Veterans deserve better
I think Texas has been a state that has sent more troops into combat and most others and that may account for some of the numbers, but it is all the more reason why its veterans deserve better treatment than they are getting. Unfortunately little has changed since I went through similar delays after being wounded in Vietnam it took over six months to get some of my benefits while I was in law school. The delays on getting loan approvals for buying my first house were also unreasonable. That was 40 years ago, but it is plenty of time to have fixed the problem. Let us not wait another 40 years.Last Dec. 7, the anniversary of Pearl Harbor, President-elect Barack Obama spoke eloquently of the sacrifices made by America’s veterans, how many of them “are struggling even more than those who have not served — higher unemployment rates, higher homeless rates, higher substance-abuse rates, medical care that is inadequate. It breaks my heart.”
That same day, he announced his choice of retired Gen. Eric Shinseki to head the Department of Veterans Affairs, calling him “exactly the right person … to make sure we honor our troops when they come home.”
Today, those returning troops, and thousands more who served before them, are being greeted, not with honor, but with roadblocks and delays in accessing compensation, rehabilitation and medical care, as the VA attempts to cope with what has become a national crisis — a record backlog of disability claims fast approaching a million.
The situation is so dire that members of Congress and veterans’ advocates are calling for a fundamental overhaul of the VA’s procedures for handling claims. While improvements are in the works, it is unconscionable that these most deserving of Americans are being treated so shabbily. We urge Obama, Shinseki and Congress to do all in their power to redress this shameful state of affairs as promptly as is humanly possible.
One of the most troubling aspects of this debacle is that Texas is one of the worst offenders in its handling of claims: The Texas Veterans Commission’s latest figures show that the two regional VA offices in the state, Houston and Waco, have appeals pending for about 20,000 veterans — more than 10 percent of the nation’s total of about 200,000.
Nearly 18,000 applications for disability benefits are waiting to be processed in Houston, of which about 26 percent have been pending for more than six months, compared with a national percentage of 21 percent. At the Houston regional office, 11,389 claims are on appeal, more than anywhere else in the country.
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