Pubdate: Mon, 05 May 2003 Source: North County Times (CA) Copyright: 2003 North County Times Contact: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: J. Stryker Meyer, Commentary DRUG WAR TAKES LIVES TOO Staff, family members and students at Oceanside's Ivey Ranch Elementary School recently had an emotional ceremony on campus honoring four Marine Corps reservist aviators who died Jan. 22 when their helicopters collided during a counterdrug mission in Texas. Lt. Col. Robert Theilmann, 47; Maj. John Walsh, 36; Maj. Steven Palombo, 36; and Capt David Cross, 34, were members of the Camp Pendleton-based Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 775, the Coyotes. It was a reminder of how deadly America's efforts can be against the flow of illegal drugs into our country. Several years ago, the Marine reservist aviators adopted Ivey Ranch ---- the school's mascot is a coyote. The aviators used to fly helicopters to the Oceanside campus for the school's annual spring carnival and answer questions from the inquisitive youngsters. A bond grew between the school's population and the aviators. So when the news of the deaths hit the campus, tears were shed, and more flowed during the memorial service where the school's student council and the Parent-Teacher Organization dedicated a stone bench in a garden to the fallen aviators. Military deaths in the drug campaign aren't new. The military joined the federal effort against illegal drugs 16 years ago. The early efforts yielded few positive results. In 1989, on the first night that an Army reserve helicopter joined the anti-drug campaign in Imperial County, the chopper hit power lines and crashed, killing everyone aboard. Every year, schools across America hold red ribbon week in memory of Enrique Camarena, the Drug Enforcement Administration agent tortured and killed in Mexico by Mexican law enforcement personnel and drug traffickers in February 1985. Every high school campus in North County has students who use illegal drugs and alcohol. The peer pressure to use drugs on campuses, on the streets, and sadly, in many homes, is relentless. The Ivey Ranch Elementary School memorial service was a poignant reminder of the dark side of illegal drugs and the horrific price we pay for them. * * * As American warriors return from Iraq, it's time the Bush administration addressed several issues concerning veterans and military widow survivors. I've fielded more than a dozen phone calls recently from retired veterans who are unhappy with the Bush administration's callousness to veterans. They note how the president praises our troops in combat while his administration reduces benefits to veterans The Military Officers Association of America has complained bitterly that many military widows get short shrift when they reach 62. MOAA officials said most military widows "receive one-third fewer dollars than they expected from a government-sponsored survivor benefit program that their spouses paid for." The MOAA reported the one officer signed up for the military's Survivor Benefit Program many years ago with the understanding that if he died his wife would get 55 percent of his retirement pay for the rest of her life. Not so. MOAA officials said she will get only 35 percent of his retirement pay. The federal government provides a better program for federal civilian survivors, who receive 50 to 55 percent of retired pay for life with no age-62 reduction - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk