Vets Risk Poverty Waiting for Disability Compensation

by: Ernie1812

Thu Jun 19, 2008 at 13:19:48 PM EDT


Army Times: Troops risk ruin while awaiting benefit checks

His lifelong dream of becoming a soldier had, in the end, come to this for Isaac Stevens: 28, penniless, in a wheelchair, fending off the sexual advances of another man in a homeless shelter.

The injury [sustained in boot camp] alone didn't put him in a homeless shelter. Instead, it was military bureaucracy - specifically, the way injured service members are discharged on just a fraction of their salary and then forced to wait six to nine months, and sometimes even more than a year, before their full disability payments begin to flow.

As is often the case with veterans, kicked to the curb after their usefulness runs out, the public has to step in to fix the wrongs committed against those who selflessly serve.

Stevens was moved to the Operation Homefront apartment after a social worker at Tripler Army Medical Center in Hawaii, acting on her own initiative, rescued Stevens from a homeless shelter there.

"This is a situation where someone used their common sense and they did the right thing, versus saying, 'This is the rules. We can't do this,'"
Tripler spokeswoman Minerva Anderson said of the social worker.

In another instance:


Simon Heine served three tours in Iraq as a tank mechanic before he was discharged with severe post-traumatic stress disorder.

His wife quit college so she could figure out how her four children could live on less than $1,000 a month. Eventually, she moved the family of six into an Operation Homefront apartment so they could finish navigating the bureaucracy and wait out the arrival of Social Security and VA benefits.

"It is like giving you a car and taking the steering wheel off. They say, 'There is the gas and the brake. Just go straight,' and hopefully, you are going in the right direction,"
Heine said.

And why does it take so long?

"The claims are a lot more complicated than people think," said Ursula Henderson, director of the VA's regional office in Houston.

Stating that these claims are "complicated" kinda of begs the question, are the claim processors being properly trained to handle these newer and more "complicated" claims? Well, not so much.

A May 2008 GAO report found:


VBA has a standard training curriculum for new claims processors and an 80-hour annual training requirement for all claims processors, but staff are not held accountable for meeting this requirement.

training shmaining.

Although VBA has a training requirement for VSRs and RVSRs, it does not have a policy outlining consequences for individual staff who do not complete their required training. Further, VBA does not maintain data on the training completed by individuals

In fact, claims processors we interviewed raised some issues with the training they received.

So keep an eye out for the civilian version of the Big Green Weenie.  

Ernie1812 :: Vets Risk Poverty Waiting for Disability Compensation
Tags: (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

Still waiting (4.00 / 2)
for benefits. Every time you hear a new story it follows the same general theme. Waiting for benefits, trying to firgue out how to support your self and others on under a $1000 a month. After hearing enough of the stories you start to wonder why are so many war vets getting the shaft. At what point is washington and the VA goning to firgue out vets need a little more help. Or is it going take the homeless vet pop. doubling or tripling before they step forward and help.      

And more..... (4.00 / 1)
All of my clients are males and indigent ~ some Veterans and some civilians.

Even when my guys (VETS) have a disability rating you wouldn't believe the hoops I have to jump through to get them into VA funded housing.

If they don't have an assigned Primary Care Physician (PCP), I have bring them through eligibility, schedule an appointment for PCP assignment of a clinician. Then I schedule an appointment with the clinician who must verify a diagnosis of mental health or substance abuse and verify that they are homeless.
And this is a guy who is already in an inpatient mental health care facility for fuck sake!

I have get on the horn to St. Louis to obtain a copy of their DD214........... then we fill out a 15 page application.....
IF he is accepted it is generally a 30 day wait for a bed.

By that time I just pray that my client doesn't' leave
the hospital ~ relapse triggered by rage and frustration of the injustice of it all.


Seabee VET (4.00 / 2)
This why it will be so important that Veterans villages or ranch get built. We all know that as soon as the fight stops the VA is going the first budget item washington try to cut. Anyone that served after vietnam or after the berlin wall came down can give first hand accounts of what happen to the military budget i can just image what happen to the VA"s budget during that period.  

[ Parent ]
You got it Sandrat (0.00 / 0)
There are also current efforts by veterans and veterans' advocates to offer supported housing options ~ apartments
WITHOUT the VA restrictions and mandates of compliance with VA PCPs, clinicians, psychiatric medications and sobriety.

If you're a veteran you're eligible for the housing ~ PERIOD!

No one should be allowed to climb up our asses and dictate to us what we should and shouldn't do.

Quite frankly, I would like to know who it was that granted the VA the authority to withhold benefits and services from deserving veterans because they choose not to conform to an archaic code of government dictated social restraints.

Of course we know it's about the money ~ not the Veteran.


[ Parent ]
VetVoice on Social Media
Follow rockrichard on Twitter

VoteVets.org on Facebook
  • VetVoice Recommends

    "The War I Always Wanted,"
    By Brandon Friedman

    "The welcome mat for memoirs by veterans of operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom might never wear out so long as they write with the savvy of Brandon Friedman . . . Friedman's take is vivid, frank, precise and dramatic." --Military Times

    "Add Brandon Friedman's The War I Always Wanted to the ranks of outstanding non-fiction produced by officers from elite combat units in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Always truthful, often excruciatingly so, The War I Always Wanted rises at numerous points to the level of literature." --Steven Pressfield, author of Gates of Fire

    Buy The War I Always Wanted here.

    "A Time To Lead,"
    By General (Ret.) Wesley K. Clark

    "A Time To Lead confirms the rewarding benefits of military service at a time when such service is experiencing considerable strain. It also includes a comprehensive description of America's current national imperatives, which deserve serious consideration." --General Alexander M. Haig, Jr., former Secretary of State

    "This is a primer on leadership forged in battle and by decades of experience. . .This isn't just a book; it's a manual for leading people and living a good life." --Barry McCaffrey, General, USA (ret.)

    Buy A Time to Lead here.

    "Love My Rifle More Than You,"
    By Kayla Williams

    "Whip smart, sassy, with a mouth as foul as a sailor's, 28-year-old Sergeant Kayla Williams. . .tells what it's like to be a female soldier in Iraq." --Booklist

    ". . .echoes military memoirists from Julius Caesar to Ernie Pyle." --Publishers Weekly

    ". . .a shocking, on-the-ground view of one military woman's experience in Iraq." --Bookmarks Magazine

    Buy Love My Rifle More Than You here.

    "How to Break a Terrorist,"
    By Matthew Alexander

    "...a riveting, fast-paced account that reads like a first-rate thriller." --Publisher's Weekly

    " ...an absorbing behind-the-scenes look at the secret intelligence war within a war." --Military.com

    Buy How to Break a Terrorist here.

    Search

    Advanced Search

    RSS Feed Links

    Subscribe to VetVoice in a feed reader!

    Subscribe to VetVoice by Email!

    Diaries and comments at VetVoice do not necessarily represent the views of VoteVets.org. VetVoice will strive to remove any illegal material as soon as it is flagged. Similarly, VetVoice will use its discretion in determining whether to remove exceedingly offensive material. However, between posting and removal, any offensive or illegal material does not reflect the condoning or endorsing of said material by VoteVets.org or VetVoice.
    Similarly, the views expressed on this website are those of the authors alone. Opinions on this website do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense or any of its components.
    Menu

    Front Page Writers
    PTSD Resources
    TBI Resources
    IRR Information
    Casualty Reports
    VA Information
    Support the Troops
    Veteran Candidates We Support
    Congressional Committees
    Contact Your Elected Leaders
    Sites We Like

    Paid for VoteVets Political Action Committee. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee. VoteVets Action Fund is a 501(c)(4) organization which primarily focuses on nonpartisan education and advocacy on behalf veterans and their families. VoteVets Political Action Committee is a federal political committee which primarily helps elect Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran candidates and educates about veterans and military issues aimed at influencing the outcome of the next election.

    Site Design: Articulated Man

    VoteVets Political Action and Vote Vets Action Fund are separate organizations.

    Powered by: SoapBlox