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Federal law, named for Iowa soldier, extended for another decade

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August 7th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

President Obama on Monday signed a law which extends a program named for a late National Guardsman from Iowa. Andrew Connolly of Dubuque spent 16 months in Iraq before returning home in August 2007. A year later, doctors discovered a cancerous tumor in his spine related to his military service. Andrew quickly lost his ability to walk and applied for a federal veterans grant to help build a wheel-chair accessible home. Connolly died just under one year ago. His wife, Jennifer, remains in the home. Jennifer is now caring for the couple’s son, Brody, who has a neuromuscular disorder that restricts his breathing and keeps him confined to a wheelchair.

The “Andrew Connolly Veterans Housing Act” was set to expire, but now the benefit is extended for a decade. In May of 2011, Andrew Connolly testified before a panel in Washington, D.C. about the frustration he felt when he was confined to a wheelchair while living in a duplex built in 1890. The federal grant allowed him and his family to move into the wheel-chair accessible home.

“Today, I am in my new house. Today, I took a shower by myself in a five by five (foot) roll-in shower with handicap controls. Today, I cooked my own breakfast because I was able to reach all of the ingredients. Today, I was able to watch my son sleeping in his bedroom because I could (fit) through the doorway with my wheelchair,” Connolly said during the hearing. Andrew Connolly died on August 26, 2011. He was 28 years old.

(Radio Iowa)