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Senator Murray Commemorates Veterans Day at Evergreen Washelli Cemetery’s Veterans Day Ceremony

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Seattle, WA – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Chair of the Military Construction-Veterans Affairs Appropriations Subcommittee and a senior member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, delivered remarks at the Evergreen Washelli Cemetery’s Veterans Day Ceremony in Seattle. The daughter of a World War II veteran and the first woman to both chair and serve on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Murray has long focused on ensuring Congress lives up to its obligations to our veterans.

"My dad wasn’t one to call attention to his service—he didn’t do it for attention after all. Like so many others, he did it for his country. He did it to keep our nation safe. That’s something I think about often, because it’s something I see all the time in so many of the incredible veterans I meet,” Murray said at the ceremony today. “And it’s why Veterans Day is so personal, so precious, to me—because I know folks like my Dad so often don’t ask for the recognition they deserve, or the help they need—and they shouldn’t have to! That’s why we, as a nation, have to make sure that we never take our veterans for granted, and that we never let our debts to them go unpaid.”

“We owe our veterans more than our thanks. We owe them more than a Day. We owe them more than a celebration. We owe them action,” Murray dijo. “We have to make sure we live up to the promises we made to our veterans, and to the American ideals they fought for. So, to all of the veterans here today, and their families—thank you for your service, thank you for your sacrifice. And know, I am working every day in the United States Senate to get you and your family the support you need. I am working every day to build the future you deserve. I am working every day to strengthen our democracy and the nation you fought to protect.  I know that you would never stop fighting for our country, and I am going to make sure your country never stops fighting for you.”

As a voice for Washington state’s veterans in the Senate, Senator Murray has consistently fought to make sure our country fulfills its promise to our veterans and their families. While Chair of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Murray supervisó the initial implementation of the Caregiver Support Program, and successfully pushed to expand the program in the years since. Murray wrote the Ley de voto para contratar héroes, which was signed into law by President Obama and brought about major changes to lower unemployment among veterans and help transitioning servicemembers and veterans find good jobs. A longtime champion of federal investments in veterans’ housing, Murray successfully helped to restart the HUD-VASH program in 2008 and has consistently fought to fund the program since; including helping to secure $50 millones in additional HUD-VASH vouchers in last year’s government funding bill.

Senator Murray helped pass the Ley PACTO into law last year, which expanded health care benefits for millions of veterans exposed to toxics in the line of duty. She takes her oversight role seriously, and is fighting to ensure VA is living up to its promise to provide high-quality care for veterans, including holding VA accountable for fixing the botched rollout of its Electronic Health Record (EHR) Modernization program. Murray is pushing to pass her EHR Program RESET Act, which would restructure, enhance, and improve the new EHR program while increasing oversight—and she leads many other bills that would improve quality of life and care for veterans, including the bipartisan Expanding Veterans’ Options for Long Term Care Act y Acto de ayudar a los héroes, legislation to help veterans start their families by expanding access to fertility services, and the BUILD for Veterans Act, which would modernize and streamline the delivery of VA medical facilities and other infrastructure projects.

Senator Murray has also led Congress in establishing child care centers at VA facilities and military bases, and since 2019, she has asegurado hundreds of millions of dollars for new military child care center construction that has increased vital access to child care across all services. Senator Murray originally authored the VA child care pilot program in 2008 as part of her Ley de mejora de la atención médica de mujeres veteranas in order to assist parents in need of child care during medical appointments at VA facilities. and she has consistently fought to fund the program and establish permanent reauthorization.

Earlier this month, the Senate overwhelmingly passed the Fiscal Year 2024 funding bill for military construction, the VA, and related agencies that El senador Murray escribió as Chair of the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations Subcommittee. The legislation provides more than $582 million for specific Washington state veterans and military construction projects across Washington state and, among other national priorities, would increase funding for women veterans’ health care, veterans’ homelessness prevention, and veterans’ mental health—specifically to expand suicide prevention efforts—as well as boost funding to fully implement the VA Caregivers program and expand the national child care pilot program at VA that Senator Murray launched.

Senator Murray’s full remarks as prepared:

“Thank you Chair MacCully for that introduction.

“And, as this is the first Veterans Day at Evergreen-Washelli in many years without Major Fackler—who is dearly missed today—I also especially appreciate Major McPherson for giving the invocation.

“It’s an honor to join you all for this Veterans Day celebration.

“As the daughter of a veteran, I know how important it is that we recognize the courage, service, and sacrifice of our veterans, and how much more we owe them than just mere recognition.

“Now, my father was, of course, the first veteran I ever knew. He served in the Second World War, he was among the first soldiers in Okinawa. He came home with a disability, and a Purple Heart.

“And yet—it wasn’t until after he passed and we were going through his journals, that we learned about his experiences in the war.

“My dad wasn’t one to call attention to his service—he didn’t do it for attention after all.

“Like so many others, he did it for his country. He did it to keep our nation safe.

“That’s something I think about often—because it’s something I see all the time in so many of the incredible veterans I meet.

“And it’s why Veterans Day is so personal, so precious, to me—because I know folks like my Dad so often don’t ask for the recognition they deserve, or the help they need—and they shouldn’t have to!

“That’s why we, as a nation, have to make sure that we never take our veterans for granted, and that we never let our debts to them go unpaid.

“So today is an opportunity to lift up our veterans’ service and their courage, and also to recommit ourselves to the promise we make every man and woman who puts on the uniform—that after their service ends, we’ll take care of them when they come home.

“That means providing the health care and services they need and deserve for putting their lives on the line for our country.

“It means supporting their transition back to civilian life, and ensuring them a place in the communities they fought to protect —a roof over their heads, an opportunity to pursue a higher education, and access to good-paying jobs.

“It means being there for veterans’ families—so supporting fertility treatment and adoption services, providing quality, affordable child care options, helping them build real financial security for their golden years, and meeting the needs of veteran caregivers—family members who dedicate their lives to looking after our heroes.

“These are issues I hear about all the time when I talk to veterans across Washington state, and that I fight for every day when I am back in Washington, D.C.

“And I’m pleased to say that I have not just worked to made veterans’ voices heard in Congress—I’ve been able to make some real progress for veterans too: establishing, and expanding the VA caregivers program, passing my VOW to Hire Heroes Act, restarting and funding the Supportive Housing Program, fighting to keep open VA health care centers that were at risk of closure, establishing the VA child care program, so that lack of child care isn’t a barrier to veterans who need health care…

“And of course, last year we passed the PACT Act—the largest expansion of veterans’ health care in 30 years.

“That’s not to say our work is done—far from it.

“I am still pushing right now for us to make progress on improving veterans’ mental health care, supporting women veterans—the largest growing demographic, cutting red tape that undermines veterans’ care, and so much more.

“Because, we owe our veterans more than our thanks. We owe them more than a Day. We owe them more than a celebration.

“We owe them action.

“We have to make sure we live up to the promise we made our veterans, and to the American ideals they fought for.

“So to all of the veterans here today, and their families—thank you for your service, thank you for your sacrifice.

“And know, I am working every day in the United States Senate to get you and your family the support you need. I am working every day to build the future you deserve. I am working every day to strengthen our democracy and the nation you fought to protect.

“I know that you would never stop fighting for our country, and I am going to make sure your country never stops fighting for you.”

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