Search: Site   Web
Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size
Photos by Nick Adams/Appeal-Democrat
Richard Lawson, left, and Carmine Petrella chat during the eighth annual Yuba-Sutter Veterans Stand Down at Beckwourth Riverfront Park in Marysville on Thursday.
What is this?

Save & Share this Article

Stand Down on duty

Comments 0 | Recommend 0

Event serves those who answered country's call

James Anderson sat in the shade and fiddled with a pair of reading glasses outside a Veteran's Administration medical clinic trailer Thursday. He took a hard look at the booths around him at Beckwourth Riverfront Park.

Anderson, 57, says he came to the same Yuba-Sutter Veterans Stand Down event last year to seek treatment for some old ailments.

He's come a long way since then.

"There's days now when I'm depressed," says the lean, soft-spoken man. "But I don't feel like doing drugs anymore."

Anderson spent 25 years living in the riverbottoms around Marysville, and after 46 years as an addict — mostly of methamphetamine — had been newly clean and sober when he finally asked for some of the medical benefits he was entitled to as a Navy veteran.

His resulting hernia surgery fixed more than just problems in his abdomen, he says.

During his stay in the hospital last fall, VA workers took on his case, and filed out his pension paperwork.

When he got out of the hospital, he says, "I was still homeless, but they had saved my life, more or less."

On Sept. 1, Anderson will celebrate 19 months of being drug free. On Sept. 2, he will move into the first real home he has known since the early 1980s.

His military benefits took care of the deposit and first month's rent on an apartment in East Marysville.

It all started at this time last year, he says, with a visit to this mobile medical clinic.

Lance Ayres, chief financial officer of the group sponsoring the stand down, says the riverbottoms between Gridley and Shanghai Bend are currently home to some 1,500 U.S. military veterans like Anderson.

By late Thursday afternoon, about 75 vets, including many of whom are homeless, had found some manner of assistance at the eighth annual Stand Down event.

Margaret Carrico, a U.S. Army veteran and VA physician from McClellan Air Force Base outside Sacramento, says most of her Stand Down patients come in for Hepatitis C and blood pressure screenings. Many seek referral to a drug rehabilitation facility.

"A lot of the guys (vets) that come here are not in the system," she says.

She and other Stand Down facilitators are tasked with linking them up with the appropriate paperwork to begin receiving benefits.

"We convince them that it's important to take care of themselves," Carrico says.

Representative of the area Veterans Services Office, as well as the veteran's representatives from the California Employment Development Department are also available at the Stand Down.

Amongh the many services for veterans and their families are assistance for VA claims, one-one-one job search services and referrals to other programs and agencies.

Schedule

• Stand Down continues today and Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

• 24-hour camp open to assist homeless veterans

Contact Appeal-Democrat re-porter Nancy Pasternack at 749-4712 or at npasternack@appealdemocrat.com

 


See archived 'Top Story' stories »
 


Reader Comments
We welcome comments from registered users of our Web site. (If you're not registered, click here.) We ask that users exercise good judgment and tolerate other people's views. Your comments should be free of libel, profanity, personal attacks and racist or offensive language. Inappropriate content will be removed without notice. Repeat violators of our user agreement will be barred from making future comments.

Weather
Traffic
News Alerts
For complete
Yuba-Sutter
weather details
click here
ADVERTISEMENT 
Featured Events

 
  • Find an Event
Publish Your Stuff
ADVERTISEMENT 
Poll
Games
Puzzles
HOMELESS SHELTER?
Yuba City is considering using the former fire station No. 4 on Walton Avenue as a cold-weather shelter for homeless families. Is this a good idea?
Yes. We've gone too long with limited options for homeless families.
It's a good idea, but the fire station is a bad location for this.
No. The city has better things they can use the building for.
I'm not sure.
Enter The Code To Vote
 
Read Related Article
powered by
google
Search
        Search: Web    Site
  • Help
  • Site Map
  • Contact Us
  • Subscriber Services