Vets Still Face Long Delays From VA
Philadelphia Inquirer | October 20, 2005
Months after the Department of Veterans Affairs told Congress it expected its
processing time for veterans' disability claims to drop, agency internal reports
show little or no progress.
Records show that the department is struggling in its attempt to reduce
veterans' waiting time, in part because VA employee productivity nationwide is
only three-quarters of what is expected. In some regional offices, it is far
lower.
The delays mean tens of thousands of veterans who were injured serving the
country are waiting far longer to have their cases decided than lawmakers - or
even the VA - would like. The waiting-time measure is one of the agency's key
goals to show how well it is serving veterans.
In March, the department was under fire from lawmakers for poor service. VA
Secretary James Nicholson told Congress he expected processing times to drop to
145 days for the fiscal year, a target that itself had been changed from prior
goals that aimed to bring the average to 100 or fewer days.
For the first 11 months of the 2005 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30, the
department's average time to process disability claims was 167 days, one day
slower than last year, according to a Sept. 22 VA report obtained by Knight
Ridder, parent company of The Inquirer. The average for August claims was 169
days.
Michael Walcoff, a top official in the VA's benefits division, said that
Nicholson fully expected the department to meet its goals but that staff
productivity had suffered throughout the year.
"The secretary had very high expectations for us," Walcoff said. "I am concerned
about productivity. I believe we have the capacity to be more productive than we
have been this year."
Many claims for disability compensation, which pays veterans for injuries
sustained while serving in the military, take far longer than the average. The
Sept. 22 report said 4,300 cases from August had taken longer than a year to
decide. And while some categories of claims have shown improvement in the last
two years, others showed a "marked deterioration in performance" and on balance
things have not improved at all, the report said.
As a result, the backlog of pending claims is rising, just the opposite of what
the department had anticipated. Only last year, VA officials said the backlog
should drop to 250,000 claims nationwide. Instead, it is now above 350,000.
"We see a deterioration of service," said Randy Reese, the national service
director for Disabled American Veterans, an advocacy group. "They are starting
to go into a downward spiral."
It is frustrating to veterans such as Joseph P. O'Marrah of New Lenox, Ill., who
first asked for an increase in his disability check in April because his back,
shoulder, and other injuries kept getting worse, he said. By August, after
exchanging letters with the VA, he called the Chicago regional office and was
told that cases were taking 32 to 48 weeks, maybe longer.
"I don't understand why it takes them so long," said O'Marrah, who is 62 and
served in the Vietnam War.