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By Bill Forry
Managing Editor
Just 23, James Crosby has already served his
country - and his fellow veterans - with great
distinction.
The Winthrop native joined the Marines in 2002
at age 17. Less than two years later, he was
deployed to Iraq where - after just a month in
country - he was seriously injured in a rocket
attack that hit his base west of Baghdad in March
2004.
After nearly a year in hospitals - including six
months at the Veteran's Administration facility in
West Roxbury - Crosby tried to get his life back to
"normal" after he was medically discharged. He was
paralyzed from the waist down.
Even as he recovered from his own wounds,
though, Crosby was still fighting for his brothers
- and sisters - in arms. Furious at a mandatory pay
cut that he was hit with after being medivaced out
of the war zone, Crosby lobbied his congressman, Ed
Markey, to fix the discrepancy for him and all
wounded service men and women.
"While in Iraq, we would get $1000 every two
weeks," Crosby said. After he was evacuated, the
pay scale was adjusted down to the "regular"
salary.
"It goes back down to regular pay at a time that
everyone needs the money the most," Crosby said.
A bill introduced by Markey stalled in the
House, but in 2005, he succeeded in getting a fund
for special rehabilitation pay totaling $430 a
month into a Defense Authorization bill. The monies
make up the difference in the pay cut until
traumatic injury insurance payments kick in.
According to Markey's office, Crosby's battle had
helped more than 10,000 injured troops as of 2005.
That number, no doubt, has grown substantially in
the last three years.
Crosby, who now lives in Dorchester's Columbia
Point, has taken on a new mission. At the request
of the state's Veterans Affairs Secretary Tom
Kelly, Crosby is now leading a team of specialists
that is being deployed across the state to reach
out to vets in need of services. The Statewide
Advocacy for Veterans' Empowerment (SAVE) program
focuses on suicide prevention, but is ready to help
any veteran who needs to connect with the myriad
programs that are now available.
Crosby's seven member advocacy team includes
four veterans and the wife of a Marine Corps
veteran who works with family members.
"What we're trying to do here is throw that net
out there and get to know the services and the
right people to get those benefits to the families
that need it," says Crosby. "They should be getting
the services they deserve and they shouldn't have
to navigate the system alone at a time in their
life when they need it the most."
The SAVE team now has a specialized van that can
visit vets anywhere in the state and bring services
directly to their door.
"The focus is on suicide prevention and we're
all trained in that," says Crosby. "Our way of
getting out there and preventing it is by getting
them in contact with all their services and
benefits. We can help resolve income issues, get
them hooked up with the V.A. If all that extra help
is in line, with that in place, we believe we're
not going to see as many become suicidal."
The team, which was launched in early February,
has already met with some success. Crosby recalls
the case of a fellow Marine with severe Post
Traumatic Street Disorder (PTSD), whose medications
had run out and who was struggling to stay
employed.
"We hooked him up with health care through the
V.A., got him some emergency cash and chapter 115
benefits. We set him up with a career center, and
paid for his first and last month's rent. All
that got taken care of in one day."
Despite his injury, Crosby says, he was - in
some ways - lucky. His father, who died last year,
was also a Marine and was his son's greatest
advocate.
"My father would get any question answered that
he wanted," Crosby says. "Not everyone has that. We
want to make sure the people who don't have that
network get the help they need.
"And when someone is severely depressed, even
with family support, we've seen that sometimes that
isn't enough."
The SAVE team is building a database of
Massachusetts veterans who have returned from Iraq
and Afghanistan in the last seven years, a number
that exceeds 30,000 men and women. Crosby says that
deploying fellow vets to meet and help them
navigate life after the military will make a big
difference.
"We share a common thing, combat vets. Nobody
can help someone who fought in this war the way
someone who has been there."
For information about the SAVE program, call
1.888.844.2838 or visit mass.gov/veterans.
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