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MORE FINANCIAL TROUBLE FOR VETS: VA ALLOWS
GUARDIANS TO CHARGE TOO MUCH -- Florida state
law
says guardians may charge 5 per cent of just VA
benefits.
But another reading has cost veterans millions.

For the previous story on this issue, click
here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/
nf07/nfAUG07/nf081507-6.htm
For more about VA fiduciaries, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=fiduciary&op=and
Today's story
here...
http://www.sptimes
.com/2007/08/19/State/VA_allow
s_guardians_t.shtml
Story below:
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VA allows guardians to charge too much
State law says guardians may charge 5 percent of just VA benefits. But
another reading has cost veterans millions.
By WILLIAM R. LEVESQUE, Times Staff Writer
Many of Florida's most vulnerable military veterans have been
overcharged millions of dollars by guardians entrusted to handle their
finances.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs mistakenly has allowed guardians
to take a larger cut of an incompetent veteran's income than state law
allows, according to the VA manager overseeing veteran guardians in
Florida.
The practice has cost veterans at least $24-million in the last decade,
said Matthew DesRoches, the St. Petersburg-based manager of the VA's
Fiduciary and Field Examination unit.
"There's no debating that a certain percentage of those funds have gone
in a direction they shouldn't have," he said. "They should have gone in
the veterans' accounts. You can't just let it persist because it's a
nuisance or a mess. You have to deal with it. It's not right."
When a doctor or court determines that a veteran is incapable of
handling his finances, a licensed guardian is appointed by the court
with VA oversight. DesRoches estimates that up to half of Florida's
6,100 incompetent veterans have their income handled by a paid guardian.
Some guardians dispute DesRoches' assessment. They say the state circuit
judges and, until recently, the VA have long approved the higher fees.
"It's just typical of a large bureaucracy that somewhere along the line
somebody takes a cramped view of state law that makes it more difficult
for people down the line to do their job," said lawyer Stephen Margulis,
a Plantation guardian who handles the finances of about 25 veterans.
How the error went unnoticed for at least two decades remains a mystery,
DesRoches said.
Florida law allows guardians to tap just 5 percent of the VA income of
incompetent veterans, according to DesRoches and VA documents.
But the VA long has allowed guardians to keep 5 percent of any income,
which might include VA benefits, military pensions, Social Security and
private pensions.
For veterans who receive only VA income and Social Security, the higher
fee may amount to $400 or $500 a year or less. But for veterans with
multiple sources of income, the tally would be significantly higher,
DesRoches said.
DesRoches, 46, who has headed the VA fiduciary unit for 2 1/2 years,
said he discovered the mistake last year and couldn't believe it.
"I thought: We've been doing this for how long?" DesRoches said. "I
mean, all these attorneys out there, all these judges, everyone, didn't
anyone notice this? I was just dumbfounded."
The VA's regional counsel soon confirmed the error and, starting in the
fall of 2006, began rejecting bids to collect fees from anything but VA
funds, documents show.
But the VA worked out a compromise after some outraged guardians
threatened to quit if their income was limited, DesRoches said.
The VA decided guardians could file a special petition with courts to
get a cut of Social Security income under a part of the law allowing
payment for "extraordinary" services rendered. The VA would approve such
petitions.
"We do not want to alienate the guardianship bar or reduce the number of
good guardians available to our veterans," said regional counsel
Cristine Senseman in a June 20 e-mail to DesRoches.
DesRoches said that is morally and legally unjustifiable, since handling
such income is part of the normal expectation of the job outlined by
law.
"That just opens up Pandora's box," he said.
DesRoches is currently involved in a dispute with the VA. He was granted
three months unpaid leave to care for his terminally ill 82-year-old
mother. But now, he said, the VA wants him to return to work early.
DesRoches has refused because he said he has no one to care for her.
But DesRoches said what moved him to consent to an interview with the
St. Petersburg Times was the compromise by the VA regional counsel that
allowed guardians to take part of a veteran's Social Security income.
"I won't have any part of that," he said.
Senseman, the regional counsel, said in the June e-mail that guardians
were "working to make a legislative change ... to correct the definition
of income that is in the statute and fix this whole mess."
Some guardians have started filing petitions for extraordinary services
to recoup the lost income, and those petitions are being approved by the
VA.
DesRoches said he thinks guardians will seek a cut of all income via
this route, not just limiting themselves to Social Security.
The probate court judges who preside over guardianships said they
typically rely on the oversight of the VA. And if the VA approves a fee
before it comes to the judge, the court will seldom reject it, judges
say.
"Technically, I guess we're responsible," said Pinellas-Pasco Judge
Lauren Laughlin, chief probate judge in the circuit. "But the VA has
made it very clear that it's their money" and the VA has primary
oversight.
Susan Sexton, a probate judge in Hillsborough, said she "accepts the
VA's representation that the accountings and fees are accurate."
Guardians say it is unreasonable to expect them to do all the work
involved in managing a veteran's finances without being adequately paid.
And if guardians handle a source of income, they should get a cut of it
for the added work and responsibility, guardians argue.
"I don't think the fees we've been charging are excessive," said Dale
Walthouse, a guardian in Altamonte Springs. "It's a 24/7 job. It's
something good. You're helping veterans who can't handle their finances.
It's good for them."
Veteran advocates say that the guardianship program is a good one and
that guardians should be adequately compensated. But some said the VA
needs to assure veterans are being financially protected.
"It seems to me even if it's only $25 a month, that may not be much to a
bureaucrat or the VA," said Al Linden, executive director of Disabled
American Veterans Florida chapter. "It darn sure means a lot to that
vulnerable veteran."
William R. Levesque can be reached at 813 226-3436 or
levesque@sptimes.com.
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Larry Scott --