Mar 25, 2013 - As some of you know many of we advocates have been brainstorming on this site to come up with answers for the on going VA backlogs but there is just so much more to this problem than the fact the US has had too many wars and created too many veterans. It just goes beyond the pale of indifference to cruelty.Besides the nightmare of hundreds of thousands approaching a million caught up in a system that is more than sluggish, there is serious and dangerous reports and findings THIS administration walked into. Something has to be done to clean and disinfect and I mean literally the red tape. The findings of what transpired under the Bush Inspector General with little consequences it appears, is horrendous.
While the Bush Administration was waging an illegal war, they sure were not doing anything for the veterans. I was doing my usual scoping with other like minded advocates today and stumbled on to some info that sickened me. I sincerely believe some of those who want to downsize an overburdened government program will just call it an Obama problem without any scrutiny of the Bush Administration. Sen. Burr of North Carolina is calling for downsizing ( AGAIN) the VISN groups ( Veteran Integrated Service Network) and have massive cuts and layoffs under the name of re organization. This cannot happen.
The Obama VA has done more to try and get a handle on some serious problems. They will be demonized because that is how republican legislation is born. Stall, do nothing, criticize, blame and never comare improvements in many areas and play up the bad.. ( Ones sided DIRTY LAUNDY PROVIDED BY FOX AND their cults)
snip And now VA investigators are trying to figure out if this one-time survey points to the likelihood that documents have been improperly destroyed for months or even years."Whatever this problem is, it didn't just start in the last two weeks," said Dave Autry, a spokesman for Disabled American Veterans. "It'd be unreasonable to assume that. Who knows what's been destroyed."
The documents, which didn't have duplicates at the VA, would have been critical in deciding veteran pension and disability claims. As a result, many veterans are asking whether their delayed or denied claims were affected by lost paperwork. read more>>>
Nov. 9, 2012 - A strange thing happened when Christopher DeLara filed for disability benefits after his tour in Iraq: The U.S. Army said it had no records showing he had ever been overseas.
snip DeLara's case is part of a much larger problem that has plagued the U.S. military since the 1990 Gulf War: a failure to create and maintain the types of field records that have documented American conflicts since the Revolutionary War.
A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has found that the recordkeeping breakdown was especially acute in the early years of the Iraq war, when insurgents deployed improvised bombs with devastating effects on U.S. soldiers. The military has also lost or destroyed records from Afghanistan, according to officials and previously undisclosed documents. read more>>>
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