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UPDATE: A LOOK AT VA'S DOCUMENT PROBLEMS
IN
COLUMBIA, SC -- VFW: "We don't know how many, we
don't
know why it happened. It will be interesting to
find out."

VA Regional Office in Columbia, SC
All stories regarding the VA's shredder and
document handling scandal can be found on this page... click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/VAshredderscandal.htm
Story here...
http://www.herald
online.com/109/story/937236.html
Story below:
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-------------------------
VA officials investigate mishandled documents at
benefits offices in S.C.
By Chuck Crumbo · The (Columbia) State
COLUMBIA -- Veterans Affairs officials are investigating why 95 records
were erroneously dumped in a shredder bin at the VA office in Columbia.
An unidentified employee at the Columbia office is under investigation for
mishandling the documents, which include new benefits claims and other
personal files, VA officials said.
"I can't discuss in detail what action may be taken against an employee in
this instance until the investigation is complete," VA press secretary
Alison Aikele said Wednesday.
In South Carolina, the possible destruction of benefit claims could affect
some of the state's 413,000 veterans. The shredding probe involves the
VA's benefits offices, not the hospitals.
So far, few veterans suspect they might have a problem resulting from
their benefit claim being erroneously shredded.
"We don't know how many, we don't know why it happened," said Rodney Burne,
quartermaster of the Veterans of Foreign Wars S.C. department. "It will be
interesting to find out."
The documents slated for destruction were found in the shredder bin Oct. 3
as part of the agency's inspector general's review of how veterans records
and claims are handled.
The probe discovered 41 of the VA's 57 regional offices, including
Columbia, had 500 records wrongly slated for shredding. The VA further
determined that half of those records were found in shredder bins at the
Columbia office and at two other offices, St. Louis and Cleveland.
Forty-six
of the records -- or about half discovered in the shredder bin at the
Columbia office -- were either new claims for benefits or supporting
documents.
Other claims included burial and death benefits, notices of clients'
disagreements with VA rulings, and documents for education benefits.
The House Veterans Affairs Committee, whose membership includes U.S. Rep.
Henry Brown, R-S.C., plans to look into the issue in mid-November, an aide
said.
Officials from the VA as well as representatives of veterans service
organizations will be invited to the discussion.
Brown called the reports "troubling," and added "there is never any excuse
for the shredding of documents, especially when they jeopardize the
benefits our veterans are entitled to."
Brown said the incident "shows how important it is for the VA to focus on
modernizing its information technology systems and establishing clear
safeguards."
The shredding issue was first reported by vawatchdog.org, a Web site run
by Army veteran Larry Scott, of Vancouver, Wash.
Scott learned records were erroneously dumped in shredder bins at the VA's
Detroit office. VA investigators discovered Detroit was just part of the
problem, so they ordered all 57 offices to check their shredder bins.
The fact that the Columbia office would have the most records in the
shredder bin wasn't a surprise, Scott said.
The Columbia office has a reputation as a "troubled office," meaning it
has a low clearance rate of veterans' claims.
In 2005, the VA reported Columbia had the third-highest remand rate of the
agency's 57 regional offices. A remand is a benefit case that, once
appealed, must be redone.
The VA said 50.1 percent of 3,095 cases filed with the Columbia office had
to be remanded. The agencywide average was 44.3 percent.
Veterans with concerns about their files and claims are asked to call the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, (800) 827-1000.
-----
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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