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UPDATE: FILNER EXPRESSES "GREAT DOUBTS" ABOUT
OUTSOURCING NEW G.I. BILL PROGRAM -- House Vets'
Chair: "I have great doubts about the contracting
out.
VA employees have administered education benefits
since World War II...This is going to be a
disaster."

For more about outsourcing the New G.I. Bill
program, read the following articles...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfAUG08/nf081808-1.htm
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfAUG08/nf081908-4.htm
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfaug08c/nf082708-4.htm
Today's story here...
http://www.insid
ehighered.com/news/2008/09/12/gibill
Story below:
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Grave Concerns on the New GI Bill
College officials heralded this summer’s passage of a new, much-bigger GI
Bill for veterans who’ve served since September 11, 2001. But the new
money only matters if educational benefits are processed and paid by the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. And in the first Congressional
hearing on the topic Thursday, lawmakers raised grave concerns about the
agency’s plans for administering the law, focusing on the VA’s reliance on
an outside vendor and its ability, or inability, to roll out a new system
before the program’s effective date, next August 1.
The VA is contracting out the creation of an automated computer system
that would process benefit applications while “minimizing human
intervention.” Claims rejected by the automated process would be
considered by VA staff members.
“The contractor will be accountable for providing timely and accurate
education claims processing by completing original claims [within] 10
days, supplemental claims [within] seven days, and by achieving an
accuracy rate of at least 98 percent,” Keith Pedigo, an associate deputy
under secretary at the VA, said in his testimony Thursday before the House
of Representatives Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity.
The
agency released a request for proposals to a limited number of contractors
August 29, with the vendors’ responses due this coming Monday and the
tentative date for awarding the contract scheduled for September 26.
Details on what the computer system would look like were scarce at this
point. “What we tried to do was to give the contractors as much
flexibility as possible to propose a solution,” said Keith M. Wilson,
director of education service at the VA.
Subcommittee members, however, were decidedly unimpressed with the VA
officials’ presentation, and the lack of details specifically.
Representative Bob Filner (D-Calif.), chairman of the full House Committee
on Veterans’ Affairs, was most aggressive in his questioning, grilling VA
officials on the wisdom of outsourcing the new system and its contingency
plans if the contractor ultimately fails in its charge.
“I have great doubts about the contracting out. VA employees have
administered education benefits since World War II,” said Filner, who, in
questioning the vendor’s expertise in and commitment to serving veterans,
echoed concerns raised by the American Legion. “I bet in the RFP it does
not say, ‘Can you relate to veterans?’ ” said Filner.
Beyond the philosophical question of outsourcing the administration of
educational benefits, Filner expressed a total lack of confidence in the
VA’s procedure. He fixated on March 1 — the date on which the vendor would
have to demonstrate that the system works. “What happens in March if they
haven’t met the requirements? We’re back to square one, it seems to me,”
said Filner.
Frustrated with the lack of detail, he said, “You don’t know what you’re
going to get, you don’t know what it’s going to cost, you don’t know
what’s going to happen if it fails. What are you getting us into?”
Filner said he would be writing a letter to the VA secretary asking for
many more details about the bidding process before a contract is awarded.
“We could,” he continued, “pass a sense of the House resolution that this
not go forward; we could do that.”
“This is going to be a disaster, Madame Chair.”
The subcommittee chair, Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-S.D.), said she
was most worried about the tight timetable. The VA originally planned to
create such a computerized system by 2013, but, with the passage of the GI
Bill, moved up the target date to 2009.
“Preferably, I’d like to see a contingency plan developed by the end of
this month. Is that possible?” Sandlin asked.
Wilson replied that he hopes to develop a contingency plan within 30 to 45
days of when a contract is awarded, at the end of this month.
In a phone interview, Terry W. Hartle, senior vice president for
government and public affairs at the American Council on Education, said
there are legitimate concerns about the new benefits system being ready by
August, given the extreme complexity of the VA’s task. And he said that
the agency’s choice of contractor — and that contractor’s ability to
deliver — will be a critical factor in whether the VA completes the task
and does so on time.
“It’s fundamentally a new program. The VA has not provided payments
directly to colleges and universities since World War II,” said Hartle. He
added that the switch to making payments directly to colleges is
complicated by the fact that a substantial number of vocationally oriented
institutions that participate in the GI Bill don’t participate in the
federal financial aid program — so it’s not just a matter of adapting
current federal systems.
In addition to paying colleges, the VA will continue to make payments
directly to veterans for their housing and book stipends. Different
payment levels will be calculated for students attending different
institutions (the law covers up to the cost of in-state tuition at the
most expensive public college in a veteran’s state). And a Yellow Ribbon
program for students attending private colleges adds a whole other
dimension.
“Colleges and universities are acutely aware that this is a very big,
complex program and that the Department of Veterans Affairs is basically
starting from scratch in putting it in place,” said Hartle. “I think the
VA is doing as much as they can.”
At the same time, he said, “If you weren’t worried about their ability [to
put it in place by next August], you wouldn’t be paying attention.”
— Elizabeth Redden
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