Wisconsin Department of Veterans AffairsThe Wisconsin Department of Veterans Affairs is a governmental agency of the U.S. state of Wisconsin that is responsible for veterans programs. The department is overseen by a secretary who is appointed by the governor after consulting with at least six Wisconsin veterans organizations.[1] The secretary is advised by a nine-member citizen advisory Board of Veterans Affairs. The current Secretary is Mary M. Kolar.[2] HistoryIn 1919, the state of Wisconsin issued a wartime bonus to service members who served in World War I.[1] After World War II, the state legislature decided that instead of issuing a wartime bonus, they would create programs to provide a better benefit to the veterans. The Department of Veterans Affairs was created in 1945 to oversee these programs, which included:[1]
In 1989, the state legislature authorized the Department of Veterans Affairs to build a new museum dedicated to Wisconsin veterans. The Wisconsin Veterans Museum opened across the street from the state capitol in 1993.[1] In 2001, the Department of Veterans Affairs opened a new veterans home at Union Grove, Wisconsin.[1] In 2013, the Department of Veterans Affairs opened a new veterans home at Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin at a cost of $20 million, with the ability to house 72 veterans.[3] State veteran cemeteriesThe Department of Veterans Affairs maintains three veteran cemeteries:
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