President Joe Biden signed a bill on March 14 authorizing the renaming of the San Diego VA Medical Center after U.S. Army Capt. Jennifer Moreno.
A native of San Diego, Capt. Moreno was killed on Oct. 5, 2013 while trying to save fellow soldiers during a night raid on a bomb-making compound in Afghanistan. When U.S. forces entered the compound, Afghani insurgents detonated a series of improvised explosive devices, killing four Army Rangers and wounding 30.
Capt. Moreno immediately moved to perform life-saving measures for her fellow soldiers but was killed by a separate explosive device in the process.
In 2020, a panel composed of San Diego veterans, VSOs, and other stakeholders was created to determine a new name for San Diego VA Medical Center, and Capt. Moreno was ultimately chosen for the honor.
In doing so, the San Diego VA Medical Center will become the first VA center to be named after a women veteran of color.
The bill authorizing the new designation was introduced by U.S. Rep. Mike Levin, D-Calif., and also includes provisions for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to name a secondary facility at the San Diego VA campus after U.S. Navy Capt. Kathleen M. Bruyere.
Capt. Bruyere was instrumental in a 1978 decision to overturn the Women’s Armed Services Integration Act of 1948, opening up thousands of combat jobs to women serving in the U.S. Navy, including the ability to command combat ships.
After her military career, Capt. Bruyere moved to San Diego County where she continued to serve fellow veterans in the area until her passing in 2020 at the age of 76.
https://calegion.org/san-diego-va-medical-center-to-be-renamed-after-army-captain-killed-in-afghanistan/
I am a U.S. Navy Disable War-Veteran of Gulf and Somalia War & Panama Canal Drug trafficking expedition from 1992-1996.
It is very degrading and unfortunate that G.I. Bill is declared expired for all Veterans those who served prior to 2000; those who like to use G.I. Bill for education to be competitive in today’s job force, the G.I. Bill which they are rightly eligible. However, those Veterans who were in war AFTER 2000 were considered eligible with Extension of G.I. Bill use. It clearly discriminates against those who served prior to 2000. I would like to appeal to the Congress and Senate to reactivate the validity of the G.I. Bill and allow all Veterans to access the unused G.I. Bill for education. Though I know, nobody reads these comments here on the website but if there is someone out there who is listening to my voice, maybe just maybe with a hope this message will someday reach to the Office of Congress and Senate someday to help Veterans to survive in this everchanging competitive job market.
God Bless all Veterans and those serving.