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“Do not ignore ability”: ER nurse fights for the right of amputees to join the Armed Forces

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Spokane, Washington — Hannah Cvancara is motivated, physically fit and patriotic, everything the U.S. military desires. Except for a condition the military considers disqualifying: an amputated left foot, which occurred when she was just 10 months old, the result of a rare birth defect.

“I’ve never counted it as part of my identity,” Cvancara told CBS News. “I’m just Hannah, who happens to be missing a leg.”

However, she hasn’t slowed down since. She rock climbs, snowboards, surfs and hikes, and took part in swim team, track and volleyball in school.

But while her amputation hasn’t stopped her at all, the military has, rejecting her from the Navy.

“The subject applicant does not meet established physical standards,” the Navy’s rejection letter to Cvancara in March 2022 read. 

Active-duty troops who lose limbs are still eligible to serve. But for those seeking to enlist, the “current absence of a foot” is automatically disqualifying, according to the Defense Department’s Medical Standards for Military Service  

When contacted by CBS News about the policy, a Defense Department spokesperson said in a statement Monday that, “At this time, there are no changes to policy, and it would be inappropriate to speculate on the future. We have no additional information to provide.”

Cvancara’s desire to get into the military comes at a time when recruitment numbers have reached their lowest levels since the Vietnam War.

“Our recruitment is suffering, and there are plenty of people with the right heart to serve that can’t,” Cvancara argues.

Cvancara is in training to try and enlist again by seeking a medical waiver to join the Washington Air National Guard. She is also a full-time ER nurse — often on her feet for 12-hour shifts — and wants to continue doing her job while in uniform.

“She adds a joy,” Cvancara’s father, Lt. Col. Joseph Cvancara, a retired Air Force flight surgeon, said of his daughter. “Her middle name is Joy. And she fits it. She perseveres.”

Alex Gates, Cvancara’s prosthetist, says medical progress has been met by antiquated thinking.  

“The rule was written back when prosthetics were made out of wood and leather,” said Gates, adding that he believes Hannah is “more able-bodied than most people that we come in contact with every day.” 

Hannah has also taken her challenge to Congress, lending her name to a House bill — the “Hannah Cvancara Service Act” — that would change the U.S. military’s policy on the issue. 

Hannah says she understands the policy, and acknowledges the concern that an amputee could be viewed as someone unable to deploy easily.  But the waiver she’s seeking would apply to a medical position.  And that advancements in prosthetics have allowed amputees to take a far more active role than what may have been possible in the past.

“I’m not asking that we ignore disability and pretend it doesn’t exist,” Hannah said. “Rather, that we do not ignore ability.”



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Catholic women lead push for female priests

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Catholic women lead push for female priests – CBS News


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Lisa Ling explores a growing movement of women defying Catholic Church tradition by becoming priests. These leaders hope to pave the way for future generations, despite pushback from the Vatican.

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Husband of Russia’s richest woman arrested for murder after deadly shootout at offices of retail giant Wildberries

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Forbes releases billionaires list


Forbes releases billionaires list

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The estranged husband of Russia’s richest woman and CEO of retail giant Wildberries was arrested Thursday and charged with several crimes including murder, a day after a deadly armed raid at the company’s central Moscow offices.

Billionaire Tatyana Bakalchuk released a tearful message a day earlier, saying her husband Vladislav Bakalchuk, whom she is currently divorcing, led an armed raid into the Wildberries offices.  

Vladislav Bakalchuk’s lawyers said in a message on his social media page that he was “detained for 48 hours” and charged with murder, attempted murder, assault of a law enforcement officer and vigilantism.

Two people, including a security guard, were killed in the shooting at the offices, which lie a few streets away from the Kremlin.  

The incident came weeks after the company finalized a merger deal that Vladislav criticized and that strongman Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov vowed to stop.

Vladislav’s lawyers said he was on his way to a “pre-agreed meeting to settle a corporate conflict.”  Vladislav alleges that it was staff at the office who fired the first shots, the Reuters news agency reported.

But Bakalchuk called her husband’s claims “absurd” and said “no one agreed to any negotiations.”  

“Vladislav, what are you doing? How are you going to look in the eyes of your parents and our children?”

Portraits of Billionaire Wildberries OOO Founder Tatyana Bakalchuk
Tatyana Bakalchuk, billionaire and chief executive officer of Wildberries OOO, in her office in Moscow, Russia, on Monday, Feb. 16, 2021. 

Elena Chernyshova/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Wildberries is Russia’s largest online retailer. Tatyana Bakalchuk founded the company in 2004, growing it from an online clothes reseller into a major marketplace for countless other products, Reuters reported.

According to Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index in 2021, she was the 40th richest woman in the world and the first self-made woman billionaire out of Russia.

Tatyana Bakalchuk is the majority oner of the company, while her estranged husband holds a one-percent stake.



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Eye Opener: More deadly explosions of communication devices in Lebanon

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Eye Opener: More deadly explosions of communication devices in Lebanon – CBS News


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A second wave of deadly explosions rocks Lebanon, as Israel says a new phase of the war has begun. Also, both candidates miss out on a crucial endorsement as the Teamsters union declines to back either choice for president. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.

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