WASHINGTON (February 7, 2017) — Today
DAV (Disabled American Veterans), Paralyzed Veterans of America
(Paralyzed Veterans), and the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) releasedThe
Independent Budget Veterans Agenda for the 115th Congress.The collaborative report, now in its 30th edition, outlines legislative and policy issues for the veterans’
community and this year immediately precedes the annual funding
recommendations for the programs
administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Topping the
list of six critical issues for the 115th Congress to address is the need to "strengthen, reform and sustain the VA health care system.”
"Veterans
of every era of service, those injured in times of war and peace, those
now in the civilian workforce, and those of us who continue to serve as
veteran advocates
rely on VA health care benefits of some kind,” explained Paralyzed
Veterans National President Al Kovach, Jr. "While no one is denying VA
has flaws, those among us who are the most catastrophically injured
veterans, and who rely on VA health care for our very
lives, urge policymakers to place the highest priority on sustaining
specialized services. We all support this country’s obligation to
provide lifelong, high-quality, accessible, comprehensive, and
veterans-centric health care to all who served, and place
emphasis on improving that care. The Independent Budget
recommends integrated healthcare and benefits to all veterans as a
common goal that the VA, Congress, the new Administration, private
healthcare providers, stakeholders and veterans can and should
work toward together.”
The Independent Budget (IB)veterans service organizations (IBVSOs) also list as critical issues:
·Resolving budget constraints that negatively impact veterans programs
·Reforming the claims and appeals process
·Realigning and modernizing capital infrastructure
·Improving the Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers of
Severely Injured Veterans
·Ensuring that VA provides high-quality, effective programs and services to meet the unique needs of women veterans
"We
have reached a defining moment in the process of reforming both the VA
healthcare and benefits systems, in which Congress, the new
Administration, and the VA must examine
the most pressing needs of veterans and make decisions on sensible,
lasting solutions to address them,” said DAV National Commander Dave
Riley. "Modernizing the claims and appeals processes is a key part in
ensuring veterans, especially those most severely
ill and injured, are able to access their earned benefits as well as
needed healthcare. Delays in adjudicating these claims are unacceptable,
and Congress must adequately fund the Veterans Benefits Administration
and move forward with appeals modernization
legislation in order to ensure all claims and appeals are processed
timely and accurately. For the hundreds of thousands of veterans
currently awaiting decisions on their claims and appeals, and for all
veterans in the future, we must get this right.”
Since the release of the IBVSOs last
report in January 2015, the groups note significant progress on key
elements of the delivery of veterans’ health care and benefits, but urge
caution in the ongoing discussion about the role
of community care in the delivery of veterans health care, stating
"veterans’ access to care, including to non-VA community providers in
the networks, should be based on the clinical need and veterans
preference…”
"Choice
Act funding expires this year, so it is imperative that Congress and
the administration incorporate what works into the VA’s standard
operating procedures as we
move forward,” said VFW National Commander Brian Duffy. "Through
contracted care, the Choice Act enabled the VA to serve more veterans in
more areas than ever before, but it also highlighted weaknesses, such
as chronic employee shortages, especially in clerical
staffing, which forces doctors and nurses to file paperwork instead of
seeing more patients. The Choice Act also proved that contracted care
can complement but never replace the continuity and continuum of care
that the VA provides to America’s veterans.”
For 30 years, the co-authors ofThe Independent Budget—DAV (Disabled American Veterans),
Paralyzed Veterans of America (Paralyzed Veterans), and Veterans of
Foreign Wars (VFW)—have presented their collective budget and policy
recommendations to Congress and the Administration. The
recommendations are meant to inform Congress and the Administration of
the needs of its members and all veterans, and to offer substantive
solutions to address the many health care and benefits challenges they
face. The FY 2018 and FY 2019 budget recommendations
are scheduled to be released later this week, and will serve as the
veterans groups’ benchmark for properly funding the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) to ensure the delivery of timely, quality health
care and accurate and appropriate benefits.
-ENDS-
MEDIA CONTACTS:
About Disabled American Veterans (DAV):
DAV empowers veterans to lead high-quality lives with respect and dignity.
It is dedicated to
a single purpose: fulfilling our promises to the men and women who
served. DAV does this by ensuring that veterans and their families can
access the full range of benefits available to them; fighting for the
interests of America’s injured heroes on Capitol
Hill; assisting them with employment;and educating the
public about the great sacrifices and needs of veterans transitioning
back to civilian life. DAV, a non-profit organization with more than 1.3
million members, was founded in 1920 and chartered by the U. S.
Congress
in 1932. Learn more at
dav.org.
About Paralyzed Veterans of America (Paralyzed Veterans):
Paralyzed
Veterans of America is the only congressionally chartered veterans
service organization dedicated solely for the benefit and representation
of veterans
withspinal cord injuryordisease.
For 70 years, Paralyzed Veterans has ensured that veterans have received thebenefitsearned
through their service
to our nation; monitored their care in VA spinal cord injury units; and
funded research and education in the search for a cure and improved
care for individuals with paralysis. With more than 70 offices and 34
chapters, Paralyzed Veterans serves veterans,
their families and theircaregiversin all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Learn more at
pva.org.
About the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW):
The
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S. is the nation's largest and oldest
major war veterans organization. Founded in 1899 and chartered by
Congress in 1936, the VFW is
comprised entirely of eligible veterans and military service members
from the active, Guard and Reserve forces. With nearly 1.7 million VFW
and Auxiliary members located in more than 6,500 Posts worldwide, the
nonprofit veterans service organization is proud
to proclaim
"NO ONE DOES MORE FOR VETERANS” than the VFW, which
is dedicated to veterans’ service, legislative advocacy, and military
and community service programs. For more information or to join, visit
our website at
VFW.org.