Military News

Good news arrives for ‘very happy’ South MS veteran whose check was shorted for years

Army veteran Harriet ‘Elva’ Pflug of Lucedale noticed in February 2024 that Veterans Affairs had failed to add a cost of living increase to her monthly check for 2023, 2024 and 2025. The problem went uncorrected for the longest, but not for lack of effort on Pflug’s part.
Army veteran Harriet ‘Elva’ Pflug of Lucedale noticed in February 2024 that Veterans Affairs had failed to add a cost of living increase to her monthly check for 2023, 2024 and 2025. The problem went uncorrected for the longest, but not for lack of effort on Pflug’s part. Courtesy Harriet 'Elva' Pflug

Valentines Day is even better than expected for Army veteran Harriet “Elva” Pflug of Lucedale.

A long-awaited payment from the Veterans Administration finally arrived. Pflug had been fighting since February 2024 for the cost of living increase that she failed to receive in her monthly disability checks from January 2023 forward.

She didn’t notice the first year that she was shorted because her check was delivered by direct deposit and her bills were on auto pay while she was gravely ill with COVID.

When the VA failed to correct the problem by July 2024, she contacted the office of U.S. Rep. Mike Ezell. His office corresponded with the VA. But, still, no decision.

Veteran’s fight for pay

Pflug brought her problem to the Sun Herald’s attention in a recent email. She also forwarded her information to the Gulfport office of U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, which went to work on her claim.

A Sun Herald story followed February 6. On Feb. 12, Pflug logged onto the VA website to order prescription refills. The first thing she saw was her monthly pay amount, recorded accurately for the first time in more than two years. She then found a VA decision letter, dated the same day.

The letter said her pay had been corrected and she would be receiving almost $11,000 in back pay.

“My money hit the bank today!” Pflug said Friday. “So I was very happy.”

Although it was a long and frustrating battle, the 62-year-old persisted. She says that she is assertive, even a little feisty.

“I just hate that it took so long and was so much aggravation,” she said. “I can just image that being done to some 80-year-old man, and chances are he wouldn’t have the wherewithal to fight for it.”

This story was originally published February 14, 2025 at 11:29 AM.

Anita Lee
Sun Herald
Anita, a Mississippi native, graduated with a journalism degree from the University of Southern Mississippi and previously worked at the Jackson Daily News and Virginian-Pilot, joining the Sun Herald in 1987. She specializes in in-depth coverage of government, public corruption, transparency and courts. She has won state, regional and national journalism awards, most notably contributing to Hurricane Katrina coverage awarded the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in Public Service. Support my work with a digital subscription
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