Category: Veterans’ Affairs Department

  • House bill would ban VA bonuses

    The House Veterans Affairs Committee passed a bill today that would grant in-state tuition rates to all veterans attending public universities as well as ban all VA executive bonuses for five years.

    Senior executives at the Department of Veterans Affairs would be banned from receiving any bonuses for five years under legislation approved by a congressional committee Wednesday.

    The move comes after two weeks of criticism over how the department awards bonuses, and reports of several five-figure awards for VA officials despite questionable performances.

    “Questionable performances” is inaccurate – piss-poor performance is better.

    Representative Jeff Miller, R-Fla., the head of the committee issued a statement on the bill.

    “The fact that so many VA executives collected huge performance bonuses year after year while continually failing at their jobs calls into question whether department leaders even know the meaning of the word ‘accountability,’” he said in a statement.

    “Until we have complete confidence that VA is holding executives accountable – rather than rewarding them – for their mistakes, no one should get a performance bonus.”

    The VA suspended bonuses for fiscal year 2012 last month, but lawmakers, including Miller, complained that the VA decision didn’t go far enough.

    Additionally, the bill calls for an increase in the amount of disability compensation equal to increases in Social Security increases.

    The bill will have to pass the full House and the Senate before it becomes law.

    The full text of the bill can be found here.

    Cross posted from After the Army.

  • Jon Stewart goes after the VA, again

    I’m just going to leave these here and let you watch through them:

    “In only two more years, they’re hoping to only have you wait four more months” sums up the progress the VA has made.

    Cross posted from After the Army.

  • Soliciting your VA experiences

    I’m doing an interview on Monday afternoon in regards to how you guys are getting screwed over by the VA. So, if you folks can tell me some of the interesting things that have happened to you (wait times for claims and appointments, lost paperwork, irritating VA employees, etc…) it’d sure help me out. Since I mostly use MTFs, I haven’t had much experience with the VA, although I’m in the middle of one right now trying to get some leg braces, but that’s probably not enough to fill up a whole interview.

  • Shinseki rewards murderer at Pittsburgh VA

    TSO forwards a link in the Pittsburgh Gazette from a reader in regards to the $62,000 annual bonus (the highest allowable cash award for a government executive) paid to VA regional director Michael Moreland in Pittsburgh just days before an investgation laid the deaths of six veterans from Legionaire’s Disease at his feet;

    That confluence of events has members of Congress, VA employees and families of the Legionnaires’ victims furious that VA Secretary Eric Shinseki — who nominated Mr. Moreland — allowed him to receive the award even though many people believe he deserves at least some of the blame for the outbreak since it occurred under his watch as regional director.

    Many believe Mr. Moreland played a more direct role by closing the Special Pathogens Laboratory — which oversaw Legionella control and prevention — and firing and forcing out Legionnaires’ experts Victor Yu and Janet Stout, when he was director of the Pittsburgh VA in 2006.

    “Are you kidding me?” said Judy Nicklas, daughter-in-law of William Nicklas, 87, of Hampton, who died in November after contracting Legionnaires’. “Unbelievable.”

    Oh, by the way, Moreland received the Presidential Distinguished Rank Award at a black tie banquet Friday at the White House. OK, maybe “murderer” is a little strong, but certainly Moreland is culpable in those deaths if what the Gazette reports is true.

    But more importantly, this is indicative of the incompetence that is routinely rewarded in the Department of Veterans’ Affairs under Shinseki. The Administrator of the Department has to be a leader, and we constantly find Shinseki with shit on his shoes. He’s no leader and veterans are fricking dying as a result of his utter incompetence as a failed leader.

    The Pittsburgh VA first publicly revealed it had an outbreak on Nov. 16, 2012, even though officials, including Mr. Moreland, knew they had a serious problem as early as July 2011, when Mr. Ciarolla died.

    So is this going to be the VA’s Benghazi? Not if you don’t speak out.

  • No bonuses for VA execs

    The Stars & Stripes reports that the Department of Veterans’ Affairs has made the “no shit” decision to fore go any performance bonuses for their executive staff because of their inability to overcome the backlog of claims from veterans;

    The announcement comes as the department faces increased scrutiny over the backlog, which has remained stagnant for more than a year. The number of disability and compensation claims pending more than 125 days has stayed near 600,000 for more than a year, and the average time to complete a claim now sits at more than nine months.

    Critics have blamed the problem in part on underperforming employees and a lack of leadership among senior leaders.

    VA officials could not say how much the forfeited bonuses will total. In fiscal 2011, senior executives throughout the department pulled in about $3.4 million in performance awards.

    Well, at least the VA has finally admitted that they might be the problem. Now if they could just clean house and put some people in charge who could actually lead their staff.

  • VA to be slammed by Obamacare

    The Navy Times has a story about the coming implementation of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, and the impact it will likely have on the Department of Veterans Affairs.

    Starting in 2014, the law punishes those without health insurance, and the VA’s health plan meets the minimum requirement for coverage – which means that there may be an increase in the number of people seeking health care from the VA.

    It is unclear how many veterans might turn to VA, but the 2014 budget includes $85 million to cover increased medical care costs, plus $3.4 million to cover administrative costs because VA would have to provide a written statement to each enrolled veteran about their coverage.

    The VA’s 2014 budget estimates coverage for 6.5 million veterans, an increase of 1.3% over fiscal year 2013 – about 100,000 more veterans than this year.

    There’s a problem there:

    Kenneth Kizer, director of the Institute for Population Health Improvement at University of California Davis Health System, estimates 1.8 million uninsured veterans will be looking for coverage when the Affordable Care Act requirement kicks in next year.

    Last time I checked, 1,800,000 is a whole hell of a lot greater than 100,000, so there are going to be issues with VA health care next year, as if there weren’t already.

    Cross posted from After the Army

  • VA expediting older claims; will it bite them later?

    While Jonn posted some praise for the VA earlier, I have some news that might not be so praiseworthy:

    Is this the right move by a Department of Veterans Affairs that has come under fire recently for the massive backlog of claims, or is it too little, too late?

    The Veterans Affairs Department is expediting compensation claims decisions for veterans who have waited one year or longer, VA officials announced April 19.

    Effective today, VA claims raters will make provisional decisions on the oldest claims on hand, officials said, which will allow veterans to begin collecting compensation benefits more quickly, if eligible.

    Veterans will be able to submit additional evidence for consideration a full year after the provisional rating, before VA issues a final decision.

    “Too many veterans wait too long for a decision, and this has never been acceptable,” said VA Secretary Eric K. Shinseki. “That is why we are implementing an aggressive plan to eliminate the backlog in 2015. This initiative is the right thing to do now for veterans who have waited the longest.”

    I see this backfiring in a big way.

    Here’s my take:

    Starting today, the VA will approve claims older than a year at the minimum level for each condition for which there is significant evidence. In order to get the proper rating, the veterans will have to submit more proof that the condition warrants a higher rating – after all, the evidence already in the claim was “reviewed” and a rating was “issued.”

    So now, instead of veterans waiting for [mostly] proper ratings, they will get lowered ratings faster, and will have to wait through the appeals process for the ratings they should have gotten in the first place.

    Here’s the proof:

    If any increase is determined to be warranted based on the additional evidence received, benefits will be retroactive to the date the claim was initially filed. The initiative protects the veteran’s right to appeal the decision. If no further evidence is received within that year, VA’s Veterans Benefits Administration will inform the veteran that the rating is final and will provide information on the standard appeals process.

    Additionally, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee Jeff Miller, R-Fla., issued this statement:

    “While this new approach sounds promising, we will be monitoring it closely to make sure it’s good policy rather than just good PR. Driving our skepticism is the fact that Sec. Shinseki and VA benefits officials have testified before our committee several times in just the last few weeks, yet the first official notice of this initiative didn’t come until today – minutes before VA issued its press release. Nevertheless, VA has a responsibility to make sure it doesn’t use this program as an excuse for letting average claims processing times continue their steady ascent indefinitely. Furthermore, the department must not shift resources and manpower away from processing new claims just to clear out old ones. Every veteran deserves a thorough, fair and timely evaluation of their claim, regardless of when it was filed. This policy should not interfere with that concept.

    “The department’s haphazard rollout of this plan has left us with a number of important questions. So in the coming days and weeks, we expect VA to fully explain to Congress precisely how this program will improve the department’s claims processing efforts and help chip away at the mountain of backlogged benefits claims.”

    The VA just put a band-aid on a sucking chest wound – and it’s going to come back to bite them big time.

    TSO did point out that the approved claim will allow the veteran to seek medical care while waiting for the proper ratings to come back, rather than just waiting. Still, I think the VA is going to screw this up big time, and veterans still won’t be getting the benefits they’ve earned.

    Cross-posted from After the Army.

  • The post wherein I praise the Department of Veterans’ Affairs

    I was shocked this morning when I got a call from my Veterans’ Service Officer at the Paralyzed Veterans of America in regards to my claim for 100% disability that I filed back on March 1st. It has been approved starting May 1st. I know. Shocking, isn’t it? When my VSO told me that it would take 90 days at the beginning of the process, I was pessimistic.

    So, I’m thinking that the VA’s problems with claims processing is a regional thing. My claim was filed at the Martinsburg, WV VA center. Of course, my claim was simpler than most – all they needed was the diagnosis from my doctor that said I have ALS because there’s no way to diagnose the disease, you have to eliminate all of the other things it could be and the doctors at Walter Reed have been doing that for two years. I didn’t need countless appointments to see the VA’s doctors. I did that for the first claim back in 1995.

    But, when the VA is wrong, I’ve been quick to criticize, so when they do something right, I have to praise them. But that doesn’t mean that I’m going to let up on them while they’re still screwing you guys and the thousands in line with you.

    Maybe the other VA centers should send their folks to Martinsburg and learn what they’re doing right, instead of going to Vegas or wherever for their training parties.