SPRING, TX (KTRK) --

On this Memorial Day, Frank Haynie offers a pretty honest assessment of his health.

"I, like everyone else, am dying. Some of us just get there quicker," he said.

Haynie fought in Vietnam but came home poisoned and disabled by Agent Orange. As Vietnam gets further away, the Agent Orange effects have gotten worse.

"I'm getting around less well and I need this thing finished," Haynie said.

This thing is his bathroom. And when we first met him, he couldn't use it.

The shower was too small, too close to the toilet that was also tough to use and the tub. It's not that big a deal until you realize it was three years after the VA spent $60,000 of your dollars to rehab Haynie's home to make it handicap accessible.

This is what progress looks like: A remodel re-do for a disabled veteran that didn't get approved until we started demanding answers from the VA. He shouldn't have needed us. The first plans weren't followed, flaws in the first job were glaring. But all approved by VA inspectors.

"We found the mold, we found misconstruction. When we broke into the bench, there was 4 inches of water," Jim Darst said.

Darst is the new contractor fixing the work with a new check from the VA. He jumped at the chance to do it after hearing what Haynie was going through.

See original here:
Vet's stalled bathroom remodeling project finally sees progress

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May 27, 2014 at 6:06 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Bathroom Remodeling