PRESS RELEASE MEMO: OUTPOST 422 CEO Tackles Wisconsin DVR ongoing problems with onboarding disabled veterans through WordPress manifesto

OUTPOST 422
PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

From: Bradley J. Burt
CEO, Outpost 422
VA Patient Adjudicator
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin

Date: March 2026

Subject: Disabled Veteran Civil Rights and Medical Privacy Protections in Employment Accommodation Processes

Today I am formally contacting the Secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development to share my experience as a pro se litigant before the Wisconsin Equal Rights Tribunal. My testimony concerns my experiences as a former client of the Wisconsin Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (DVR) and the systemic practices I observed regarding medical privacy demands made upon disabled veterans during employment accommodation processes.

I am currently coordinating with the Privacy Director of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to pursue federal accountability regarding actions taken by respondents in my case. These actions involved employer demands that I disclose Veterans Affairs medical records as a condition related to employment accommodation discussions.

The broader matter now under review includes the possibility of a discretionary audit examining corporate employers and Universities of Wisconsin post-secondary institutions that may have required disabled veterans to disclose sensitive medical information in bad faith during the interactive accommodation dialogue process. These practices raise concerns regarding privacy breaches, misuse of medical questionnaires, and the use of medical disclosure to justify adverse employment actions or constructive dismissal.

On March 12, 2026, during proceedings held at GEF 1 in Madison, Wisconsin, I appeared before an administrative law judge where opposing counsel subjected me to nearly three hours of personal attacks regarding my credibility while representing myself as a pro se litigant. These events reinforced the need for broader public awareness and accountability.

In response, I have begun drafting a thirteen-volume investigative and advocacy work titled Outpost 422. The series will document the experiences of disabled veterans navigating employment accommodation systems while confronting institutional power structures without legal representation.

My position is not one of victimhood. I speak as a military service civil rights advocate determined to address systemic practices that expose veterans to unnecessary medical disclosure and reputational harm.

One emerging concern involves the expanding use of employer wellness platforms and Employee Assistance Program applications that collect personal health data. When combined with employment accommodation processes, these systems raise significant ethical and privacy questions about how medical information may be aggregated, analyzed, or repurposed.

A recurring pattern reported by veterans involves pressure to disclose documentation related to post-traumatic stress disorder during accommodation requests. The stigma surrounding PTSD can then be used to challenge a veteran’s credibility in workplace disputes.

However, federal medical privacy protections remain clear. State agencies, administrative tribunals, and private employers do not possess authority to compel disclosure of Veterans Affairs medical records without proper federal authorization.

In my case, this position was affirmed through Veterans Affairs memorandum 1B-10-163p, which supports the principle that VA medical records cannot be compelled through state administrative processes.

For veterans seeking workplace accommodations, a progress note or documentation from a VA primary care physician may be sufficient to substantiate the need for reasonable accommodation. Veterans should understand that they are not required to surrender full medical records in order to exercise their employment rights.

This issue extends beyond a single case. It concerns the dignity, privacy, and civil rights of disabled veterans across the United States.

Outpost 422 will continue documenting these issues and advocating for transparency, legal reform, and protection of veteran medical privacy in employment settings.

Contact:
Bradley J. Burt
Outpost 422
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin
Email: leads111@proton.me
Phone: (608) 852-1983

When Employers Change Their Story: A Guide for Disabled Veteran Employees

When Employers Change Their Story: A Guide for Disabled Veteran Employees

By Bradley J. Burt (adapted for public/legal context)

If you’re a veteran with a disability facing workplace discrimination or retaliation, you’re not alone — and understanding how employers sometimes defend their actions can be a powerful tool in your legal toolbox.

One of the most common tactics employers use to justify unlawful conduct is something called a post hoc justification. Let’s break that down in clear, everyday language and explore how it affects disabled, veteran, or otherwise protected employees.

🎯 What Is Post Hoc Justification?

Post hoc justification literally means “after this, therefore because of this.”
In legal terms, it’s when an employer offers a reason for firing you after the fact, rather than at the time of the event.

So instead of saying “We fired you for X” when you were actually fired, they say it later — often after you legally challenge them or allege discrimination.

This matters because:

  • It shows the employer’s stated reason wasn’t truly what motivated the decision.
  • It suggests the real reason might be retaliation for something protected — like disability accommodation requests or whistleblower complaints.

This is especially important for disabled veterans, who are protected under both federal law (ADA) and local anti‑discrimination ordinances.

📌 Example: The Threat That Never Was

Imagine this scenario:

  • You notify your employer you won’t work around a certain person because of a credible threat to harm you.
  • You ask to be excused for your safety.
  • No one investigates, makes a report, or documents anything that night.
  • You continue to work, but later you’re fired.

Then, months later, your employer claims you were fired because you “threatened violence.”

If there’s no contemporaneous report, no incident documentation, no witness statements at the time, and no HR action on the day of the event — that’s a strong indicator the “threat” reason was created after you complained or asked for accommodation.

That’s post hoc justification — shifting the reason after the fact to justify an adverse decision that was likely caused by something else (like your disability disclosure or protected complaint).

🧠 Why This Matters for Disabled Veterans

If your employer:

  • Returns with a new reason only after you engage in protected activity (like reporting discrimination),
  • Changes its explanation over time,
  • Or provides a reason contradicted by its own conduct or records,

then that’s not just a clerical mistake — it’s evidence that the stated reason is a pretext.

Pretext means the reason given is not the real reason.

And under both federal law (ADA, Title VII, ADEA) and many local laws (including Madison Ordinance § 39.03), pretext is exactly the type of evidence used to prove discrimination and retaliation

🔍 How to Spot Post Hoc Justification

Here are the key indicators:

✔ The employer didn’t mention the reason until after you complained
✔ There’s no contemporaneous documentation of the alleged conduct
✔ The employer’s policy for handling the alleged issue wasn’t followed
✔ Witness accounts don’t support the new justification
✔ You were previously evaluated as adequate or competent before the protected activity
✔ The timing of the termination closely follows your protected complaint

When these signs line up, it raises a strong inference of retaliation — not legitimate conduct.

🛡️ Why It’s Important for Your Legal Case

In discrimination law, you don’t always have to prove that the employer intended discrimination.

Instead, you show:

  1. You engaged in protected activity (like reporting discrimination or asking for accommodation),
  2. You suffered an adverse action (like termination), and
  3. The employer’s stated reason is weak, inconsistent, or post hoc.

If the stated reason is pretextual, the law allows investigators, hearing officers, or judges to infer discrimination or retaliation.

This is true under:

  • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
  • Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
  • Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)
  • Local anti‑discrimination ordinances like Madison Ordinance § 39.03

📣 A Word for Disabled Veteran Employees

You deserve workplace safety, accommodation, and equal treatment — period.

When an employer tries to justify a disciplinary action with a reason that only came after you exercised your rights, that’s exactly the kind of evidence that supports a retaliation claim.

So if you notice:

👉 reasons that change over time
👉 lack of documentation
👉 timing that follows your complaint

trust your instincts — it’s not just coincidence. It’s legal evidence.

Letter to the City of Madison Mayor: William S. Middleton Memorial Hospital individually unemployable discharged patients face HUD-VASH Gentrification with relocation

Disabled veterans in the Dane County area cannot compete with landlords who require a “three-times” rent agreement also known as “gentrification.” When totally and permanently veterans listed as “individually unemployable” seek work opportunities, those who view military service as racist, predominantly those who preach critical race theory in management and human resources, run the veteran off the job.

The problem disabled veterans face is the inability to keep up with gentrification who become HUD-VASH statistics. What can be done?


Why should a disabled veteran who could afford their apartment who no longer be required to live amongst crack dealers, those who try to rewrite philosophy with “violent protest”, or worse yet graffiti the Wisconsin Veterans Museum?


Dane County, mainly in Madison, has an anti-veteran problem. I propose a voucher system that allows the disabled veteran a cap and a requirement of 20 percent HUD-VASH tenancy who then will open opportunities for homeless veterans who also qualify for more opportunities other than waitlists.


Or better yet, establish a recruiting model that transitions disabled veterans through remote proctored instruction, which will qualify the individual with a noncredit option, then utilize the research for receiving HUD-VASH grants that could potentially provide the landlord or academic institution with economic stimulus. I suggest renovating the downtown Madison College campus into a HUD-VASH readjustment and rehabilitation transition center allowing potential candidates access to Madison College classes on-site.


The operation could raise $2.5 million for renovation capital, then accept tenants on a first-come educational eligibility opportunity to sell and provide data regarding the needs of those afflicted. Once a pilot fully matures the building’s depreciation, then the pilot can renovate unused buildings for harnessing creativity with those who manage trauma-informed symptoms like LightFIghter Syndrome®.

By focusing on the needs of disabled veterans who are individually unemployable, a corporate vendor could potentially study, through focus groups, why disabled veterans struggle in society and how to implement welcoming environments, which could potentially stimulate the veteran hiring sector, provide administrative short-term jobs and track outcomes with tenant qualitative analysis.

By focusing on the housing needs of those who suffered injuries in service, the workplace can grow into a place where lost time and shift coverage could easily be filled on a last-minute basis as a part of a rent-free living experience.

By having unemployable veteran work for rent voucher as a rent offset, the Dane County rental community could potentially resolve the ongoing issue with veteran homelessness by reconnecting individuals with their learning minds first in a noncredit capacity, then grow into a creative intelligence mindset performing small tasks and duties that usually comprise $18-$20 per hour.

By divesting in vouchers, a business could own an apartment complex, decrease staff, gain access to block grants and run a lean operation with disabled veteran independent interns who at least receive at the minimum pride in workmanship. The solution is simple. Hire individually unemployable veteran quid pro quo for rent and then watch the workplace thrive in their absence.

No veteran is hopeless and could have an opportunity to take a troublemaker angry at the world and convert them into becoming employable again.