Tag Archives: Paralympic

VA Adaptive Sports Program

Mission Redefined
Your courage, your determination and your drive all led you to serve America proudly. Those same characteristics will also lead to satisfaction and success in adaptive sports. Disabled Veterans of all ages and abilities report better health, new friendships and a better quality of life when participating in adaptive sports. Disabled Veterans who are physically active simply have more fun! To get started, take some time to review the many sports opportunities available to you by reaching out to your VA clinical team.

Get started by learning how disabled Veterans can benefit from adaptive sports. If you have questions, contact them at vacoadaptiveSP@va.gov.

2015 Schedule of National Events
2014 Annual Report to Congress

The Grant Program
The Grants for Adaptive Sports Programs for disabled Veterans and Members of the Armed Forces (ASG Program) provides grant funding to organizations to increase and expand the quantity and quality of adaptive sport activities disabled Veterans and members of the Armed Forces have to participate in physical activity within their home communities, as well as more advanced Paralympic and adaptive sport programs at the regional and national levels. Learn more»

Training Allowance
Interested in becoming a Paralympic athlete?
The VA National Veterans Sports Programs & Special Events Office provides a monthly assistance allowance for disabled Veterans as authorized by 38 U.S.C. 322(d) and Section 703 of the Veterans’ Benefits Improvement Act of 2008 for qualifying athletes training in Paralympic sports.

Through the program, VA will pay a monthly allowance to a Veteran with either a service-connected or non-service-connected disability if the Veteran meets the minimum military standards or higher (e.g., Emerging, Talent Pool, National Team) in his or her respective sport at a recognized competition. Besides making the military standard, an athlete must also be nationally or internationally classified by his or her respective sport federation as eligible for Paralympic competition within six or 12 months of a qualifying performance.

Athletes must also have established training and competition plans and are responsible for turning in monthly and quarterly reports in order to continue receiving the monthly assistance allowance. The allowance rate for an athlete approved for monetary assistance is the same as the 38 U.S.C. Chapter 31 Vocational Rehabilitation & Employment (VR&E) rate, which in FY 2013 ranged from $585.11 up to $1,104.64 per month, depending on the number of dependents.

Download the VA Training Allowance Standards

Download the VA Training Allowance Briefing

To learn more about the specific sport standards or the monthly assistance allowance, email them at vacoadaptiveSP@va.gov.

VA program fuels elite athletic careers for veterans and injured service members

VA program fuels elite athletic careers for veterans and injured service members

va program fuels elite athletic careers for veterans and injured service members

va program fuels elite athletic careers for veterans and injured service members

uis Puertas will fly to France soon as part of the U.S. team that will compete in the International Paralympic Committee Athletics World Championships in Lyon.

It’s a journey that likely never would have happened if Puertas hadn’t been watching the London 2012 Paralympic Games on his computer at home in Orlando, Fla., last summer.

On that day, Puertas saw Great Britain’s Richard Whitehead sprint to a world record and a gold medal in the 200 meters (T42 class).

Puertas, a former specialist with the U.S. Army’s 4th Infantry Division, already was living an active life — running 10Ks, marathons and swimming — after having lost both his legs above the knees in an explosion that tore apart his Humvee in Iraq in 2006. With the use of prostheses, Puertas was running again less than a year after his surgeries.

But when Puertas saw Whitehead rocket to a victory on new “running knees,” he knew he’d just seen his future. Whitehead, who also ran as a double above-the-knee amputee because of a congenital condition, “motivated me,” Puertas says.

“I want to be that guy,” Puertas said. “I want the crowd roaring for me.”

He wanted to be able to move the way Whitehead could move. So, Puertas picked up his phone.

“I was so excited, I immediately got on the phone with the Department of Defense and I told the people I wanted those knees so I could run, see how it works,” he recalled.

Almost nine months since beginning a new phase of serious training for 100- and 200-meter races, Puertas — who also is considering taking up the paratriathlon next year — is one of 10 military veterans (and two active-duty service members) on the 76-member U.S. track and field team that will compete in Lyon on July 19-28. He’ll be running the 200 meters in France.

The competition in Lyon comes almost a year after the London Games, in which 20 members of the U.S. Paralympic Team were either active-duty service members or military veterans.

More and more, veterans are becoming a key component of the U.S. Paralympic movement, and a partnership between the United States Olympic Committee and the Veterans Affairs’ Paralympic Program is helping these men and women excel.

The VA’s Paralympic Program helps in two ways. First, it provides $7.5 million to the USOC each year to aid in grassroots programs to help injured veterans and active-duty service members participate in adaptive sports and recreation. Second, it provides monthly stipends to qualified athletes to help defray costs for training, equipment, coaching, travel and competition.

Depending on their number of dependents and other factors, those athletes receive monthly checks that range from $566 to $1,070.

Puertas just recently hit the qualifying standards that allowed him to apply for those monthly benefits. He should start receiving them shortly and is looking forward to it.

“That allowance is great,” he said, after returning from England, where he participated in the IPC Grand Prix Finals June 29. “Because the amount of food you have to eat, and going to training every day, gas … the program is really set up (well). It’s out there so you don’t have any excuses of not going out there and doing it.”

Chris Nowak, the VA’s national director for veterans sports programs and special events, said the program is now in its fourth year. Numbers of participants among the elite athletes who have hit the standards to qualify for the monthly stipends continue to rise. Currently, says Nowak, more than 100 athletes have qualified.

“The USOC has established military standards (times, distances, performances) for veterans and members of the armed forces to meet, and once they meet those standards, and prove that they’re continually training, then they’re eligible for the allowance,” he said.

Jose Nieves, 54, a U.S. Army veteran, also will be on the U.S. team competing in France this month. He’s been a part of the VA’s elite-athlete support program since 2011 and said the monthly checks have helped greatly in his training.

He is ranked No. 2 in the world by the IPC in javelin (F55 class) and No. 4 in the discus.

“I’ve been able to get much better training, better techniques, more and better competition,” said Nieves, who lives in Puerto Rico.

For Nowak, who’s now in the 20th year with the VA, being a part of the program to help veterans and injured active-duty service members is incredibly gratifying.

In his capacity as national director of these sports programs, he’s had a chance to speak with the Paralympic athletes in London last year as well as athletes at the USOC’s Colorado Springs headquarters. It’s equally important to see veterans just regaining an active life as it is to see them win a medal in London.

“It’s just amazing,” he said. “And very rewarding.”

But the effort to help give veterans these opportunities is a team effort.

“I can’t emphasize enough how important the partnership is with the U.S. Olympic Committee,” Nowak said. “We couldn’t do this without their expertise and their leadership. We’re very fortunate to be working with an organization that cares so much about our nation’s veterans.”

In Puertas’ experience, the kindness and help he’s experienced since coming back from Iraq and embarking on what is now a very athletic life stretches much further.

“We get so much help,” said Puertas, who won the 100-, 200- and 1,500-meter races at this year’s Warrior Games presented by Deloitte in Colorado Springs, Colo. “Besides the VA, there are so many generous people out there. High schools, corporations want to help you. There’s just a lot of ways for us to go about our (athletic) careers.”

Team USA named for 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships

martin ray

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — U.S. Paralympics, a division of the United States Olympic Committee, today announced 76 athletes have been selected to compete for the United States at the 2013 International Paralympic Committee Athletics World Championships, July 19-28, in Lyon, France. The event is the first major international track and field competition since Team USA won 28 medals in the sport at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

“Over the weekend at the national championships, there were some incredible performances that we hope will translate to medals in Lyon,” said Cathy Sellers, high performance director for U.S. Paralympics track and field. “While we have come to expect great things from athletes like Tatyana McFadden, who won her six events, or David Prince, who set two world records, there were a lot of newcomers who caught our attention. It is an exciting time for U.S. Paralympics track and field. With the leadership of our veterans combined with the eagerness of our rookies, I know there will be no shortage of highlights at the world championships.”

The world team is highlighted by 23 men and 11 women who competed in London, including gold medalist Jeremy Campbell (Perryton, Texas), four-time gold medalist Raymond Martin (Jersey City, N.J), three-time gold medalist Tatyana McFadden (Clarksville, Md.) and gold medalist Shirley Reilly (Tucson, Ariz.). Of the 18 Team USA athletes who combined for 28 medals at the Paralympic Games, 15 are on the world team.

Paralympic bronze medalist David Prince (Sarasota, Fla.), who set world records in the men’s 200 and 400-meters (T44) at the 2013 U.S. Paralympics Track and Field National Championships, and Cassie Mitchell (Atlanta, Ga.), who set a world record in the women’s F52 shot put, are among the top contenders for medals in Lyon.

Prince highlights a strong roster of ambulatory sprinters that also includes Paralympic silver medalist in the men’s 100m (T44) Richard Browne (Jackson, Miss.), who recently tied the 100m world record in an unsanctioned competition. Paralympic silver medalist in the 400m (T44) and bronze medalist in the 200m (T44) Blake Leeper (Kingsport, Tenn.), reigning world champion in the men’s 100m (T44) Jerome Singleton (Irmo, S.C.), reigning Parapan American Games champion in the men’s 100m (T44) Jarryd Wallace (Athens, Ga.) and Paralympic silver medalist in the men’s 200m (T42) Shaquille Vance (Houston, Miss.) are also on the world team.

Ten veterans and two active duty service members have been named to the team. U.S. Paralympics, through a partnership with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense, is providing thousands of opportunities for veterans and service members with physical disabilities to compete in Paralympic sport at the recreational, intermediate and elite levels.

The 2013 U.S. Paralympics Track and Field National Championships, June 14-16, in San Antonio, helped determine the selections for Team USA in conjunction with the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships Athlete/Guide Selection Procedures, which were approved by the USOC in March 2013.

U.S. men’s roster for the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships

  • Stephen Binning (Phoenix, Ariz.)
  • Karsten Brogan (Bossier City, La.)
  • *David Brown (St. Louis, Mo.)
  • Sergeant Rob Brown (Chula Vista, Calif.), U.S. Army
  • *#Richard Browne (Jackson, Miss.)
  • *#Jeremy Campbell (Perryton, Texas)
  • Tommy Chasanoff (Bradenton, Fla.)
  • Sam Craven (Walnut Creek, Calif.)
  • Troy Davis (Queen Creek, Ariz.)
  • *Tobi Fawehinmi (Arlington, Texas)
  • *Rudy Garcia-Tolson (Bloomington, Calif.)
  • Robbie Gaupp (Gatesville, Texas), U.S. Army veteran
  • *#Josh George (Herndon, Va.)
  • *Tanner Gers (Tucson, Ariz.)
  • *#Elexis Gillette (Raleigh, N.C.)
  • Tyson Gunter (Pocatello, Idaho)
  • Steven Hancock (Pueblo, Colo.), U.S. Navy veteran
  • Erik Hightower (Glendale, Ariz.)
  • Bob Hunt (Champaign, Ill.)
  • Gianfranco Iannotta (Garfield, N.J.)
  • *Josiah Jamison (Vance, S.C.)
  • Khalid Jlidat (Boynton Beach, Fla.)
  • Hurie Johnson (Detroit, Mich.)
  • Josh Kennison (South Paris, Maine)
  • *#Blake Leeper (Kingsport, Tenn.)
  • *#Raymond Martin (Jersey City, N.J.)
  • *Michael Murray (Nashville, Tenn.)
  • Jose Nieves (Gurabo, Puerto Rico), U.S. Army veteran
  • *Dennis Ogbe (Prospect, Ky.)
  • Paul Peterson (Charlotte, N.C.)
  • *Markeith Price (Baltimore, Md.)
  • *#David Prince (Sarasota, Fla.)
  • *Austin Pruitt (Green Acres, Wash.)
  • Luis Puertas (Orlando, Fla.), U.S. Army veteran
  • Isaiah Rigo (Cheney, Wash.)
  • Daniel Rizzieri (Cohocton, N.Y.)
  • Max Rohn (Longmont, Colo.), U.S. Navy veteran
  • *#Scot Severn (Caro, Mich.), U.S. Army veteran
  • *Brian Siemann (Savoy, Ill.)
  • *Jerome Singleton (Irmo, S.C.)
  • *#Jeff Skiba (Sammamish, Wash.)
  • Scott Stokes (Roswell, Ga.)
  • Jorge Fernando Tarazon (Glendale, Ariz.)
  • Chief Petty Officer Casey Tibbs (San Antonio, Texas), U.S. Navy
  • Steven Toyoji (Campbell, Calif.)
  • *#Shaquille Vance (Houston, Miss.)
  • Trevor Wallace (Lawrence, Kan.)
  • *Jarryd Wallace (Athens, Ga.)
  • Ahkeel Whitehead (San Diego, Calif.)
  • *Scott Winkler (Pittsburgh, Pa.), U.S. Army veteran
  • Regas Woods (Ocala, Fla.)

U.S. women’s roster for the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships

  • Megan Absten (Seattle, Wash.)
  • Scout Bassett (Aliso Viejo, Calif.)
  • Kate Callahan (San Antonio, Texas), U.S. Air Force veteran
  • *#Zena Cole (Oregon, Ohio)
  • Sabra Hawkes (Rockport, Mass.)
  • Lacey Henderson (Denver, Colo.)
  • *#April Holmes (Kissimmee, Fla.)
  • Kelsey LeFevour (Chicago, Ill.)
  • Cheri Becerra-Madsen (Union, Neb.)
  • *Ce-Ce Mazyck (Columbia, S.C.), U.S. Army veteran
  • Chelsea McClammer (Benton City, Wash.)
  • Amy McDonaugh (Irmo, S.C.)
  • *Hannah McFadden (Clarksville, Md.)
  • *#Tatyana McFadden (Clarksville, Md.)
  • *Amanda McGrory (Kennett Square, Pa.)
  • *Kristen Messer (Austin, Texas)
  • *Cassie Mitchell (Atlanta, Ga.)
  • *#Kerri Morgan (St. Louis, Mo.)
  • Ivonne Mosquera-Schmidt (Philadelphia, Pa.)
  • *#Shirley Reilly (Tucson, Ariz.)
  • *Susannah Scaroni (Tekoa, Wash.)
  • Amy Simmons (Mesquite, Texas)
  • LaKeria Taylor (Shreveport, La.)
  • Stephanie Timmer (Naperville, Ill.), U.S. Marines Corps veteran
  • Katie Walker (Wilmington, Ohio)

*Denotes 2012 U.S. Paralympian
#Denotes 2012 Paralympic Games medalist