JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. - JBLM & I Corps will host a press
conference at 2 p.m. today, May 18, with Gen. Peter Chiarelli, Vice
Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, Lt. Gen. Eric Schoomaker, Surgeon
General, Lt. Gen. Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., commanding general, I Corps,
Maj. Gen. Philip Volpe, commanding general, Western Regional Medical
Command and Brig. Gen. Jeff Mathis, National Guard officer who served as
Acting CG of I Corps and Ft. Lewis while I Corps was deployed. Please
see below for details.
During the demobilization of the 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team
(IBCT) from the Oregon National Guard after a one-year deployment to
Iraq, some Soldiers voiced concerns about the quality of their medical
processing. The Soldiers specifically expressed concerns to as to
whether Reserve Component Soldiers were being processed differently than
their fellow Active Duty Soldiers. Oregon's Senator Ron Wyden and
Congressman Kurt Schrader helped bring the Soldiers' concerns to the
attention of Army officials.
As a result of these concerns, JBLM's senior mission commander and I
Corps commanding general, Lt. Gen. Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., launched a
commander's inquiry to investigate the complaints, and later met with
Senator Wyden to address concerns and discuss the issues.
"This past year, I Corps was deployed to Iraq and fought side by side
with the 41st IBCT," said Jacoby. "We have a shared combat experience
and consider the 41st one of our own. It's simply not reflective of our
culture to treat one unit differently from another-Active or Reserve.
Anything we find during our inquiry, we will fix. We will keep faith
with our fellow Soldiers."
In the last two years, almost nine thousand Guardsmen and Reservists in
109 units have been mobilized or demobilized at JBLM.
"We take great pride in how we have supported the units who have come
through JBLM," said Col. Jerry Penner, commander, Madigan Healthcare
System. "When Soldiers from the 41st IBCT voiced concerns about the
medical processing they received, we took it very seriously. The history
of this base and the history of this war have been built on the
contributions and teamwork of all the components of the military. All
Soldiers deserve to be treated the same, and we won't stand for anything
less," he said.
Leaders at JBLM and the Western Regional Medical Command and the office
of the Surgeon General are working closely with the Oregon State
Deployment Medical Officer and the leadership of the 41st IBCT to
address each of the issues that Soldiers have identified. The results
of these efforts will be used to further improve medical processing for
all Soldiers who deploy or redeploy through JBLM and other sites across
the Army.