VA cites progress on backlog; Congress disagrees

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Veterans Affairs says it has made “tremendous progress” in reducing a
disability claims backlog that reached above 600,000 early last year. Members of Congress and the
department’s assistant inspector general don’t believe it.
Allison Hickey, the VA’s undersecretary for benefits, told Congress that at the insistence of officials
from President Barack Obama on down, the benefits backlog has been whittled down to about 275,000 — a 55
percent decrease from the peak.
Hickey’s claims were met with disbelief by some. Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans
Affairs Committee, told her flatly that he thinks the VA’s numbers are inaccurate.
“I don’t believe anybody at the table is telling the truth from the VA,” Miller said at a contentious
hearing that lasted more than five hours Monday night. “I believe you are hiding numbers.”
Asked if she trusted numbers produced by VA, the agency’s assistant inspector general, Linda Halliday,
said no.
“I don’t want to say I trust them,” Halliday said.
In a report issued earlier Monday, Halliday said that in its rush to reduce the backlog of disability
claims, the VA has made benefits payments of more than $85 million to veterans who lacked adequate
medical evidence that they deserve them. Without improvements, the VA could make unsupported payments to
veterans totaling about $371 million over the next five years for claims of 100 percent disability
alone, Halliday said.
The IG’s office also found widespread problems at VA regional offices in Philadelphia and Baltimore,
including mail bins full of disability claims and associated evidence that had not been electronically
scanned for three years.
“Improved financial stewardship at the agency is needed,” Halliday told the House veterans panel. “More
attention is critical to minimize the financial risk of making inaccurate benefit payments.”
Special initiatives designed to remove older claims and speed processing of new claims are worthwhile,
Halliday said, but in some cases they “have had an adverse impact on other workload areas” such as
managing appeals filed by veterans and reducing overpayments to veterans.
Hickey defended her agency, saying the department has spent the past four years redesigning and
streamlining the way it delivers benefits and services to veterans.
Last year, the Veterans Benefits Administration, which she oversees, completed a record 1.2 million
disability rating claims, Hickey said. The agency is on track to complete more than 1.3 million rating
claims this year and pay a total of $67 billion in benefits — about half the VA’s budget, Hickey said.
More than 90 percent of the claims are being processed electronically, she said.
The VA has long struggled to cope with disability claims. The backlog intensified in recent years as more
solders returned from Iraq and Afghanistan, and as the VA made it easier for Vietnam-era veterans to get
disability compensation stemming from exposure to Agent Orange.
The VA has set a goal to process all claims within 125 days at 98 percent accuracy in 2015, but so far
has fallen far short. The agency now processes most claims within 154 days — or more than five months —
at a 90 percent accuracy rate, compared with an accuracy rate of 86 percent three years ago, Hickey
said. At one point, veterans were forced to wait an average nine to 10 months for their disability
claims to be processed.
“It has never been acceptable to VA … that our veterans are experiencing long delays in receiving the
benefits they have earned and deserve,” Hickey said, adding that she was “saddened and offended” by
related problems that have plagued VA health centers in recent months. Investigators have found long
waits for appointments at VA hospitals and clinics, and falsified records to cover up the delays.
Halliday, in her report, said she found similar problems with the benefits agency, including faulty
claims processing that “increases the risk of improper payments to veterans and their families.”
Inspectors surveying Philadelphia’s VA benefits center in June found mail bins brimming with claims and
associated evidence dating to 2011 that had not been electronically scanned, she said.
Inspectors also found evidence that staffers at the Philadelphia regional office were manipulating dates
to make old claims appear newer. The findings are similar to problems in which investigators have found
long waits for appointments at VA hospitals and clinics, and falsified records to cover up the delays.

In Baltimore, investigators discovered that an employee had inappropriately stored in his office
thousands of documents, including some that contained Social Security data, “for an extensive period of
time.” About 8,000 documents, including 80 claims folders, unprocessed mail and Social Security
information of dead or incarcerated veterans, were stored in the employee’s office, Halliday said.
Kristen Ruell, an employee at the VA’s Pension Management Center in Philadelphia, told the committee that
mail routinely “sat in boxes untouched for years” at the pension office. Once, after becoming concerned
that unopened mail was being shredded, Ruell opened the boxes and took photos. Instead of addressing the
problem, she said, VA supervisors enacted a policy prohibiting taking photos.
After VA officials in Washington issued a directive last year ordering that a backlog of claims older
than 125 days be reduced, the Philadelphia office “took this to mean that they could change the dates of
every claim older than six weeks,” Ruell said. While pension center managers later told the IG’s office
that the mislabeling was based on a misunderstanding of the directive, Ruell said, “these behaviors are
intentional.”
“The VA’s problems are a result of morally bankrupt managers that through time and (government service)
grade have moved up into powerful positions where they have the power to and continue to ruin people’s
lives,” Ruell said.
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