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Stefanik introduces legislation to restore survivor benefits to remarried spouses of fallen service members

Monday, July 5, 2021 - 6:35 pm Congresswoman Elise Stefanik (NY-21), along with Congressman Andy Kim (NJ-3), have introduced the bipartisan Gold Star Spouses Non-Monetary Benefits Act – a bill that would restore non-monetary survivor benefits to the remarried spouses of fallen U.S. service members. This legislation applies to surviving spouses who are eligible for the Gold Star Lapel Button without regard for whether they have remarried. Following the loss of their service members, Gold Star spouses often face difficulties ranging from the change to single incomes to access to healthcare benefits. The Department of Defense and Department of Veteran Affairs provide various benefits to assist with those hardships. However, many of those benefits are forfeited once a surviving spouse remarries before age 57, or in some cases, age 55.

Response to questions from The Canberra Times journalist Doug Dingwall – Australia Institute poll on Development Project

Response to questions from The Canberra Times journalist Doug Dingwall – Australia Institute poll on Development Project 1. Do the Australia Institute poll results align with the results of surveys conducted by the war memorial measuring public support for the redevelopment project? No, the results do not align. Different surveys conducted by different organisations at different times with varying sample sizes, in different formats and different lines of questioning are not comparable. The Australian War Memorial routinely seeks visitor feedback and has conducted dedicated surveys on the Development Project. The Memorial has surveyed people across the nation and the results have been one of the many indicators of public support and confidence that the Development Project has great value to the Australian population and is supported in the Australian community.

This is our life and death : Texas takes small steps in expanding medical marijuana program

This is our life and death : Texas takes small steps in expanding medical marijuana program
expressnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from expressnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Ranked: The Richest Veterans in America

Ranked: The Richest Veterans in America
visualcapitalist.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from visualcapitalist.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Maine Compass: Celebrate veterans this Fourth of July by lowering drug prices

Maine Compass: Celebrate veterans this Fourth of July by lowering drug prices Pharmaceutical price-gouging hurts all Americans, including those who have served our country, writes a veteran from Oakland. By Alicia Barnes Share Imagine this: You go to the pharmacy to pick up some things you need, like Prilosec for heartburn, a bottle of vitamin D, some iron and B12 pills, Breathe Right nose strips, and, from the pharmacy, sertraline for anxiety. Put together, over the year, your trips to the drug store are costing you between $504 and $720 per year. That might not seem like a lot. But imagine if, like an estimated 119,000 Mainers, you have diabetes.  In 2019, just a vial of insulin in the U.S. cost $332, and in 2017, a 26-year-old Minnesota man died because he couldn’t afford to pay the $1,300 his monthly supply of insulin would have cost.

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