This is from US House Rep. Maxine Waters' office:
VA Honors Waters for Commitment to Women’s Veterans
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (VA) has honored Congresswoman Maxine Waters (CA-43) for her years of work on behalf of America’s women veterans. 
In a ceremony that took place in Washington, D.C., Waters was honored by VA Secretary Bob McDonald for her work in creating the Center for Women Veterans,
 a special bureau within the VA that advocates for women veterans by 
ensuring health care benefits and other programs are effectively meeting
 women’s needs. 
The event was to commemorate the 20th
 anniversary of the Center’s founding. To mark the occasion, Waters 
participated in a ceremony with McDonald, Center Director Elisa 
Basnight, and former directors Irene Trowell-Harris, Joan Furey, and Dr.
 Susan Mather.
“Ranking
 Member Maxine Waters is the true matriarch of the Center for Women 
Veterans. It was her work back in 1994 that made the Center a 
long-overdue reality,” said VA Secretary Robert McDonald. 
“After
 being elected to Congress, one of my first priorities was to introduce 
legislation that ensured women veterans were informed of their benefits 
and receiving appropriate care at the VA. And 20 years later, I am so 
proud to see how the Center has affected change,” said Waters. “By the 
year 2000, the Center had influenced the VA to provide prenatal and 
obstetrical care to women veterans. That same year, the VA announced a 
$3 million dollar investment to lift women veterans out of homelessness,
 an investment closely followed by Congress enacting legislation to care
 for children with birth defects born to women veterans of the Vietnam 
War. The Center has also connected female veterans with public and 
community service opportunities, while also ensuring the service and 
contributions of women Veterans and women in the military are properly 
recognized by our nation and society.”
Before
 the Center was created, there was a shocking inequality for women 
veterans trying to access VA benefits. A 1982 report found women were 
not receiving proper physical examinations at VA facilities. There was 
no access to basic gynecological care – a serious problem which 
contributed to women suffering a cancer rate twice that of women in the 
general population, with gynecological cancers being the most common.  
And a shocking 57 percent of female veterans did not even know they were
 eligible for VA services, benefits, and programs.
Acknowledging
 this problem, in 1993, Waters spearheaded legislation to create a 
special bureau for women at the VA. That legislation was enacted into 
law in 1994, creating the Center for Women Veterans to address these 
problems. As a member of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Waters fought 
to ensure that the creation of the Center was included as part of the 
“Veterans’ Benefits Improvements Act of 1994,” enacted to provide for 
veterans of the Persian Gulf War.
Waters
 added, “Twenty years later, the Center is needed more than ever.  Women
 are the fastest growing population within the DOD and VA. And they 
still face challenges – like a broken grievance system that forces them 
out of service more often than it holds predators accountable.  I 
believe that in the future, the Center can take a leadership role in 
ensuring victims of sexual assault are provided access to the important 
services they need. And we all must act boldly to offer these victims a 
path to justice, so that they may come forward without fear.”
###
 
