Volunteers help veterans file claims for benefits

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There are three stacks of Post-It Notes tacked to a wall near Robert Montague’s desk.

There are three stacks of Post-It Notes tacked to a wall near Robert Montague’s desk.

“3,009,” one reads — that’s the number of veterans assisted over the years here at Veterans Service Office in Hilo, where Montague, 88, volunteers.

“267,” is scrawled on the second — the number of veterans who’ve been successfully awarded 100 percent disability benefits.

“2,389” the third says, which represents the number of claims currently being processed.

The Post-Its are meaningful to Montague and other volunteers: They represent thousands local veterans he and other volunteers at the office have helped over the years, successfully navigate the complex VA claims process.

The office is a joint, volunteer-run effort led by the local Korean War Veteran’s Association and the VFW Post 3875. It’s designed to help isle veterans successfuly file claims to receive disability compensation.

Montague has volunteered at the office for 17 years. He’s an Army veteran who joined the service at age 21 as a recruit. He continued to serve 22 years which included a tour in Korea and three tours in Vietnam.

He retired from service in 1971 as a lieutenant colonel. Now, Montague said he views volunteering as his way of paying it forward.

“The Army was good to me,” Montague said last week, seated at his desk in the office. “And I figured I should be giving something back to help veterans.”

Hawaii Island is home to more than 15,000 veterans. And yet volunteers at the office say many are unaware of the veterans service office. Advertising is all word-of-mouth, largely through local veterans organizations.

The office aims to help any veteran, regardless of whether a person is affiliated with the VFW or Korean War Veterans Association. It’s designed to help those with an array of disabilities — hearing loss, diabetes, heart conditions, PTSD and major depression to name a few.

Filing a claim can be a convoluted process, Montague added, and winning a claim can also be tricky.

“The big problem is, there isn’t probably one in 50 veterans who knows how to write a claim and (navigate) the process and paperwork of it,” Montague said. “So that’s where we come in.”

“You can sit down a veteran who has PTSD ( for example) and write up a claim and send it in, and they’ll deny it and kick it back,” he continued. “We don’t do that. We sit down and figure out what a person’s disabilities are and then we develop the evidence to support that disability. Then, we send it in … We help anybody and everybody.”

Montague moved to East Hawaii in 1969 to serve as a commander at the Kilauea Military Camp. He eventually married and has remained ever since.

He’s a member of both the Korean War Veterans Association and the VFW. But these days, he isn’t able to participate in as many events as he’d like. He was exposed to Agent Orange while serving in Vietnam and is now battling chronic lymphocytic leukemia. As a result, his immune system is weaker and he refrains from large public events on recommendation of his physician.

But he continues volunteering — he says helping people in need makes its well worth it. He’s quick to describe veterans he’s helped over the years — some with serious disabilities — and now receiving full benefits which have “turned their life around.”

Email Kirsten Johnson at kjohnson@hawaiitribune-herald.com.