“Our veterans were willing to give their lives to defend our freedom and democracy. All gave some and some gave all. Orange County is united in its support for Gypsum Canyon as the final resting place for our veterans and their families, who courageously served our nation.”
Correa hand delivered letter to Secretary Collins this week
WASHINGTON — This week, Representatives Lou Correa (CA-46) and Derek Tran (CA-45) led a letter to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) urging federal support for the building of the Southern California Veterans Cemetery at Gypsum Canyon in Anaheim Hills, CA., which would be the first-ever veteran cemetery located in Orange County.
"We write to express our support for the Veterans Cemetery Grants Program Pre-application submitted by the California Department of Veterans Affairs (CalVet) for the Southern California Veterans Cemetery at Gypsum Canyon in Anaheim Hills, CA.,” the members wrote. “After years of delay due to a lack of consensus on an appropriate location, the County of Orange, all 34 cities, a bipartisan majority of the County’s state and federal delegation, public safety and labor organizations, and more than 100 local, state and national veterans’ organizations are united in support of the Gypsum Canyon location.”
The California Department of Veterans Affairs (CalVet) submitted a Veterans Cemetery Grants Program Pre-application to the National Cemetery Administration within the VA. As of July 23, 2024, the Orange County Cemetery District’s (OCCD) application to develop and operate a public cemetery at Gypsum Canyon was unanimously approved by the Anaheim City Council—allowing OCCD, CalVet and the County to continue collaborating on land development for shared cost options.
Correa hand delivered the letter to VA Secretary Doug Collins earlier this week.
“Our veterans were willing to give their lives to defend our freedom and democracy. All gave some and some gave all. Orange County is united in its support for Gypsum Canyon as the final resting place for our veterans and their families, who courageously served our nation,” the members concluded. “We request your full and fair consideration of this application[.]”
The Orange County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved $20 million exclusively for site development of a veterans’ cemetery at Gypsum Canyon on July 27, 2021, and allocated over 200 acres of county-owned land near the intersection of the 91 freeway and 241 toll road for the purpose of building a public cemetery and a separate veterans cemetery. The amount of combined state and local funding to begin the construction for a veterans’ cemetery at this location currently totals $50 million, including $5 million allocated as part of the 2024 State Budget Act and $25 million in state funding already allocated in the previous state budget.
You can read the full text of the letter HERE.
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