Out of the Horrors of War. Audra Jennings
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Название: Out of the Horrors of War

Автор: Audra Jennings

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Юриспруденция, право

Серия: Politics and Culture in Modern America

isbn: 9780812293197

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СКАЧАТЬ present and pressing emergency” from the Bureau of the Budget until Roosevelt had decided on how he wanted to approach the broader program. The president signed off on the temporary funding, but the Bureau of the Budget requested more time to study McNutt’s original proposal.74

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      Figure 1. War workers install control wires on a BT-13A Valiant airplane. The photograph highlighted the man’s short stature as he worked from inside the small space of the aircraft, next to an average height woman. Courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.

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      Figure 2. Polio survivor Robert H. Drake, photographed in 1942 by the U.S. Office of War Information, operated a drill press in a factory that produced airplane motor parts. The photograph visually recorded Drake’s disability by including his crutches in the background. Photograph by Ann Rosener. Courtesy of the Library of Congress Farm Security Administration—Office of War Information Photograph Collection.

      In July, the Bureau of the Budget and the FSA presented Roosevelt with a concrete plan for new rehabilitation legislation. The plan called for an office of rehabilitation to be housed in the FSA that would be charged with rehabilitating disabled civilians for the manpower crisis, providing rehabilitation for civilians injured in civil defense, and addressing the needs of injured veterans. The plan contemplated offering services to veterans as the VA no longer offered the vocational rehabilitation services that had been available to World War I veterans, and the civilian rehabilitation program offered the only publicly funded vocational rehabilitation services in the nation at the time. The administration’s proposal added “medical services and physical repair, prosthetic appliances and mechanical aids,” to the civilian rehabilitation program’s pre-war services of job training, education, and counseling. The Bureau of the Budget and the FSA proposed to maintain the existing federal-state funding system but aimed to address the reality that states had “unequally developed” programs by giving the FSA the authority to supplement matched funding with federal dollars to strengthen rehabilitation programs in states with underdeveloped rehabilitation agencies.75 The Bureau of the Budget cautioned Roosevelt against delay, as “the question of seeking additional emergency funds will continue unabated.” McNutt and budget officials feared that the process of seeking funds would lead to “piecemeal modification of the present legislation” and could “render more difficult the adoption of a sound permanent program.” Moreover, they pointed out that Congress had taken up the issue and that several “inadequate bills” had been proposed.76

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      Figure 3. Photographed by the U.S. Office of War Information in 1942, Belva Fletcher, on the left, and Henriette Furley painted airplane engine parts at the Maryland League for Crippled Children. The original caption noted Fletcher’s progressive paralysis and Furley’s need to stand at work because of arthritis. Photograph by Ann Rosener. Courtesy of the Library of Congress Farm Security Administration—Office of War Information Photograph Collection.

      Indeed, labor shortages, the increased visibility of disability, pressure from disabled veterans for greater employment opportunities, and the need to provide rehabilitation for injured soldiers from the present conflict had pushed Congress into action. Members of both the House and Senate introduced numerous bills, ranging from initiatives to expand Social Security to increased appropriations for the rehabilitation program in 1941 and 1942.77

      In 1941, Representative Graham Barden (D-NC) had introduced rehabilitation legislation promoted by the National Rehabilitation Association. Founded in 1923, the National Rehabilitation Association, a professional society that represented the interests of workers within civilian rehabilitation, had struggled to keep the program on sure financial footing. While the civilian rehabilitation program had remained small, the organization had grown and positioned itself to play an increasingly important role on the federal legislative front in the 1940s. In 1941, the organization hired an executive director and set up a national office, allowing the National Rehabilitation Association to advocate for growth of the rehabilitation program. Barden’s bill would have increased federal funding for rehabilitation, established a federal office for the program in the FSA, provided rehabilitation for disabled soldiers, expanded the range of services the program could provide, and eased the financial burden on states by reducing states’ matching responsibilities to one dollar for every two spent by the federal government and making the federal government responsible for costs incurred in rehabilitating soldiers and federal employees. While nothing came of his first rehabilitation bill, Barden would continue working on the rehabilitation question, and his initial thoughts on rehabilitation had been shaped by professionals in the field.78

      Barden’s next rehabilitation bill was the product of the conferences, research, and planning led by the FSA following the president’s request that the agency develop a plan to expand rehabilitation. In August 1942, Barden and Senator Robert La Follette, Jr. (PRG-WI) introduced identical rehabilitation bills in the House and Senate. La Follette, a member of the Senate Committee on Education and Labor, had sponsored with Barden legislation to increase rehabilitation appropriations earlier in the year.79

      In proposing that the FSA be in charge of veterans and civilians vocational rehabilitation, Barden’s second rehabilitation bill, in line with McNutt’s plans for expanding rehabilitation, ruffled feathers in the VA and did not gain the Bureau of the Budget’s approval. In early October 1942, General Frank T. Hines, head of the VA, weighed in on the Barden and La Follette bills, arguing that the VA handled all services for veterans, ranging from hospital care to pensions and other benefits, except employment placement. He told the Senate subcommittee, chaired by La Follette, that the La Follette bill did not have the official backing of the administration and that veterans’ organizations wanted veterans’ rehabilitation to be handled by the VA. Hines agreed with the veterans’ organizations, noting that the VA already assessed veterans’ disabilities and had the necessary information about disabled veterans to develop a training plan. He concluded, “We also know his history pretty well and we should be in a position to at least guide him to the right place for training.” Hines, however, danced a fine line in the hearing, as it was clear that the broader Roosevelt administration favored a plan that would prevent duplication and waste. Despite Hines’s call for VA authority in veterans’ matters, he argued that the federal government “should not, under any circumstances, duplicate training facilities that now exist.” Instead, he maintained that the VA should have the authority to determine whether existing rehabilitation programs were appropriate for individual veterans, “rather than to have some other agency decide that,” the other agency, of course, being the FSA. Essentially, Hines argued that the VA should certify a veteran’s disability and eligibility for services, develop a plan for rehabilitation, but utilize existing rehabilitation and vocational programs to carry out the actual training.80

      Disabled veterans were more direct. Millard W. Rice, national service director of the DAV, expressed concerns that having disabled veterans rehabilitated by the FSA would set a dangerous precedent of veterans receiving medical care and vocational assistance outside of the VA, arguing that “it might well be the first step in a gradual and logical absorption of the VA into the Federal Security Agency.” Rice maintained that war-disabled individuals should “be kept in a class separate and apart and that they should be treated separate and apart through the Federal agency, which has been designated by Congress to attend to veterans’ matters.” He referenced “the chaos and confusion that existed following the First World War,” prior to the establishment of the VA when five different federal agencies administered some element of veterans’ benefits. Indeed, he argued that the very conditions that La Follette’s bill would re-create had spurred the founding of the DAV. Rice maintained, “The war-disabled veterans should be required to go to only one Federal agency to find out what they are entitled to, as to all benefits, from the Government, СКАЧАТЬ