March 25, 2007

House Panel claims VA Not Doing Enough for Iraq Vets



Associated Press | March 14, 2007
WASHINGTON - The Veterans Affairs' system for handling disability claims is strained to its limit, and the Bush administration's current efforts to relieve backlogs won't be enough to serve veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, investigators said Tuesday.

In testimony to a House panel, the Government Accountability Office and Harvard professor Linda Bilmes detailed their study into the VA's claims system in light of growing demands created by wars. They found a system on the verge of crisis due to backlogs, cumbersome paperwork and ballooning costs.

The House hearing is the latest to review the quality of care for wounded troops returning from Iraq - from emergency medical care at military hospitals, to long-term rehabilitation at VA clinics and eventual transition to civilian life with VA disability payments.

According to their findings, the VA:

-Took between 127 to 177 days to process an initial claim and an average of 657 days to process an appeal, resulting in significant hardship to veterans. In contrast, the private sector industry takes about 89.5 days to process a claim.

-Had a claims backlog of roughly 600,000.

-Will see 638,000 new first-time claims in the next five years due to the Iraq war - 400,000 by the end of 2009 alone - creating added costs of between $70 billion and $150 billion.

-Maintained a system for determining a veteran's disability that was complex and applied inconsistently across regional centers. Results varied; for example, Salt Lake City took 99 days to process a claim, while Honolulu spent 237 days.

-Had antiquated technology for processing claims, such as unreliable old fax machines.

The findings drew fire from House members. Rep. John Hall, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs subcommittee on disability assistance, floated the possibility that the Veterans Affairs Department should be merged into the Defense Department.
"When our Soldiers and military personnel return home and need help, they should get the assistance they have earned without delay," said Hall, D-N.Y.

Colorado Rep. Doug Lamborn, the panel's top Republican, said the overstressed claims system was courting a "financial and potentially emotional disaster."

Bilmes, a professor at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government who co-authored a paper on the war's economic costs with Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, described a failed system that could have been prevented after years of warnings. She urged simplifying the disability ratings system, reducing time VA staffers spend documenting disabilities, and conducting random audits instead.

"The veterans returning from Iraq are suffering from the same problem that has plagued many other aspects of the war, namely a failure to plan ahead," she said.
Responding, Ronald Aument, deputy under secretary for benefits at the VA, told the House panel that the department was working to shorten delays. The VA also was consolidating some processing operations, and planned to add 400 new employees by the end of June.

"Expediting the claims process is critical to assisting veterans in their transition from combat operations back to civilian life," Aument said.

The hearing follows disclosures of roach-infested conditions and shoddy outpatient care at Walter Reed Medical Center, one of the nation's premier military hospitals. Since the disclosures by the Washington Post, three high-level Pentagon officials have been forced to step down. President Bush has also appointed a commission led by former Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and former HHS Secretary Donna Shalala, a Democrat, to conduct a broad review on veteran and troop care.

"If anything the recent Walter Reed expose has taught us is that trying to treat and care for Soldiers and veterans on a limited budget and limited oversight only has one logical conclusion, poor care," said Patrick Campbell, legislative director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.

Daniel Bertoni, an acting director at the GAO, Congress' investigative arm, said the VA system has been riddled with problems for years. "After more than a decade of research, we have determined that federal disability programs are in urgent need of attention and transformation," he said.

Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., said what was needed was to create specialized case workers known as "navigators" who could make sure Soldiers don't fall through the cracks after leaving military service and before they enter the VA system.

Menendez planned to introduce legislation Wednesday to create a pilot program with $25 million in grants over the next five years. The navigators would focus on helping new veterans who are members of the National Guard, women or suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

"The Veteran Navigators, who will not be part of the government system, will be better able to advocate for veterans to make sure they are treated fairly," Menendez said.

8 Comments:

At 1:18 AM, Blogger Jagmedic said...

In the United States, there are more women serving in the Armed
Forces than in any other period in American history. More than one
hundred sixty thousand female US soldiers have served in Iraq,
Afghanistan and the Middle East since 2003, which means one in seven soldiers is a woman.

At least four hundred fifty women have been wounded in Iraq, and seventy one have died -- more female casualties and deaths than in the Korean, Vietnam and first Gulf Wars combined.

With the increased number of women serving in the US military,
something else is on the rise too: rape and sexual assault by their
male comrades. To make matters worse, female soldiers say they can't trust the US military to protect them.

(article at)
The Private War of Women Soldiers: Female Vet, Soldier Speak Out on
Rising Sexual Assault Within US Military

http://www.democrac ynow.org/ article.pl? sid=07/03/ 08/1443232

Jagmedic said the dirty little secret is out again

 
At 6:23 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Hey, I hope all is well. There is this great veteran of the Navy, he was a Hospital Corpsman who worked with the Marines and other troops, his name is Wesley. The poor guy has been going through a rough time. He returned from duty and worked with his dad for a while. Unfortunately, his father turned out to be a thief and stole millions of dollars. The law has dealt with his father and our fellow veteran friend was cleared with no charges, as he was unknowing of any wrong doing. So, in the recent year our veteran friend has lost half of his family because he did not approve of what his father did, so he removed himself. Our veteran friend has become the target of some people who are on a witch hunt because putting our veteran friends dad in jail was not enough. Please e-mail this guy: jim@summitfa.com and ask him to remove his unfounded posts from the net. Look, this guy, Wesley, is only 28 and should not have to pay for what his father has done. As is said, "he is not his father's keeper." Thank you. SSGT Lawrence, looking out for our own.

 
At 2:07 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

God Bless America & Great Britain on the War on Terror,

Mack.

 
At 4:59 PM, Blogger Kellie Manier said...

Mr. Bucaro,

My name is Kellie Manier and I'm a Western Kentucky University photojournalism student. My web publishing class is currently working on a project on Clarksville and the families, the community, and the economy is being affected by deployments. I tried e-mailing you, but for some reason wouldn't deliver. I think because you are a veteran and live in Clarksville, you would be a great resource and I would love to talk to you more about this project and get some insight from you. Please feel free to e-mail me at kellie.manier@wku.edu.

Thanks,

Kellie Manier

 
At 12:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

THE DISILLUSIONED

Remember, Mommy,
I´m off to get Sadaami,
So send me a salami...
--Tom Lehrer (emended)

They said that I was fighting for my country and I was,
But now I merely feel like such a fool:
My countrymen did not support my mission or my cause,
And I was just unwittingly a tool.

Those we supposed we went to help despised us even more,
Yet scores of cruelties couldn´t make them like us,
And we returned the feeling--move me over by the door,
I like "the kind old sun" and blooming ficus.

Read me "Futility" that I might drink the bitter dregs,
I hear the words and feel the sunlight´s warm,
Now my remorse runs like a millipede on all its legs,
But I asked God to keep me safe from harm.

The Government has put me in a slum with all the rest,
A seedy place where no one gives a damn--
So different from the words with which a youth was wooed, caressed,
Which is the reason I´m in such a jam.

Prior to my enlistment all the world was in my hands,
My faith in God and Government intact,
But now I see it merely was the worst of brigand bands
Which sought my services, and that´s the fact.

No, let me rest a while. The kind old sun will ease my pain,
While propaganda tells me I am happy,
Yet it was all a vanity for which my troop was slain,
Myself condemned to this discomfort crappy.

Remorse runs like a centipede but I no more can run,
And bleeding hearts may like to bleed but tell me what they´ve done,
Yet I, that served them in their greed and sacrificed my fun,
What have I left, but life low-keyed, and pain beneath the sun?

I.M. Small

 
At 11:11 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Check out new BlogTalkRadio show called “Dot-Mil-Docs.” The first show is about TRICARE benefits and some of the future shows will be about Traumatic Brain Injury, suicide, and coping with the stress of deployment.
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Dot-Mil-Docs

 
At 2:06 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for writing this.

 
At 5:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Veterans deserve proper medical care, it's a shame that these issues are always so complicated.

 

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