Fulfill Promises to Veterans
During the 2012 Mid-Winter Conference, National Commander Donald L. Samuels
presented the DAV’s National Legislative Program at a joint session of the House
and Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committees. Commander Samuels called upon lawmakers
to fulfill our nation’s promises to the men and women who served. Following are
highlights of the Commander’s presentation, which received enthusiastic applause
and a standing ovation from the hundreds of DAV and Auxiliary members gathered for
the event.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen and members of the Veterans’ Affairs Committees: On behalf
of the Disabled American Veterans and its Auxiliary, I am honored for this opportunity
to discuss the major concerns and agenda of the Disabled American Veterans for the
coming year.
Since 1920, the DAV has remained faithful to our mission of building better lives
for our nation’s wartime service-disabled veterans, their families and survivors.
Part of that mission is advocating for meaningful, reasonable and responsible public
policy for service-disabled veterans.
With the end of combat operations in Iraq, the proposed downsizing of our military
forces and the slow recovery in our domestic economic situation, more veterans will
be relying upon the Department of Veterans Affairs for services and benefits over
the next few years. We must ensure that the VA is prepared to handle the large influx
of new veterans into its health care or benefits administrations. However, based
on my experiences with the VA over the past four decades, I am not yet confident
that our government is fully prepared to uphold its promises to the nation’s veterans.
All of my adult life has been spent in service to my fellow veterans. When I was
discharged from the Marine Corps in 1969, after almost nine years of active duty
service, I came to a crossroads. At that point in my life—a young, wounded Vietnam
veteran dealing with a permanent disability—my life could have taken many different
directions. However, the DAV was there for me with much-needed help. But the DAV
went further and offered me the privilege of helping my fellow veterans. In 1970,
following my completion of a 2,600-hour VA Vocational Rehabilitation Training Program,
I was assigned as a National Service Officer at the Nashville DAV National Service
Office and served there as Supervisor of the office until my retirement in 1989.
After my DAV career, I served as the Assistant Commissioner of the Tennessee Department
of Veterans Affairs until my retirement in April 2011. In that position I supervised
all claims activity, outreach, and legislation and played a part in establishing
state veterans cemeteries and state veterans homes in Tennessee.
And I continue to be a staunch veterans advocate. I am also the proud father of
two sons who have continued our family’s commitment to this great nation. My older
son is a U.S. Marine master gunnery sergeant, a combat veteran and DAV member. My
younger son is a flight engineer in the U.S. Marine Corps. He is also a combat veteran
and DAV member.
I also had two sons-in-law who are former Marines, one of whom passed away at age
24 due to a service-connected disability.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen, it is a well-known fact that more than 6,300 military personnel
have died from wounds, illnesses and accidents in Iraq and Afghanistan, and hundreds
of thousands more were wounded or injured as a result of their service to our nation.
And the VA anticipates providing health care to more than 610,000 post-9/11 veterans
next year. That is a major reason why our government must keep its promises to those
who serve in our armed forces and to their families and survivors.
None of those men and women joined the military to make a profit or to become wealthy.
Like all generations of veterans, they joined the military for the good of our nation
and its citizens, to protect our freedom and our safety. Both they and their families
made great sacrifices during military service. For many, those sacrifices continue
throughout their lifetime. They were put in harm’s way because of the actions of
our government; therefore, Congress and the administration are responsible, morally
and legally, for the well-being of veterans, their families and survivors.
The DAV calls upon the members of these committees to ensure that our government
keeps its promise to our nation’s disabled veterans.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen, the DAV and the disabled veterans we represent are grateful
for the support that your committees and Congress have provided for the VA health
care system. The VA has received substantial annual funding increases for medical
care programs for more than a decade. More importantly, the VA has become one of
the highest quality health care systems in the world.
And while the President’s fiscal year 2013 budget proposal for the VA comes close
to what the DAV and other veterans groups have recommended, we see the need for
additional funding for medical and prosthetic research and for construction as noted
in The Independent Budget.
One area of concern is that veterans medical care still is not sufficiently funded.
Although advance appropriations have eliminated many of the uncertainties that plagued
VA health care for decades, the Government Accountability Office has noted the use
of budget gimmicks that rob the system of billions of dollars under the cover of
“management efficiencies” and other clever accounting tricks.
Also disturbing is that under the recent continuing resolutions, which Congress
passed in the absence of annual appropriations, the VA was forced to devote fewer
resources to veterans medical care than Congress authorized for the current year.
The plain fact is that despite funding increases, demand for veterans health care
has risen faster than resources allocated to the VA. Yet amid widespread reports
of hiring freezes, funding shortfalls and deferral of equipment purchases at medical
centers, the VA somehow was able to “carry over” more than a billion dollars that
it claims it could not spend in fiscal year 2011.
While the DAV applauds efforts to eliminate unnecessary and wasteful spending, we
are concerned, based on what we hear from VA medical facilities around the country
and from our members, that medical services were withheld from veterans due to lack
of sufficient funding and unreasonable wait lists.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen, as a service-disabled veteran and a retired National Service
Officer, I have taken a great interest in the VA disability evaluation system. Of
course, I recognize the importance of having a modern, up-to-date disability rating
schedule that reflects advances in medical science. That is a necessary part of
ensuring accurate, equitable disability ratings.
Yet I find it very troubling that the VA may be moving toward revising its rating
schedule with a greater focus on compensating veterans based on their disabilities’
impact on earning capacity, while ignoring other factors such as quality of life
and social impairment.
Some argue that if you’re able to work, you shouldn’t receive disability compensation.
But I simply cannot understand such a limited view.
Take for example someone with a master’s degree in business who was highly successful
in sales before joining the military after 9/11. Say that person had several deployments
and suffered post-traumatic stress disorder to such a degree that he or she is no
longer able to interact with other people. Consequently, the veteran finds work
as a low-wage earner, with minimal interaction with others. So, just because a veteran
is able to hold a job — even one that pays a fraction of his or her previous income
— disability compensation for PTSD could be reduced.
I can’t imagine how you could possibly justify such a travesty. I promise you the
DAV will not stand idly by and allow that to happen.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Shinseki has focused a great
deal of attention on reducing the claims backlog. He has set an extremely ambitious
long- term goal of having no claims pending over 125 days and that all claims will
be completed to a 98-percent accuracy standard.
Certainly eliminating the backlog will be a welcome milestone; however, clearing
the backlog is not necessarily the same as reforming the claims processing system
nor does it guarantee that veterans are better served. To achieve real success,
the VA must focus on creating a veterans’ benefits claims processing system designed
to get each claim done right the first time. Only when the VA has adopted a culture
of quality, accuracy and accountability will true reform in the claims process succeed.
The DAV looks forward to the rollout of a new electronic Veterans Benefits Management
System later this year, the continued development of e-Benefits and the other IT
improvements that will modernize claims processing. We will continue to work closely
with VBA leaders to ensure the DAV and other VSOs who represent veterans seeking
earned benefits are fully integrated into these new IT systems.
Madame and Mr. Chairmen, the men and women seated behind me are vital to our mission
and the well-being of our nation’s hospitalized, sick and disabled veterans. They
represent some of the more than 14,000 DAV and Auxiliary members who volunteer their
time at VA medical facilities.
Some of them are volunteer drivers with the DAV’s National Transportation Network,
which provides free transportation to veterans in every state and nearly every congressional
district. Thanks to them, more than 13 million veterans have been transported more
than 495 million miles in DAV vans.
Each year, our National Service Officers, all of whom are wartime service-disabled
veterans, represent a quarter-million individuals in their claims for benefits from
the VA. Among all organizations representing veterans, the DAV helps by far the
largest number of claimants annually, ensuring that disabled veterans and their
families receive all of the benefits they deserve.
Our highly trained and dedicated National Service Officers provide free representation
to any veteran or their dependents and survivors. And I would encourage you to put
the veterans in your districts in touch with a DAV National Service Officer when
they need assistance.
Our Transition Service Program also provides benefits counseling and assistance
to separating military service members. This program is a huge success in helping
military members transition back to civilian life and obtain the benefits and services
they have earned.
Since the 1970s, the DAV has placed Mobile Service Offices on the road to provide
outreach and claims assistance to veterans who are unable to come into our offices.
These offices on wheels are in your states and districts helping veterans — your
constituents — with claims work.
As you can imagine, I am very proud of the work that this great organization does.
There is no other veterans service organization that contributes more to the welfare
and well-being of our nation’s disabled veterans, their families and survivors than
the DAV. I can assure you, Madame and Mr. Chairmen, that the DAV stands ready to
assist you and your committees in finding ways to improve the services and benefits
that veterans have earned from a grateful nation.
This completes my testimony, and my staff and I would be pleased to respond to any
questions you may have. Thank you for allowing me the opportunity to appear before
you on behalf of the DAV to share our proud record of service to veterans and our
country.
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