Healthcare and Marijuana Covered at South Charleston Town Hall

Sen. Joe Manchin attended a town hall in South Charleston Thursday night, taking questions from West Virginians about anything from environmental regulations to Pres. Donald Trump’s policies on immigration. 

More than 300 people attended the town hall at the Labelle Theater in South Charleston where Manchin took audience questions for an hour and a half.

Several of those questions focused on healthcare and the Republican House plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Bob Hardesty said the Republican plan will put healthcare services for disabled people at risk.

“We know that you are against this at this point, but you’ve got to fight with every ounce of your begin against it,” Hardesty told Manchin.

Not every exchange throughout the evening was as supportive of Manchin. He was criticized for his support for the coal industry and accused of not caring about West Virginia’s coal communities who are dealing with the environmental fallout left in the industry’s decline.

The state’s opioid addiction problem was also the center of many questions and statements posed to the Senator, including one form a woman who only identified herself as Bethany.

“We have a huge problem here. My friends are dying. My son is seeing neighbors in an otherwise safe neighborhood tripping over themselves walking up my safe street. If you don’t know, if you’re undereducated then you are so far removed from reality about the opioid addiction problem in our state.”

Bethany, and several others in attendance, asked Manchin to push for medical marijuana. Manchin said while he’s not opposed to it, he believes it’s a state issue.

Manchin will make two more stops in West Virginia for town halls this weekend, one today in Huntington and one Saturday in Morgantown. 

Martinsburg VA Holds Town Hall to Hear Veterans Healthcare Concerns

A group of impassioned veterans showed up to a town hall meeting at the Martinsburg VA Medical Center last week to voice a litany of complaints. But for the most part, they did NOT echo the national outrage about wait times for doctors’ appointments. Instead, the veterans raised issues ranging from homelessness to hospital food.

Timothy Cooke is the new Medical Director at the Martinsburg VA Medical Center. The event last Tuesday was the first ever town hall meeting organized at this facility.

The Martinsburg VA serves about 44,000 veterans; about 50 showed up to the meeting held just outside the Center under a large, white tent.  The 20 who spoke brought up a wide range of issues. There were several comments about homelessness, particularly from veterans who live on-site at the Domiciliary, widely referred to as the DOM. It provides transitional housing for 66 homeless veterans, but they can only stay for so long. Several speakers, like Bill Plater, are worried about what happens when their time is up.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting

“And before you know it,” Plater said, “you’re back to sick little situations, you know, you’re right where you started, from…you sit down and wasted all this time, and I did all this work, and I followed directions, and I’m going right back in the street or a shelter.”

About 180 additional veterans live in the DOM while they’re undergoing inpatient treatment.  Several residents complained about problems with mail service.  Phillip Stonestreet said he’s been waiting seven weeks for one letter.

“I’ve had a letter of mail to me from southern Maryland, 135 miles away,” Stonestreet said, “I’ve not got it yet, but it’s gone through to Martinsburg and came here, and where it’s at? God only knows.”

Other concerns included the status of caregivers, complaints about paperwork, and a complaint about the food. Only one veteran, George Dubose, brought up the problem that’s getting all the national attention — appointment availability.

“So far I’ve got approximately seven cancellations in my medical care, and sat and wait, and it goes a long time,” Dubose said, “The PA asked me today, he says, how come I don’t see you but once every two months? Well, I don’t know that, they keep getting canceled and canceled and canceled.”

New patients at the Martinsburg VA Medical Center have to wait more than 32 days, on average, to get an appointment with a primary care doctor.  That’s lower than the national average, but the second highest in the state. Center Director, Timothy Cooke said that issue is his main focus.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting

“We actively go out and have enrollment fairs and outreach events trying to bring in new veterans,” Cooke noted, “But it really is meaningless if we don’t have the access for them to come. The promise is you fought for our country, you deserve this care, now we need to provide it to you.”

Over the course of the meeting, the feeling amongst the veterans seemed to shift from frustration to a sense of relief at the chance to voice their concerns to the medical staff.

“Did you feel like you were heard tonight,” asked West Virginia Public Radio reporter, Liz McCormick.

“Yes I did,” answered Frank Cayer, “He was very sincere and very open. I was surprised.” Cayer was in Vietnam for part of his 15 years of service, between 1970 and 1985.

Army veteran Ahkenaton Bonaparte, served for ten years during Desert Storm and Desert Shield and says he travels from Baltimore to Martinsburg, because he gets better treatment here.

“I travel over, I think it’s like 70 miles on the road here to come and get treatment here, because I like the treatment here.  They address my needs, they diagnose me properly, they’re very professional. You know, you do have some people with personality issues, some staff members. But for the most part, that’s rare.”

As the event wrapped up, veterans were eager form more public meetings in the future. Center Director Timothy Cooke says that’s a definite possibility.

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