far at least five homes have sponsors.
That has made for some very shocked and very happy families.
Chapin announced during his organization's First Annual Road to Recovery
Tribute and Conference in Orlando, Fla., earlier this month that five families
would receive sponsored homes.
The homes are solutions to problems each of the families is familiar with.
Army Reserve Staff Sgt. Tracy Jones and his wife, Johnnie, are living in a two-
bedroom apartment in the Atlanta suburbs, Johnnie said. Already they have
learned which home features work and which don't. For instance, wheelchairs and
carpet don't get along.
"'(The new house is) going to have (hard) floors in it that the wheelchair can
roll on,'" Johnnie said, quoting her husband. Jones, was hit by a water tank in
Balad, Iraq, and is now a quadriplegic.
Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Mark Mix, his wife, Jasue, and their three children
really didn't have any place to call home when he's medically discharged in
February. They are currently living in base housing. Now, they plan to move
back to their hometown of Newark, Ohio, where their house will be built to suit
them.
Mix said he was ecstatic at the announcement. "There are no words to describe
it," he said. "(The house) is actually going to give us a new start."
Mix, a Seabee, was injured twice in the spine -- once in the Philippines and
the second time in Baghdad. The second injury made him a paraplegic.
Marine Sgt. Jason Wittling's wife, Maureen, was the only one out of the group
who had prior knowledge of the home before the announcement. She already had
chosen the building site –- without telling her husband.
"I have no idea where the new lot is," Wittling said. He said the announcement
caught him completely off-guard. He suffered a spinal cord injury in Karbala,
Iraq, when his Humvee rolled over.
Wittling, Maureen, and their two children are currently living with his sister.
Her three-year-old home is great, he said, but it was not built for the
wheelchair he now requires.
By the time her husband's name was announced, Johnnie Jones was already
"uncomposed" by having seen the other couples' reactions, she said. "It's a
total blessing as far as I'm concerned," Johnnie said.
The last two recipients aren't wheelchair users but are still in need of
adapted housing. Both of the veterans lost both of their eyes while serving in
the war on terror.
The decision to include those blinded in combat in the program was made by the
coalition at the conference when the need was realized.
"When there's an obvious need, we would like to rise up and meet that, not only
as the Coalition to Salute America's Heroes but also by engaging other
individuals and organizations," Plank said.
The houses for Army Pvt. 1st Class Kenny Adams and Army Staff Sgt. Jason Pepper
will include "smart" technology. This technology allows certain appliances to
be controlled by speaking a command. It can also help the men by telling them
whether the doors are locked and the lights are off.
Adams was with the 3rd Squadron, 17th Calvary Regiment, out of Fort Drum, N.Y.,
when he was wounded in Kandahar, Afghanistan. He was helping a fellow soldier
clean and reassemble his weapon when the weapon discharged. The round entered
Adams' face below his left eye and exited above his right.
In addition to the loss of his eyes, he lost his senses of smell and taste,
some of which have returned, and he has short-term memory problems. Adams and
his wife, Katherine, currently reside in the Houston area and plan on staying
there.
Now in an apartment, Adams said he is excited about the house that will make
him independent. He feels even better knowing that "it won't tear us apart
financially," he said.
Pepper was on patrol in Karbala, Iraq, with Company B, 16th Engineer Battalion,
when an improvised explosive device detonated in a tree. He lost the majority
of the bones in his left hand, as well as his eyes, in the blast.
He, his wife, Heather, and their daughter currently call Heidelberg, Germany,
home but will build their new home in Wisconsin to be near family. Pepper, like
Adams, has to relearn a lot of things he once took for granted. The smart
technology will help immensely, he said.
"For me, (the house) will make me more independent," he said.
Plank said the coalition will be "pretty intricately involved" in work to
identify local architects, contractors and realtors. It will also make sure
that the construction or remodel meets the needs of the veterans and their
families.