‘This Is Deeply Troubling and Concerning’ – Senate Minority Leader…
- James Smith
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In San Antonio, where uniforms are as common as school backpacks, the shutdown has become painfully personal. TRICARE’s promise — that military families would always have care — now collides with clinics on the brink of collapse. Providers like Dr. Britt Sims and Dr. Gia Koehne aren’t hedge-fund hospitals; they are small practices surviving on thin margins, now stretched to zero as reimbursements freeze. The families they serve, many raising children with autism or complex developmental disorders, cannot simply “wait it out.” Every missed therapy session risks lost progress that may never fully return.
Meanwhile, troops’ paychecks are being protected with reallocated funds, but the civilians who keep their families healthy are left carrying the financial burden. It is a quiet crisis: no dramatic headlines from battlefields, just shuttered offices, unanswered phones, and parents wondering how a political standoff in Washington could so quickly unravel the fragile safety net they thought was guaranteed.