
INFO SHEET #150 FROM WESUPPORTTHEVETS
Special
Infosheet
The story about veterans processing that never made the news. Matter of fact,
it was never really released to the public because of some of the facts here are
documented and to close to reality for the V.A.
It reads;
This is the article that Knight
Ridder pulled a day after it was published. WHY? By Whom???
VA's red tape squelches veterans' long-overdue disability claims
By Chris Adams and Alison Young (Knight-Ridder news)
March 3, 2005
Like thousands of his fellow veterans of America's wars, Alfred Brown died
waiting.
In 1945, when he was a 19-year-old soldier fighting in Italy, shrapnel from
an enemy shell ripped into his abdomen. His wounds were so severe that he
was twice administered last rites. When Brown came home, the government that
had promised to care for its wounded veterans instead shorted him.
Not until 1981, however, did Brown realize that his monthly disability check
didn't cover all the injuries he'd suffered. He launched what would become a
21-year battle.
"As a member of the so-called `Greatest Generation,' I am well aware of the
large numbers of us passing away," he wrote the nation's chief veterans
judge in 2001. "I am prepared to meet our Creator. My fear is that your
court will not make a decision in my case."
Brown was right. He died a year later, and his case died with him. As he
closed the books on the case, Judge Kenneth Kramer acknowledged that Brown
might have been right all along. Had Brown not died, the judge wrote, "I
believe that the Court would likely have so held."
Tens of thousands of other veterans have returned from war only to find that
they have to fight their own government to win the disability payments
they're owed. A Knight Ridder investigation has found that injured soldiers
who petition the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs for those payments are often doomed by
lengthy delays, hurt by inconsistent rulings and failed by the veterans
representatives who try to help them.
The investigation is based on interviews with veterans and their families
from around the country and on a review of internal VA documents and
computerized databases that had never been released to the public. Many of
the records were made available only after Knight Ridder sued the agency in
federal court.
The VA is a mammoth agency that serves 25 million veterans with a far-flung
health care system and a separate disability and pension operation. The
agency spends more than $60 billion a year, at least $20 billion of it on
disability compensation.
But the Knight Ridder investigation found that the VA serves neither
taxpayers nor veterans well. Some veterans never get what they're due, while
antiquated regulations mean that others are paid for disabilities that have
little effect on their ability to hold jobs or aren't related to their
military service.
For America's veterans, plus the thousands of soldiers now returning from
Iraq and Afghanistan, the investigation identified three points where cases
often go wrong: the selection of a special representative called a veterans
service officer, the review by a regional VA office and the filing of an
appeal.
Among Knight Ridder's findings:
Many of the VA-accredited experts who help veterans with their cases receive
minimal training and are rarely tested to ensure their competence. These
veterans service officers work for nonprofit organizations such as the
American Legion, as well as states and counties, but their quality is
uneven, and that often means the difference between a successful claim and a
botched one.
The VA's network of 57 regional offices produces wildly inconsistent
results, which means that a veteran in St. Paul, Minn., for example, is
likely to receive different treatment and more generous disability checks
than one from Detroit.
Veterans face lengthy delays if they appeal the VA's decisions. The average
wait is nearly three years, and many veterans wait 10 years for a final
ruling. In the past decade, several thousand veterans died before their
cases were resolved, according to an analysis of VA data.
"How a veteran seeking benefits gets treated should not be an accident of
geography," said George Basher, the director of the New York State Division
of Veterans' Affairs, one of 50 state agencies that help veterans.
"Unfortunately, the current system makes that a virtual certainty."
In interviews late last year, then-VA Secretary Anthony Principi and other
VA officials admitted to many of the agency's shortcomings, but they said
things have gotten better since the Bush administration took over. "This
agency was underwater in 2001," Principi said. "My people have made
tremendous progress."
The current secretary, Robert James "Jim" Nicholson, who was sworn in
recently, had no comment.
There have been some improvements in the last three years. But when it comes
to delays, cases that need to be redone and backlogs, things are the same or
worse than they were in the 1990s, Knight Ridder found, when the agency
vowed to clean up its act.
For the family of Kentucky veteran Alfred Brown, that decade brought nothing
but frustration. If a decision had come before he died, Brown could have
been entitled to nearly 45 years of back pay, his attorney said. Based on VA
payment rates, that would have been worth about $30,000.
"It wasn't so much the money," said his son Clayton Brown, on a day when he
visited his father's grave north of Lexington. "He felt he was robbed. He
almost gave his life up, and this is what he was getting in return?"
VA workers are reminded daily of the pledge by Abraham Lincoln "... to care
for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan ."
But the task isn't as simple as it used to be.
The VA makes disability payments for injuries as obvious as an amputated leg
and as complex as post-traumatic stress disorder. They include combat wounds
and peacetime injuries, since veterans are serving their country whether
they're in a Humvee in Iraq or in boot camp. Veterans are given ratings from
zero to 100 depending on how severe their disabilities are. Payments for a
single veteran range from $108 to $2,299 a month, and they're supposed to
reflect the vet's lost earnings potential.
But, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the disability
payments are based on 60-year-old labor-market assumptions. So veterans who
have desk jobs in today's service and information economy can draw checks
based on the fact their disabilities would keep them from good manufacturing
jobs.
The system stems from a time when war injuries were often less complex.
Today's soldier faces mental illnesses unacknowledged two generations ago,
as well as wounds that were often fatal in earlier wars.
Beyond that are tough fiscal realities. The Congressional Budget Office has
already indicated that the VA could save significantly if it eliminated new
payments for certain diseases not connected to military service. While most
payments can be linked directly to service, veterans also can qualify merely
if they're diagnosed soon after their military service.
The GAO offered one example: A Navy veteran was hospitalized with a heart
condition three months after his induction. Although the disease had its
inception in childhood, the veteran eventually received disability payments
based on the VA's highest rating. In all, the VA pays nearly $1 billion a
year for disabilities that the GAO says generally aren't directly linked to
veterans' service in the military.
Many veterans' cases go bad even before they file claims.
Applying for disability benefits requires veterans to navigate a labyrinth
of bureaucratic rules and unforgiving deadlines. It can require the skill of
an investigator and the mind of a physician.
That's why national veterans groups have for decades provided free help.
About 40 veterans service organizations, such as the American Legion and
Disabled American Veterans, are authorized to handle VA claims, as are many
states.
But Knight Ridder found that the network of VA-accredited service officers
is a patchwork of well-meaning helpers whose training and expertise vary
widely. Contrary to its own regulations, the VA does little to ensure that
veterans receive competent representation from veterans service
organizations. Yet the agency prohibits vets from hiring their own attorneys
until after their claims have been denied and they're generally years into
the appeals process.
Two-thirds of the veterans who submit claims use service officers, and
picking the right one can determine whether they get the full payment
they're due, a fraction of it or nothing.
"The best advocates can be very good and lousy ones can be awful," said Ron
Abrams, the joint executive director of the National Veterans Legal Services
Program, which trains service officers for the American Legion and other
veterans groups.
New evidence from Washington state illustrates for the first time the odds
veterans face in this service officer roulette.
Since July 2003, the Washington State Department of Veterans Affairs has
tracked the outcome of every claim filed by veterans groups that receive
state funding. The groups' success rates range from 53 percent to 81
percent. Among the busiest individual service officers, those handling 30 or
more decided claims, the success rates can range from 35 percent to 98
percent, the state's data show.
"You might be proud of the fact you filed 100 claims. But if pretty much
everything you filed was denied, it would cause some concern," said John
Lee, the department's deputy director.
The percentage of the Washington groups' claims being granted is on the rise
- from about 50 percent overall when the program began to about 70 percent
in recent months. Lee attributes it to the accountability the program
requires.
Although they fought the effort for years, the state's politically powerful
veterans groups now see its merit, and they've changed their training and
oversight as a result. The program is "an invaluable tool to see exactly
what the strengths and weaknesses are across the state," said Court Fraley,
the Veterans of Foreign Wars state service director.
Veterans officials in other states said such performance disparities are
certain to exist nationally because the training of service officers is so
inconsistent.
That's not the way it's supposed to be.
The VA, through its national accreditation program, is supposed to ensure
that all service officers are "responsible" and "qualified." But the VA
program does little more than rubberstamp names submitted by veterans
groups. About 11,000 service officers are currently on the VA's roster -
about 80 percent are accredited through nonprofit groups.
VA regulatory files, obtained after Knight Ridder's lawsuit, reveal that the
agency has done little in decades to determine the adequacy of the training
provided by veterans groups or to check the quality of the claims prepared
by their officers. Only rarely does the VA suspend or revoke a service
officer's accreditation. When it does happen, it's generally the result of
criminal charges rather than incompetence.
"What we do is take it on the word of the service organization that the
individual has had sufficient training," said Martin Sendek of the VA's
general counsel's office.
That training, however, varies widely, according to a Knight Ridder survey
of 13 of the largest veterans groups and all 50 state veterans departments.
At one end of the spectrum is Disabled American Veterans, which has
full-time paid national service officers and a 16-month training and testing
program that's so regimented that it qualifies for 10 hours of college
credit.
Groups such as American Ex-Prisoners of War and Catholic War Veterans rely
largely on part-time volunteers who aren't required to complete any courses
or pass any tests. "We don't get paid, so we're not going to be that strict
with these people," said Doris Jenks, the national training director for
American Ex-Prisoners of War.
Nonprofits generally have less stringent requirements for service officers
than those working for the 33 state veterans agencies that responded to the
survey.
Just 62 percent of nonprofits and 73 percent of the state agencies require
continuing education for all service officers, something experts consider
crucial given the VA's constantly changing rules.
Only 38 percent of nonprofits and 67 percent of states require a test before
recommending that the VA accredit a representative. And once accredited, few
service officers are ever tested to ensure their competence: While 27
percent of the states require later testing, only one nonprofit, Disabled
American Veterans, had that requirement.
VA officials bristled at suggestions that their oversight of accredited
service officers is lax and said they're unaware of any systemic problems.
Retired Vice Adm. Daniel Cooper, the VA's undersecretary for benefits, said
the VA fixes any mistakes that service officers might make. If anything
needs to be done to make an application complete, Cooper said, "we do it."
General counsel Tim McClain noted that veterans have extensive appeal
rights. "There are a lot of checks and balances in the system," he said.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, however, has repeatedly ruled
that veterans are out of luck when they've been steered wrong by
VA-accredited service officers.
Ask Gerry Corwin.
As the navigator aboard a B-24 bomber during World War II, Corwin survived
more than 30 missions over Japanese-controlled waters. He came home to
Minneapolis with two Air Medals - and disabling nightmares and flashbacks.
There were images of his buddies burning in planes crashed on runways and of
a friend killed on a mission that Corwin persuaded him to take. By December
1984, those nightmares began to overtake the TV executive.
Corwin applied for disability benefits and was denied, in part because the
VA couldn't find many of his military records, which had burned in a 1973
fire at a national archive in St. Louis.
So Corwin went to the Minnesota Department of Veterans Affairs and enlisted
the help of Kirk Jones, a service officer who'd become VA-accredited a year
earlier through his state and the American Legion.
Jones submitted a three-sentence letter on Corwin's behalf and didn't take
any steps to prove Corwin's claim. He didn't, for example, push for a
psychiatric examination from the VA. He didn't round up statements from
Corwin's crew to corroborate that they'd been sent home in May 1945 for
"combat fatigue."
"I should have suggested a VA examination," Jones, who no longer is a
service officer, said recently. He acknowledged that he'd had minimal
training when he first handled Corwin's claim.
That 1984 claim went nowhere.
In 1995, Jones, who by then had gained extensive experience plus classroom
training, restarted Corwin's claim. He did all the things he hadn't done a
decade earlier, and more.
This time, Jones helped Corwin win compensation for post-traumatic stress
disorder and a heart problem. Jones filed several appeals, and each time the
VA granted more benefits, eventually declaring Corwin totally disabled in
1998.
Even so, the veterans court ruled last summer that Corwin can't collect back
pay from 1984-1995 because the proper documents weren't filed in 1986 to
keep his original claim alive.
Corwin's loss is tens of thousands of dollars, he and his lawyer estimate.
"It would mean a home. Let's start with that," said Corwin, 82, who with his
wife, Katherine, has been living in a house her family owns in rural
Mississippi.
"To have to come back and to fight 20 years to get what you're supposed to
be given, and to fight your own government for it, is disappointing," he
said.
Even when a service officer does a good job, veterans' claims often get
bogged down in the VA's 57 regional offices, where veterans' claims are
processed.
In an electronic age, these regional offices are a throwback to an
ink-and-paper world. In Waco, Texas, the records room is almost the length
of a football field, with row after row of file cabinets - 2,700 in all -
containing records that date back six decades.
Workers wheel massive brown folders with rubber bands around them around on
carts, shifting them from one table to the next as they move through the
approval process. In the constant shuffle of paper, things get lost and
mistakes get made.
Nationwide, errors are made in 13 percent of claims, more than three times
the agency's hoped-for rate of 4 percent, according to a VA quality-control
database that reviews a sample of the decisions. That translates to 103,000
errors a year; in many cases they can result in either an overpayment or an
underpayment of benefits.
"I don't think anybody is proud of the fact that we have" a 13 percent error
rate, said Michael Walcoff, who oversees the agency's regional offices.
Errors often trigger appeals, sending thousands of veterans into an ongoing
cycle of mistakes, appeals, rehearings, mistakes, appeals, rehearings.
In some regional offices, the error rate last year was far worse - as high
as 23 percent in Wilmington, Del. (The low was 3 percent, in Des Moines,
Iowa.) And such varied performances affect nearly every aspect of a
veteran's experience:
The percentage of all types of claims that are approved ranges from 89
percent in St. Paul to less than 70 percent in Jackson, Miss., and Cheyenne,
Wyo., according to an annual VA survey of veterans. Perhaps not
surprisingly, "satisfaction" among veterans is highest in St. Paul, at 73
percent, compared with 50 percent in Atlanta. Knight Ridder found that
disability ratings, which determine the size of a veteran's monthly check,
also vary widely.
An analysis of 3.4 million veterans claims shows that major mental ailments,
such as post-traumatic stress disorder and schizophrenia, are subject to
bigger regional swings than major physical ailments such as bad backs and
knees. For example, veterans with PTSD assigned to the Wilmington office are
more likely to have the highest disability rating than their counterparts in
Lincoln, Neb. In Delaware, 34 percent of those with PTSD have the highest
rating; in Lincoln, it's 10 percent.
Diagnosing mental disorders is more subjective, and parts of the country
have been slow to recognize them. Different training standards in the past
may also have contributed to regional VA differences.
Because the major psychiatric disabilities on average pay more than the
major physical ones, the wider swings have a dramatic impact on veterans'
payments. The different ratings may help explain a puzzle noticed by
veterans every time the VA releases its annual report: Average disability
checks vary by state.
The VA wouldn't comment on Knight Ridder's analysis but said in a statement
that it's investigating regional differences, which it attributed to
"extremely complex" factors. The agency "is committed to treating every
veteran's claim fairly and equitably" and has nationwide training programs
to help eliminate uneven treatment.
The GAO last year reported that the VA "cannot provide reasonable assurance
that similarly situated veterans who submit claims for the same impairment
to different regional offices receive reasonably consistent decisions."
The final minefield is the VA appeals system, where claims often linger.
It's a problem the VA recognizes. "It takes too long. We all agree on that,"
said Ron Garvin, acting chairman of the Board of Veterans' Appeals.
With the average disability payment now $7,860 a year, back-benefit awards
can be substantial because an award is calculated as though the VA made the
right decision when the claim was first filed. Some veterans with severe
disabilities win $100,000 or more.
But if a veteran dies with his or her case under appeal, the case dies, too.
In the past decade, more than 13,700 veterans died while their cases were in
some stage of the appeals process, according to a Knight Ridder analysis of
a VA appeals records database. (While precise estimates aren't available,
the VA said experience suggests a few thousand of them wouldn't have
actively pursued their appeals.)
Even if a veteran wins a case but dies before receiving payment, his family
is often out of luck. Unless the veteran had an eligible spouse or dependent
child, the money stays in the U.S. Treasury.
The agency goes so far as to take back money it's already paid. George
Wilkes, a World War II sailor, spent the last five years of his life
fighting to increase his disability rating, which stemmed from a spinal cord
injury. In April 1997, the VA agreed with him and said he was due back
benefits of $109,464.
Wilkes, ill with pneumonia, died four days later. Six days after that, the
VA wired the money into his bank account.
Once the VA realized Wilkes had died, it wouldn't let his family keep the
money. Although he had no immediate family, Wilkes' nephew and niece had
tended to him for years, allowing him to stay in his New Orleans home.
Had the money come years earlier, it "would have had a substantial impact on
his life," said nephew Ray Wilkes of Covington, La. "His house was pretty
deplorable and was deteriorating. But he was determined to live on his own."
In an October interview, then-Secretary Principi said he was "stung" when he
learned a few years ago how common it is for veterans to die with their
cases in limbo. While some deaths are inevitable, given the VA's elderly
clientele, "it's not acceptable," he said. "We need to do something about
it."
He also suggested that a recently formed commission on benefits could
reconsider the legal barriers that prevent heirs other than a wife or
dependent child from receiving a deceased veteran's back benefits.
The VA has admitted that its processes are too slow and too prone to errors.
And veterans have told the agency that they suspect the worst: that the
agency is "just stalling, waiting for them to die so the claim won't have to
be paid," veterans said in focus groups in 1995.
But the agency has repeatedly ignored recommendations to eliminate redundant
steps in the process to speed things up. One exhaustive review, completed in
1996, declared the entire claims and appeals process "cumbersome and
outmoded" and in need of an overhaul.
Since then, "I think things are basically the same," said the agency's
Walcoff. "I wouldn't say that we have changed the system in any major way."
In fact, VA data show that delays and the percentage of cases being sent
back for re-hearings are basically unchanged since the agency vowed to
reduce them.
In the mid-1990s, about the time it promised to speed things up, the VA also
denied Berlie Bowman's claim.
Bowman had gone to Vietnam in 1967, an outgoing kid following in his
father's military footsteps. "When he was drafted, he went without a fuss,"
said his sister Paulette. "He was a different person when he came back."
He was skittish, quick to anger, uneasy in crowds. The family trod warily
around him - "learned to wake him from a distance by touching his feet with
something," his VA file said. Over three decades, he ran through 30 jobs; he
lived in a small trailer on a curvy North Carolina road.
His first disability claim, in 1971 for "nerves," was denied. His second
try, in 1995, met a similar fate.
But that time, Bowman pushed back.
Working with an attorney, he assembled evidence to show that he had
post-traumatic stress disorder and to document that it had started in
Vietnam. The case wound up and down the system, receiving six different
rulings, until Bowman fell ill with pancreatic cancer.
On June 16, 2004, the Board of Veterans' Appeals finally agreed with
Bowman's claim. It declared that "credible supporting evidence" showed that
Bowman suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder caused by his time in
Vietnam, just as Bowman had contended for nine years.
Bowman's attorney immediately pestered the VA for Bowman's back benefits,
dating to 1995. By then, Bowman's cancer treatment had been stopped.
On June 21, attorney Dan Krasnegor or his assistant talked with the VA every
two hours. On June 22, they were told that the official disability rating
was complete and that only final signatures were needed before Bowman's
check for $53,784 could be cut. "Oh, it's in the computer system," they were
told.
Berlie Bowman died that night, and his claim died with him. No check was
sent.
At his burial, Bowman's mother accepted a smartly folded American flag from
the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Seventeen old soldiers stood in formation in
the rain. A bugler played taps; riflemen splintered the silence with a
three-gun salute.
"The march of our comrade Berlie Bowman is over," intoned the VFW's
chaplain.
Editors:The following copy block describes the VA's goals for claims
processing:
The VA has repeatedly reset its goals for how efficiently it handles
veterans' claims. One of its critical measures is the time necessary to
decide an initial claim for disability benefits. At one time in the
mid-1990s, the VA had a long-term goal to process claims in 60 days. It
later increased that to 74 days, and then to 90 days. Average processing
time instead ballooned to 223 days by 2002 before coming down slightly.
Last spring, the VA told Congress it was "on track" to reach a processing
time of 100 days by the end of 2004. It didn't reach that target; today, the
actual time stands at 165 days.
The agency recently changed its long-term goal again, to 125 days. The
increased goals, the VA said, are due to changes in the law and the nature
of claims currently being received.
©2005 Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service ©2005 Knight Ridder/Tribune
Information Services Knight Ridder Washington Bureau
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