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 Report: 6 in 10 VA claim denials are in error

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OathKeepingJarhead
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OathKeepingJarhead


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Report: 6 in 10 VA claim denials are in error Empty
PostSubject: Report: 6 in 10 VA claim denials are in error   Report: 6 in 10 VA claim denials are in error EmptySun Dec 16, 2012 3:03 am

Being a Veteran in this day and age is becoming harder every day. This article explains exactly the reason why. When we leave the service we are treated lik dirt. It no longer matters what accomplichments we may have achieved while on active duty. If you no longer suit the needs of the global elite you will be cast out and left to struggle the rest of your life. If we had a president who even half cared about the veterans then we would not have problems such as this. Most of us know better than to rely on the government to provide for us but this is having negative consequences throughout the veteran community. One of the biggest threats to the elite who are in control of this government is the veterans. One day things are going to go sideways.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2012/12/military-veterans-disability-claims-121312w/

Quote :
A new report on an old problem contains some sad statistics about veterans’ benefits claims:

• Thirty-one percent of claims filed with the Veterans Affairs Department are likely to be denied — and 60 percent of those denials will be erroneous.

• Sixty percent of claims will take longer than 125 days to be processed, more than 7 percent of claims will be misplaced, and 4 percent will be completely lost.

• A veteran calling VA’s benefits hotline has just a 49 percent chance of being connected to someone and receiving a correct answer.

The report, “The Veterans Disability System: Problems and Solutions,” was released Dec. 12 by the nonprofit National Center for Policy Analysis.

Based on a review of the 870,000 benefits claims pending before VA in 2011 — a number that has climbed to about 900,000 pending claims today — the report says the pile of pending claims has grown despite the fact that VA is processing more claims than ever before and using a variety of new efforts to work faster and more accurately.

Even faster claims processing might be possible by contracting out administrative services or transferring claims processing from the federal government to states, the report says. It recommends expanded pilot programs to test those ideas.

The nonpartisan National Center for Policy Analysis, which specializes in retirement and health care programs, is skeptical about VA’s stated goal of eliminating the claims backlog by the end of 2015.

VA “is barely able to process current claims,” the report says, “and has exhibited little to no progress toward their stated goal of 125 days and 98 percent accuracy for processed claims by 2015.”

The federal government, in general, does a poor job of administering disability benefits and services, the report says, “as evidenced by the state of Social Security Disability.”

“But the Veterans Benefits Administration appears to be far worse.”
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