| VA CLAIMS BACKLOG
AT HOUSTON ONE OF WORST IN COUNTRY
Houston is at the heart of a growing
national crisis involving the backlog of claims at the VA that's
approaching a record 1 million.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Use our search engine for more about the
horrendous claims backlog problem at the VA.
-------------------------
VA claims and appeals pile up in Houston
Thousands wait months for word
on benefits
By LINDSAY WISE
Houston Chronicle
Houston is at the heart of a
growing national crisis involving the backlog of claims at the
Department of Veterans Affairs that’s approaching a record 1
million, including thousands of returning service members injured
in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Nearly 18,000 veterans are waiting for the Houston VA Regional
Office to process their applications for disability benefits,
according to the most recent data released by the VA. What’s even
more troubling for some veteran advocates is the fact that 26
percent of those claims in Houston have been pending for more than
half a year, compared to 21 percent nationwide.
Total claims in Houston, including nondisability compensations and
pensions, add up to almost 24,000, with 24 percent pending over
six months. That percentage, too, is higher than the national
average.
Houston also currently has 11,389 claims in appeal, more than
anywhere else in the country.
Among ‘worst’ in U.S.
Overwhelmed, the Houston VA Regional Office has outsourced some of
its claims processing to VA facilities elsewhere in Texas and
other states.
“The situation at VA’s Houston office is among the worst in
America — more than 20,000 veterans are waiting for a claim
decision from VA, and more than one in four veterans already
waited more than six months for an answer from VA,” said Paul
Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, a
national advocacy group. “Our veterans and their families deserve
better.”
A Houston VA Regional Office spokeswoman said the number of claims
received by the facility have increased by 26 percent since last
year, a trend that represents more than twice the national average
of 12 percent.
“While the total workload pending has grown in light of this,
improvements have been made with regard to processing timeliness,”
Valerie Martinez said in a statement.
In
addition to outsourcing, she said, the Houston VA Regional Office
has been authorized to hire 105 employees to improve efficiency.
The average wait to complete a disability claim in Houston is
about 192 days, an improvement over last year’s average of 222
days.
The waiting game
Tomball native Richard Jimenez is all too familiar with the VA’s
waiting game. Every time the 27-year-old Marine veteran gets a VA
form letter in the mail, he barely glances at it before tossing it
in the trash.
The letters all say the same thing: That the appeal of his
disability claim rating for injuries he suffered during two tours
in Iraq and Afghanistan is still being processed. He’s been told
to expect a two- to five-year wait.
“It perplexes me that people could get welfare in a much smaller
time frame,” he said.
Jimenez first applied for disability benefits three years ago
after being diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder,
constant ringing in his ears, arthritis in both knees, hearing
loss, traumatic brain injury and pain caused by a bone fragment in
his back.
He meticulously filled out the VA’s 23-page application and waited
eight months for his claim to be processed. The appeal he filed to
challenge his disability rating — which determines his level of
benefits — has been pending since April of last year.
“To me it’s not even about the money,” Jimenez said. “It’s
principle more than anything. I volunteered to join the military.
I didn’t even know what disability was at the time, so I never
expected anything, but if they do offer I think they should follow
through on it.”
Veterans advocates say the complex claims process takes far too
long, especially for seriously wounded veterans, some of whom face
financial hardship or possible homelessness while they await
disability checks.
“They’re dependent right now for the VA to make the quickest
decision possible, and a lot of them are paying their bills off of
credit cards or going into debt,” said John Roberts, national
service director for Wounded Warrior Project, a nonprofit that
assists injured Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.
Jump in claims
Roberts worked as a supervisor in the disability claims division
at the Houston VA Regional Office before leaving to take a job
with Wounded Warrior Project in 2007.
He traces Houston’s problems to poor leadership and a staff
shortage, compounded by a flood of new claims.
Nationwide, the total number of VA claims has increased from
638,648 this time last year to 723,152, as of June 20. The number
of appeals went from 173,682 to 195,194.
At a congressional hearing in Washington last week, VA Deputy
Undersecretary for Benefits Michael Walcoff said it is incorrect
to designate all these claims as a backlog because the total
number “includes all claims received, whether pending for just a
few hours or as long as six months.”
Roberts said that’s semantics. “Every number still represents a
veteran waiting for a decision,” he said.
He attributes the bump in claims to troops returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan with severe injuries and mental health problems, as
well as legislation that made it easier for Vietnam veterans
exposed to Agent Orange to qualify for disability payments.
“All that took place, and it kind of put Houston in a hole they
haven’t been able to dig themselves out of,” he said.
Stress on employees, too
Right now, the Houston VA Regional Office doesn’t have enough
low-level mail sorters and filing clerks or senior officials
trained to process and review claims, Roberts said. “It’s a large
volume of paperwork, and they basically don’t have the manpower to
handle that,” he said. “It causes a lot of stress not only on the
veteran but a lot of times on the VA employees themselves.“
Jimenez, for one, isn’t waiting around for a check to arrive in
the mail. He’s studying biology at the University of Houston.
Scheduled to graduate in 2011, he jokes he could earn his
bachelor’s before the VA finishes with his appeal. For now, he has
a part-time job at a car dealership to make ends meet.
“It’s been tough, but like I said, I survived two wars. I can
survive the civilian world,” Jimenez said. “Just work a lot of
overtime and learn to budget well.”
-------------------------
TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
claims backlog, Houston |