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North Dakota Veteran's Home - Scuttlebutt - News


Groundbreaking Set for New Vets Home

By DAVE KOLPACK Associated Press Writer The Associated Press - Sunday, May 25, 2008

The hallways of the North Dakota Veterans Home are too narrow for more than one motorized medical scooter to pass at one time, and some residents are picked up at a loading dock for medical appointments.
"That's an issue of human dignity," said Brad Maasjo, of Fargo, one of the home's board members. "That's not right."
Maasjo said he feels more patriotic this Memorial Day, with groundbreaking ceremonies for a new $26.5 million facility a couple of weeks away.
"The spirit of teamwork was everywhere in getting this project done," he said. "It really wasn't a political issue, it was a patriotic one."
The Legislature approved the new Veterans Home in the last session, after the federal Veterans Administration agreed to chip in about $12 million. It will replace a facility that was built in 1893 and revived several times.
"If you walked into that building today, you would say the building doesn't meet today's standards," Maasjo said. "It's an old building. It's kind of tired."
The current campus includes the main four-story building, which was completed in 1950; a four-story addition built in 1980; and a two-story addition built in 1990. Maasjo and Mark Johnson, the Veterans Home administrator, said it looks more like an institution than a home. "It seems more like a barracks or a dormitory," Maasjo said.
The new facility will be entirely one story, with three separate wings surrounding a central support center. It will have two 49-bed basic care units and one 52-bed skilled care unit.
"We're making this very independent, very private," Johnson said. "This is their own room, this is their own shower. It offers independence and it offers just a great quality of life for them."
The project caps a turnaround in fortunes for the Veterans Home, which five years ago drew questions from legislators about failure to follow rules. That included violations of state bidding laws, a lack of performance reviews of division managers and improper money handling.
That was followed by the creation of a seven-member board to supervise the home.
The new facility was proposed in the fall of 2006, after problems with ventilation and air conditioning. The idea came at a time when the state's revenues were increasing and officials were focused on medical care for veterans returning from the Persian Gulf.
"It was almost as if the planets were aligned," Maasjo said.
Ross Cole, the mayor of Lisbon, said residents were worried at one time about losing the Veterans Home, which currently employs about 110 people.
"This is just a wonderful thing for Lisbon," Cole said. "It's also a wonderful for our veterans, who deserve the best kind of care they can get."
The Veterans Home is on 92 acres of rolling land in south Lisbon, just east of the Sheyenne River, surrounded by meadows and old trees.
"It is simply the heart of the Sheyenne River Valley," Johnson said. "It just keeps getting prettier all the time."
The new home will be built on higher ground that will meet requirements of the 500-year flood plain and offer views of the countryside. The 150-bed facility is scheduled for completion in June 2010.
"The quality of care has never been in question," Maasjo said. "Now we're going to have one of the most modern veterans care facilities in the entire nation."


Updated 5/26/08




Architects Drawings of the new Veterans Home

Here's a link to a bunch of the latest architects drawings of the new Veterans Home. They are in .pdf format and are quite large so they may take some time to download.

Veterans Home Drawings

Updated 6/5/08




"THE WALL" - Now Online

March 27th, 2008 - From AP

Vietnam Memorial Wall Now Online
By DAN SCHERAGA, AP Business Writer

An interactive version debuts online this week, a project of historical document archive site Footnote.com in conjunction with the National Archives and Records Administration. The virtual version of the famous memorial - which is a pair of 246-foot black granite walls inscribed with the names of more than 58,000 American military casualties - is searchable. Every name etched onto the real-world wall is viewable online and linked to the veteran's service record. Online visitors can add photos and describe their memories of the servicemen and women who died in the war. Footnote.com Chief Executive Russ Wilding hopes the site will develop into an online community for veterans, family and friends to pay tribute and share their thoughts. "The memorial is a historical document that obviously is very emotional," he says. "We want the site to help people come together to remember the veterans who were lost." More than 2,000 photos were taken of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall to create the online version, Wilding said. He said the resulting image is the equivalent of 460 feet wide and the largest of its kind on the Web. Wednesday was the 26th anniversary of the groundbreaking for construction of the wall, which was completed in November 1982 and officially became a National Monument two years later.

Link to The Walll Online