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Cpl Chad Perry
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I work at the VA, and I'm on the appeals team in my office. There is not an easy answer for this. The appeals team I work on is statistically the best in the VA, but we are still getting overwhelmed. One of the stats I heard recently is it would take the Board of Veteran's Appeals (BVA) over 6 years to complete the appeals they currently have, and they receive hundreds more every month. Another reason that most of you already know is a severe lack of give a shit from many VA employees. I used to work on restricted access appeals for VA employees, and many of those would be initiated at other offices then transferred to us because of their high level of sensitivity. A lot of these claims were several years old and nothing was done on them. We would also find other claims in these files that were never done either. All of these files were just half assed and sent down range like "maybe the next person can fix it." I was going to management almost everyday asking WTF! All we could do was send our complaints up the chain and cross our fingers. A third major problem we see, and sorry guys, is the veterans themselves. Before you submit a claim/appeal talk to a CVSO or a POA, and do your own research on how the VA works. It will save a lot of time and headaches. And I'm also sorry to say there are a lot of veterans clogging the system with crap. Some examples would be an Air Force guy claiming tummy problems because they made him go out in the field and eat an MRE, or the NG member who never deployed demanding 70% for PTSD because a drill sergeant yelled at her. We also see a lot of veterans who are already 100% P&T submitting claims with 50 new issues. This kind of stuff wastes time and resources that the VA could be spending on veterans that have real problems. So no there is not one clear cut Amber to this question, and there is no easy fix.
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TSgt Joe C.
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Wish I had a good answer for this!
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LTC Stephen F.
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I would not say that the appeals process is broken completely SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL. Mid-level management is the principal driver in most Federal agencies. When they get energized things happen. Mid-level management does not seem to be consistency involved throughout the VBA.
Another major issue is the limited number of appeals courts available to adjudicate the vast number of appeals still waiting to be ruled on.
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