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LAWYERS STEP UP TO HELP VETERANS GRATIS
-- "This could be
the VA's worst nightmare. Hundreds of attorneys
from around the
country providing legal service to veterans for
free."

Bart Stichman, an attorney at the
National Veterans Legal Services Program, was instrumental in
getting lawyers from around the country to provide legal services to
veterans for free. (By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY) |
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urvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=nvlsp&op=and
Story here...
http://www.usatoda
y.com/news/nation/2007-11-26-valawyers_N.htm
Story below:
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-------------------------
Lawyers step up to help veterans gratis
By Laura Parker, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The scene resembled Hollywood's
version of how a multibillion-dollar legal deal might be negotiated.
Big-name corporate law firm. Posh conference room, with a conference table
so large 70 attorneys fit easily around it. Video technicians, hovering
nearby, beam the meeting to other big law firms from Boston to Seattle.
Yet there was no deal to cut. Instead, the high-powered lawyers were
getting a tutorial in the arcane vagaries of veterans law.
"This could be the VA's worst nightmare," Bart Stichman, one of the
organizers, enthused from the podium. "Hundreds of attorneys from around
the country providing legal service to veterans for free."
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The recent gathering at Sidley Austin, a firm
with 1,700 lawyers around the globe, is part of a growing effort to
provide free legal help to thousands of veterans returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan who are trying to win disability benefits from the Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA).
"There are 100,000 veterans seeking benefits, and too many of them are
waiting too long to get them," says Ron Abrams, who, with Stichman,
directs the National Veterans Legal Services Program, a non-profit group
in Washington spearheading the effort. "These lawyers are going to treat
these veterans the way they would treat their corporate clients."
The approach marks the first time since the Civil War that attorneys have
been recruited in large numbers to represent veterans. The lawyers hope
their legal expertise will speed consideration of claims and result in
better benefits for veterans, Stichman says. More than 50 of the largest
law firms in the USA and more than 400 attorneys have signed up. Stichman
and Abrams hope to start assigning veterans to the attorneys early next
month.
Law schools join cause
Amanda Smith, an attorney with the Philadelphia-based firm Morgan Lewis,
says many of the participating lawyers are Vietnam veterans and "are
appalled at the circumstances that they find veterans in today."
Besides the push by big law firms, law schools in states such as the
Carolinas, Virginia, Delaware, Michigan and Illinois also are offering
free services to veterans.
Craig Kabatchnick, who worked as a VA appellate attorney from 1990 until
1995, launched a clinic last January for veterans at North Carolina
Central University's law school, where he now teaches.
"We had all kinds of veterans who were very disabled, litigating against
trained attorneys like myself who were defending the VA," Kabatchnick
says. The VA would "win" if the claim was denied, Kabatchnick says. "Did
we litigate to win? Absolutely. In cases where the veteran was
representing himself, the win ratio was very high."
Paul Hutter, the VA's general counsel, says its attorneys have "an ethical
obligation to fairly and justly" review claims and settle "meritorious
cases quickly."
"Our job is to ensure that veterans get the benefits allowed them by law,"
he says in an e-mail.
Disability claims have increased from 578,773 in fiscal 2000 to 838,141
this year, according to VA figures. There are about 407,000 pending. The
average processing time is 177 days, the VA says.
Change in law lifted restrictions
Traditionally, veterans have represented themselves or sought assistance
from a service organization, such as the American Legion or the Veterans
of Foreign Wars. But many of the caseworkers in those groups are
overloaded with cases, Stichman says, and sometimes one volunteer oversees
1,000 veterans' claims.
The approach has not led to quick compensation for veterans. Evidence
supporting a veteran's claim — medical records or letters from colleagues
— is not always submitted with the original claim. When that evidence is
added later, it can lead to reversals or requests for reconsideration.
That can add more than a year to the appeals process, the VA says.
The Board of Veterans Appeals either reverses or orders reconsideration of
decisions made by VA regional offices 56% of the time, according to an
analysis of VA figures by Stichman's group. Congress has long kept
attorneys at arms-length from the veterans' disability process. Until last
June, when federal law changed, paid attorneys could not work on cases
until after a final decision by the Board of Veterans' Appeals. The VA is
now considering regulations that would require all attorneys to pass a
test in order to qualify to handle veterans' claims, according to Phil
Budahn, a department spokesman.
Service organizations, including the Disabled American Veterans and
Veterans of Foreign Wars, vigorously fought the change in law. They are
now pushing to repeal the law and support requiring a test, arguing that
lawyers could turn what is supposed to be a non-adversarial process into a
litigious one.
"The fear was lawyers will dominate, and they'll ruin everything," says
Thomas Reed, a law professor at Widener University in Wilmington, Del.,
who began offering free legal services to veterans in 1997.
Lawyers not the cure-all
Joe Violante, national legislative director of the Disabled American
Veterans, which represents 1.3 million veterans, says trained volunteers
from the service organizations are far more experienced at representing
veterans' claims than the newly recruited lawyers.
"If the veteran is under the impression that an attorney is going to get
their claim through faster, there's no proof of that," he says.
Ron Flagg, a Sidley attorney involved in the pro bono veterans' project,
says there are so many claims that the system is overwhelmed.
"Lawyers are not the cure to all ills," he says. "But this is a problem
where lawyers can be helpful."
----------
CLAIMS PROCESS CAN DRAG ON
Veterans' disability requests average 177 days to process but it can take
years if claims are rejected and appealed. The disability claim's process
at a glance:
1) A veteran applies for disability benefits at one of 57 regional
Veterans Affairs offices. At best, this process takes 30 days, but that
time can stretch into years if additional documentation is needed to link
the disability with a service-related event.
2) If the veteran's claim is rejected, he or she can formally disagree and
ask the regional office to reinvestigate the claim. This process can take
30 days to several years. After the VA issues a formal Statement of the
Case, a rejected claim can be appealed to the Board of Veterans' Appeals
in Washington, D.C. This step can take more than a year.
3) If the veteran's claim is rejected by the appeals board, it can be
contested further in court. The process in each court, listed in order of
escalation, can take six months to several years:
� U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
� U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
� U.S. Supreme Court
Sources: National Veterans Legal Services Program and Veterans Affairs
Department
----------
APPEALS GET SECOND LOOK
More than half of the disability cases decided by the 57 regional offices
of the Department of Veterans Afairs are reversed or returned for
reconsideration upon appeal. In fiscal 2007, the Board of Veterans'
Appeals heard 40,401 cases. Of those, 22,817 or 56% were overturned or
sent back to regional offices. Status of appealed cases at the 10 largest
regional VA offices:
City Reversed{+1} Sent back{+2} Total{+3}
Atlanta 23% 40% 63%
St. Petersburg, Fla. 26% 37% 63%
Little Rock 22% 39% 61%
New York 22% 38% 60%
Nashville 23% 37% 60%
Montgomery, Ala. 20% 38% 58%
Winston-Salem, N.C. 23% 34% 57%
Houston 18% 36% 54%
Waco, Texas 19% 33% 52%
St. Louis 18% 33% 51%
National average 21% 35% 56%
1 - Claim granted by the Board of Veterans' Appeals after being rejected
by the regional office.
2 - Claim sent back to the regional office for further review.
3 - Total percentage of claims reversed or sent back.
Source: National Veterans Legal Services Program analysis of Board of
Veterans' Appeals figures for fiscal year 2007
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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