Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Veterans
Related: About this forumOnce a fixed issue, the VA disability claims backlog is on the rise again
http://www.militarytimes.com/articles/va-disability-claims-backlog-risingOnce a fixed issue, the VA disability claims backlog is on the rise again
By: Leo Shane III, March 24, 2017 (Photo Credit: Alan Lessig/Military Times)
WASHINGTON The number of backlogged veterans benefits claims is rising again. Veterans Affairs officials insist its only a temporary problem, due to an unexpected rise in the number of new cases that flooded into the system over the last few months. Theyre confident the 30,000-case increase in the backlog since last fall will be brought back down again in coming weeks.
But to do that, theyre also instituting mandatory overtime for claims processors for the fourth year in a row, a practice that in the past has raised questions about whether VA officials have enough capacity to handle the ever-increasing number of benefits cases.
(snip)
VA leaders have also asked for (and received) an exemption to the federal hiring freeze for disability claims examiners and other staff to address the issue.
The veterans claims backlog was a major focus of lawmakers and VA critics in the years before the 2014 wait times scandal, but has largely gone unnoticed in recent years as congressional focus shifted to the departments accountability and health care challenges. At the peak in early 2013, the number of backlogged claims first-time benefits cases that took more than four months to process topped 610,000 cases. By October 2015, the backlog was down to around 70,000 cases, thanks to a combination of new hires, mandatory overtime and new digital processing of claims. At the time, VA officials said the 70,000-case plateau was likely the lowest theyd ever push the backlog without unnecessarily rushing some claims.
After a year of stability around that mark, the backlog number has steadily grown since last November. At the start of March, it jumped above 100,000 cases, prompting concerns from outside advocates. Clark said that has nothing to do with the change in presidential administrations but instead with VA decisions to shift benefits processors to handle more appeals cases.
The total number of unfinished benefits appeals peaked above 300,000 cases last year, but has dropped about 16,000 cases since November. Clark said VA officials made the decision to shift resources and personnel to handle the appeals caseload because of public concerns about its growth. But a dramatic rise in new claims in early winter has forced VBA officials to rebalance those efforts yet again. Were providing more work than ever before, he said. But the number of cases coming in keeps going up too.
In fiscal 2001, claims officials processed roughly 675,000 cases. For the last seven years, that caseload has topped 1 million, with a record 1.3 million claims processed in fiscal 2016. Clark said VA officials are expecting another record processing year in fiscal 2017. But he is also promising that planners will find a way to balance claims workflow to bring both the first-time cases backlog and the pending appeals caseload down in months to come.
(snip)
Department officials have acknowledged the appeals process for claims which can take five years or more to complete needs a major overhaul, but also insist that legislation is needed to clean up and speed up the process. Lawmakers have been receptive to the idea in recent years but have failed to pass any fixes to the issue.
(snip)