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Soldiers sue for reimbursement
Kathleen Burge, Boston Globe
January 12, 2006
Four
Massachusetts National Guard soldiers, called to active duty after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, filed a federal lawsuit yesterday,
arguing they were forced to pay for their own lodging, meals, and
commuting expenses while they were protecting the state from terrorism.
The lawsuit is apparently the first claim of its kind nationally, and
the soldiers hope to expand their suit to include hundreds of others
who have served in the Massachusetts National Guard since Sept. 11,
their lawyers said. If the soldiers in all approximately 300 positions
at issue were fully reimbursed for every day since Sept. 11, 2001, they
would be owed an estimated $73 million, the lawyers said.
The four plaintiffs said they were never given reasons why their
reimbursements -- a maximum of $158 a day for food and lodging, plus
travel expenses -- were denied.
Sergeant Wayne R. Gutierrez of New Bedford, one of the soldiers suing
for reimbursements, said his family struggled under the financial
burden of paying for travel expenses and meals while he was serving at
Camp Edwards in Bourne. His Guard duty cost him about $18,000 over
three years, he said.
''I had to not pay one bill to pay for another," said Gutierrez, who is married and has two children.
Major Winfield Danielson, a spokesman for the Massachusetts National
Guard, said his office was reviewing the lawsuit and could not discuss
it.
But he said the rules for reimbursements for soldiers are complex and
depend on several factors, including what type of duty the soldiers are
on, how long they are serving, and whether the government provides
lodging where soldiers are working.
He said he couldn't discuss how those factors applied to the four soldiers suing because he did not know their status.
But John Shek of Boston, the soldiers' attorney, said he knew of no
other state where similar Guard orders denying the reimbursements for
post-Sept. 11 security were issued.
''People just didn't know how to handle this mass activation of
people," said Constance A. Driscoll, a military law specialist who is
advising the soldiers.
Lawyers for the soldiers say those serving in the National Guard have
historically been reimbursed for reasonable expenses for travel, food,
and lodging. Many soldiers traveled more than 100 miles a day to report
to duty, the lawyers said. The reimbursements, they argue, are required
by federal law.
The soldiers who filed the lawsuit are paid with federal money, but
they work under the command of the state National Guard. Before Sept.
11, 2001, National Guard duty usually required one weekend a month and
two weeks a year of training.
But after the Sept. 11 attacks, soldiers were called to guard a host of
possible targets around the state, including military bases, airports,
reservoirs, and nuclear power plants. Some Guard soldiers are still in
those security postings.
National Guard soldiers who are sent overseas, including those sent to
Iraq, are under federal command and paid by the federal government.
Those who are called up to respond to natural disasters such as a
blizzard are usually under state command and paid by the state.
First Lieutenant Veronica Saffo, a spokeswoman for the Vermont National
Guard, said orders calling up National Guard soldiers typically lay out
whether lodging and meals are provided by the government, as they are
for soldiers who serve one weekend a month, she said.
''If there's not lodging available, you need to find accommodation somewhere and you should be reimbursed for that," said Saffo.
Soldiers are usually reimbursed for one round-trip to their base
location for each weekend, or two-week training period, she said. But
soldiers are not necessarily reimbursed for daily commutes to their
base, she said.
Retired Captain Louis P. Tortorella of Brookline, N.H., another of the
Massachusetts Guard soldiers who filed the lawsuit, said he spent about
$14,600 of his own money on expenses necessary to carry out his
21-month assignment to Camp Edwards between 2001 and 2003.
He said the trip from his home to Cape Cod was 250 miles roundtrip and
took 3 1/2 hours, a drive he made daily because he was refused
reimbursement for lodging.
During part of his service, he was assigned to security at the Quabbin
Reservoir, Boston's main drinking water source, overseeing about 45
soldiers.
There was no place to sleep at the reservoir, and so he and other soldiers drove home after their shifts.
The lawsuit does not detail how much the other two plaintiffs --
Sergeant Steven M. Littlefield of Plymouth and Joseph P. Murphy of
Derry, N.H. -- say they are owed.
Gutierrez said he worries that he will suffer reprisals from the
National Guard for his role as a plaintiff in the lawsuit. Some
soldiers have told the lawyers they were threatened with discipline by
senior officers when they challenged the denials.
''I got two years left," Gutierrez said at a press conference at Shek's
office. ''I'm just afraid they that might do something that might get
me kicked out."
Shek said that although the reimbursements are federally funded, he
does not know where the money sought in the lawsuit would come from. So
the lawsuit names 10 defendants, including the Massachusetts National
Guard, Governor Mitt Romney, and US Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld.
Charles Miller, a spokesman for the civil division of the US Department
of Justice, another of the defendants named in the lawsuit, said he
could not discuss it.
He has not seen any similar lawsuits from other states, he said.
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