| THE NEW YORK
TIMES LOOKS AT VA CLAIMS BACKLOG
Veterans advocates say the actual
backlog is nearing one million, if minor claims, educational
programs and appeals of denied claims are factored in.
NOTE
from Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot
Org ... As the
backlog of VA claims approaches one million, the VA has
excuses and not answers. Nothing new here ... please keep
moving ... ignore that man who works for the VA .....
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Veterans Affairs Faces Surge of Disability Claims
By JAMES DAO
He jumped at loud noises, had unpredictable flashes of anger and
was constantly replaying battle scenes in his head. When Damian J.
Todd, who served two tours in Iraq with the Marine Corps,
described those symptoms to a psychiatrist in January 2008, the
diagnosis was quick: he was suffering from post-traumatic stress
disorder.
Less swift was the government’s response when Mr. Todd submitted,
a month later, a disability claim that would entitle him to a
monthly benefit check. Nearly 18 months went by before the
Department of Veterans Affairs granted his claim late last month,
Mr. Todd said.
Mr. Todd, 33, is part of a flood of veterans, young and old,
seeking disability compensation from the department for
psychological and physical injuries connected to their military
service. The backlog of unprocessed claims for those disabilities
is now over 400,000, up from 253,000 six years ago, the agency
said.
The department says its average time for processing those claims,
162 days, is better than it has been in at least eight years. But
it does not deny that it has a major problem, with some claims
languishing for many months in the department’s overtaxed
bureaucracy.
“There are some positive signs in terms of what we’re doing,” said
Michael Walcoff, deputy under secretary for benefits in the
Veterans Benefits Administration. “But we know that veterans
deserve better.”
Mr. Walcoff said the department recently finished hiring 4,200
claims processors, but many will not be fully trained for months.
The Government Accountability Office reported last year that the
Veterans Affairs Department had about 13,000 people processing
disability claims.
The larger significance of the backlog, veterans groups and
officials said, is that resources for veterans are being stretched
perilously thin by a confluence of factors beyond the influx of
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Aging Vietnam veterans with new or worsening ailments are
requesting care. Layoffs are driving unemployed veterans into the
department’s sprawling health system for the first time. Congress
has expanded certain benefits. And improved outreach efforts by
the department have encouraged more veterans to seek compensation
or care.
Mr. Walcoff said the vast majority of the 82,000 claims the
department received each month were not from veterans returning
from the current wars. “We’re still getting a lot of Vietnam
vets,” he said.
Veterans advocates say the actual backlog is nearing one million,
if minor claims, educational programs and appeals of denied claims
are factored in. They point to the discovery last year of benefits
applications in disposal bins at several department offices as
evidence of shoddy handling of claims. And they assert that they
routinely see frustratingly long delays on what seem like
straightforward claims.
One group, Veterans for Common Sense, has obtained records showing
that some veterans are calling suicide hotlines to talk about
their delayed disability claims. The group has called on the
department to replace processors who take exceedingly long to
handle claims.
“We’re not saying vets are threatening to commit suicide over the
claims issues,” said Paul Sullivan, executive director of the
group. “We’re saying V.A.’s claim situation is so bad that it is
exacerbating veterans’ already difficult situations.”
The
sprawling veterans compensation and pension system is expected to
pay $44 billion in benefits to about three million people this
year, the largest group of whom served during the Vietnam War.
Under the system, veterans who can demonstrate that a
psychological or physical problem resulted from their military
service are eligible for compensation and, if the injury is severe
enough, free health care. (All new veterans are eligible for
health care for five years after they leave service, regardless of
whether they are injured.)
Compensation is scaled by the severity of the disability: a
veteran with dependents who is rated 100 percent disabled, and
therefore unable to work, is eligible for more than $3,000 a
month.
Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, has emerged as one of the
most prevalent disability claims, after ailments like back pain
and knee injuries. Not only are many new veterans receiving a
diagnosis of the disorder, but an increasing number of Vietnam
veterans are also reporting symptoms for the first time, officials
and advocates said.
Delays in getting PTSD claims approved have prompted members of
Congress to propose legislation that would reduce the
documentation required to prove that a veteran’s disorder was
caused by specific combat events. Finding such documentation can
be difficult for Vietnam veterans, whose memories of events 40
years ago may have grown hazy. Records from that era are also
often difficult to find, advocates said.
Veterans who did not serve in combat units but who may have been
in firefights or witnessed traumatic events like roadside bombings
— common events in Iraq and Afghanistan — also report difficulties
documenting the sources of their disorder.
Those hurdles have added to the claims backlog, advocates said.
Legislation proposed by Representative John Hall, Democrat of New
York, would require the government to grant claims by veterans
with the disorder once they demonstrated simply that they had
served in a combat theater, which would include all of
Afghanistan, Iraq and Vietnam.
The projected cost of the legislation, $4.7 billion over 10 years,
according to the Congressional Budget Office, has become a
stumbling block. But Mr. Hall said the cost would be offset by the
benefits of reducing the backlog, avoiding appeals of rejected
claims and speeding compensation to veterans.
“We’ve got veterans sleeping under bridges or struggling to fit
back in with their families or looking for jobs,” Mr. Hall said.
“It’s no time to be messing around with compensation that we
probably owe them and will probably pay them anyway.”
The legislation might have eased the process for Mr. Todd, who
flew helicopters in Anbar Province for seven months in 2005 and
then served 10 months with an infantry unit in Ramadi, an
insurgent stronghold, in 2006 and 2007. He left the Marines in
2007 as a captain.
Many months after Mr. Todd received the PTSD diagnosis and first
submitted his claim, the department asked him to document two
stressful events that might have caused his trauma. For one, he
described driving a girl to the hospital after she was torn apart
by a bomb. She survived, but the memory still brings him to tears.
Now attempting to start his own business, Mr. Todd, who lives in
Orange County, N.Y., said he would receive $770 a month for his
disorder, as well as for shoulder, back, knee and hearing problems
linked to his service.
“There are a lot of other kids who need the money more,” he said.
“I just want the process to change, because it is ridiculous.”
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
claims, backlog |