8,763 vets died waiting for benefits!
Posted by CTuttle on July 16, 2008 • Comments (0)Permalink

In another sad rendition of VA's unofficial motto... "Delay, Deny, and Hope They Die..."

Although Dennis Kucinich has been in the news of late, for his impassioned pleas to impeach Darth and Shrub, little mention is made about his role as chairman of the domestic policy subcommittee of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Today, he held a hearing on: “Die or Give Up Trying: How Poor Contractor Performance, Government Mismanagement and the Erosion of Quality Controls Denied Thousands of Disabled Veterans Timely and Accurate Retroactive Retired Pay Awards.

Whew, quite a mouthful... About sums it up tho, don't ya think?

Who are the 'guests of honor'? The director of DFAS, Zack Gaddy, the Pentagon's inspector general, and, a top Lockheed Martin executive. Now, why would Lockheed Martin have to answer questions on Disabled Vet pay...? Because, DFAS, issued a no-bid contract to Lockheed Martin. Don't you just love those 'no-bid' contracts...

Particularly, when you try to hold them accountable...

DFAS, in charge of military benefit payments, issued a no-bid contract to Lockheed Martin to get out back payments and clear up a backlog. DFAS supervised the work from its Cleveland offices, and it had previously contracted with Lockheed Martin to handle other benefits work.

But Lockheed Martin was understaffed, according to Kucinich's investigation, and missed deadlines. DFAS officials grew increasingly frustrated with the backlog, according to e-mail and memos found by Kucinich's committee staff.

Yet despite a desire to hold Lockheed Martin accountable, DFAS found that its contract rendered it powerless to penalize the company.

Yep, the War Profiteers, err.. Private Contractors chalk up another victory...

The Army Times reported...

The report by the majority staff of the House Oversight and Government Reform domestic policy panel, released Tuesday, concluded that at least 28,283 disabled retirees were denied retroactive pay awards because rushed efforts to clear a huge backlog of claims led program administrators to stop doing quality assurance checks on the claims decisions.

And of the original 133,057 potentially eligible veterans, 8,763 died before their cases could be reviewed for retroactive payments, according to the report.[...]

Under the programs, many disabled veterans also became eligible for a single retroactive payment due to changes in their disability status.

As of September 2006, the Defense Finance and Accounting Service determined that 133,057 veterans potentially were eligible for these so-called “VA Retro” payments. Over time, another 84,237 newly retired and other veterans were added to the list.

Yet as of March 1, more than 60,000 eligible veterans were still waiting for reviews of their cases under the two programs.

The claims processing shortfall was raised during a February defense budget hearing; Pentagon Comptroller Tina Jonas told the Senate Budget Committee that she had recently asked Zack Gaddy, the director of the Defense Finance and Accounting Service, to triple the number of people working on the backlog.

In February, the backlog was said to be “more than 39,000” cases. Jonas said she had been assured that the backlog would be cleared by April.

That did not happen, according to the subcommittee report, because Lockheed Martin, the contractor hired in July 2006 to compute the complex retroactive pay awards, had difficulty making the computations fast enough to eliminate the backlog quickly. The complexity of the computations also hindered Lockheed Martin’s ability to develop software to automate the process.

Two other factors played a role: The required databases did not exist, and the Department of Veterans Affairs and the military services “were slow to put the data in the necessary form for automation.”

As a result, Lockheed Martin was forced to compute the cases manually. It did so, and with just under half the number of workers the government had previously used for the work — a relic of the original contract proposal, according to the report.

So they had to do it manually and with half the workers that DFAS used... But wait, fear not, it gets even better(worse?)...

Lockheed Martin missed its original November 2007 deadline and every succeeding one, the report stated. The committee said Gaddy personally monitored the program and “frequently complained to Lockheed about low productivity and the high number of errors DFAS quality control auditors were detecting.”

Gaddy also expressed concern that the delays were damaging the reputation of DFAS.

To ease congressional concerns and speed up the review process, DFAS chose several “questionable approaches” — assigning federal workers to duties covered by the contract with Lockheed Martin, and suspending independent quality checks on Lockheed’s calculations.

After those measures went into effect on March 1, up to 60,051 payments were made to eligible veterans. But the subcommittee concluded that “serious questions” remain about the accuracy of these payments.

While the subcommittee majority staff does not know how many erred payments were sent, we do not believe that DFAS knows either,” the report said.

Under Lockheed’s operating procedures, its quality assurance team also did not verify the accuracy of any “No Pay Due” determinations, which are sent directly to veterans without verification
, the report added.

“Neither DFAS nor Lockheed knows how many ‘No Pay Due’ letters could be in error,” the report states. Such letters were sent to at least 28,283 veterans.

For that dismal performance Lockheed Martin raked in $18.74 million of our taxpayer dollars, I wonder if that tally includes the DFAS employees' salaries that had to help them complete the shitty job they did...?

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