AT THE VA -- He shelved a Seamless Transition
program
aimed at helping returning veterans when he
took over as VA Secretary in 2005.
The President just announced that VA
Secretary Jim Nicholson would be in charge of a new Seamless Transition
program designed to help our new veterans get their VA benefits quickly.
Story here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfMAR07/nf030807-3.htm
Now we find out he had a program ready to
go, but he shelved it when he became Secretary in 2005.
Video is 3:07 in length and comes from
ABC World News, Wednesday, March 7, 2007.
Or view in the embedded player if your
browser will allow:
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Under VA Chief, Effort to Aid Wounded Vets
Stalled, Ex-Employee Charges
Brian Ross and Justin Rood Report:
A proposal to keep seriously wounded vets from falling through the
cracks of the bureaucracy was shelved in 2005 when Jim Nicholson took
over as the secretary of the Veterans Affairs Department, according to
the former VA employee who was responsible for tracking war casualties.
As a result, seriously wounded veterans continued to face long delays
for health care and benefit payments after being discharged from the
military, says former VA program manager Paul Sullivan.
The program, called the Contingency Tracking System, had been approved
by Nicholson's predecessor but died once Nicholson took over the VA,
Sullivan told ABC News.
Sullivan said he was told the cost of the system -- less than $1 million
to build and requiring a handful of staff to maintain -- was
prohibitive.
When asked about the Contingency Tracking System at the White House
Wednesday, Nicholson told ABC News, "I'm not sure I know what program
you're referring to." He added that "when the VA gets patients...we
instantly create an electronic medical record for them."
In testimony before Congress today, a VA official confirmed that its
current tracking system still depends on paper files and lacks the
ability to download Department of Defense records into its computers, a
key flaw originally identified as leading to veterans getting lost
between the cracks.
Throughout 2004, the new program sat on a shelf while returning veterans
struggling with serious brain injuries, psychological trauma, paralysis
or worse spent weeks and months fighting the VA bureaucracy to receive
the benefits they deserved after being discharged from the armed
services, veterans advocates say.
"In that gap...people find themselves not being able to pay for their
car, their mortgage, they may have marital problems because they can't
pay their bills," said Steve Robinson, director of veterans' affairs for
the advocacy group Veterans for America. "You find suicide, alcohol
abuse, drug abuse, domestic violence."
Yesterday, President Bush put VA Secretary Nicholson in charge of an
interagency task force to determine what can be done to deliver benefits
and health care now to thousands of wounded vets who have struggled to
receive care.
The announcement came almost exactly two years after Nicholson had
received the newly designed system, itself the result of an internal VA
task force studying how to make sure wounded soldiers were "seamlessly"
transitioned from military service to veteran status with the care and
benefits they'd earned.
Despite Nicholson's apparently cool reception to the inexpensive
solution, others thought the system had merit. "It was a great idea,"
said Cynthia A. Bascetta, a congressional expert on veterans' health
care who was briefed on the project just prior to its completion. After
the briefing, she said, she didn't hear any more about it.
Newspaper exposes in 2004 prompted former VA Secretary Principi to come
up with a plan to fix the problem of wounded vets returning from Iraq
and Afghanistan and not receiving timely care and benefits.
"You read a story about someone who was caught in between and I said,
'Wait a minute. We have to do better than that,'" Principi, now a
lobbyist for the Pfizer pharmaceutical company, told ABC News.
Sullivan and his team designed the "Contingency Tracking System" (CTS),
a secure online database that would capture Department of Defense data
on soldiers wounded on the battlefield and track their status through
their medical care and treatment at both Defense and VA facilities.
To keep costs down, he said, he cadged computer hardware from other
offices which weren't using theirs.
CTS would record each vet's diagnosis and help VA staff make sure he or
she received all of the dozens of benefits they might qualify for as
soon as possible, from rehabilitative care to disability payments,
vocational training and more.
"Before the CTS, VA had no nationwide system for tracking casualties
from the battlefield," Sullivan said. Instead, the department relied on
a haphazard system of casualty records manually kept on spreadsheets at
several locations, which sometimes did not match up with Defense
Department casualty records. That process hampered vets' timely access
to medical care and other benefits after discharge, Sullivan said.
Sullivan left the VA in March 2006; he is now an advocate for improving
care for veterans. He reacted with dismay at yesterday's announcement
that Nicholson would be leading the new effort to make sure wounded
veterans get the care and benefits they deserve.
"I don't think it's a good idea for the people responsible for the
problem to be in charge of fixing it," he told ABC News.
In a written response to ABC News, the VA said a new tracking system
"very near deployment" would allow them to track casualties soon after
they left the battlefield, much the way CTS was designed to do in 2004.
---------------
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