Siloam Springs Herald Leader

Veteran hopes to re-establish local DAV chapter

Evans has secured mobile van from the state to help with claims, recruitime­nt.

- By Mike Capshaw Staff writer ■ mcapshaw@nwadg.com

Walking with a cane his grandchild­ren named “Pablo,” Ronald Evans has been visiting with veterans he meets at stores in Siloam Springs and the surroundin­g area.

One of the questions he always asked is if they have a service connected disability. Many, Evans said, with varying degrees of disability may not realize they’re eligible for disability compensati­on from the government.

That’s why he’s hoping to corral 25 disabled veterans to restart the Siloam Springs chapter of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV) organizati­on. He wants to help more veterans with gaining assistance than he currently can through one-on-one meetings at Walmart or Lowe’s.

“It’s supposed to be 50 members, but the state and national offices have waived that to 25, so we can hopefully get this going again,” Evans said. “It can be zero percent (disability) all the way up to 100 percent. It doesn’t matter because those zero percents sometimes grow, but I need 25 brand new members to join and I’m getting close.”

Evans has worked with the state office in Little Rock to bring a mobile van to Siloam Springs that will be set up in the Walmart parking lot from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Officers there help veterans with new or establishe­d claims while also helping recruit others to join the DAV.

Siloam Springs had a DAV chapter “seven or eight years ago,” Evans said, but was dissolved for a variety of reasons that he said came down to a “power struggle.” He’s a member of the DAV in Springdale, so he’s been having to drive to monthly meetings along with other disabled veterans from the Siloam Springs area. Because of differing disabiliti­es, driving long distances is not always ideal.

Evans said the DAV in Siloam Springs would serve as another advocate for disabled veterans and work in concert with the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, two groups of which he’s also a member.

“We have a lot of disabled veterans in the area that need help,” Evans said. “They deserve certain rights from the (Veterans Administra­tion), from the government, and sometimes they need more than one person and more than one organizati­on to fight for them.

“When you lose a charter,

you’re losing strength. There’s always strength in numbers and that’s what helps people establish their claims, or if they’re having problems with any part of their existing claims.”

If he’s successful, Evans

said the next step will be informing those other organizati­ons in Siloam Springs they now have a charter as well as establishi­ng days for meetings and who will serve as officers.

“I’m not doing this because I want to be president or anything like that,” Evans said. “This is just something that is near and dear to my heart because I

want to help other veterans like myself.”

Evans needs the cane because he has back and knee issues he developed while serving in the U.S. Navy from 1968-92.

Those who are not able to stop by the mobile van on Tuesday can contact Evans at 479-427-6235 for more informatio­n or to get signed up.

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