Newsbytes July 26, 2024
In this issue:
VA Budget Shortfall Update
Mental Health Program Fails to Reach Most Enrollees
Legal Services for Homeless Veterans
Korean War Armistice Day
FRA Staff Discuss VA Budget Shortfall with VA
DLP
John Davis participated in a conference call with Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) budget staff regarding the budget shortfall noted
in last week’s Newsbytes. The chief financial officers from the Veterans
Benefits Administration (VBA) and Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
informed the House Veterans Affairs Committee (HVAC) that they
anticipate a $2.88 billion shortfall for the remainder of fiscal year
(FY) 2024 related to compensation and pension and readjustment benefit
payments, and an $11.97 billion shortfall in FY 2025 primarily related
to increased hiring and pharmaceutical costs. This represents by far the
largest budget shortfall the VA has experienced.
VA
staff noted that the shortfall was largely due to more benefits being
paid to more veterans than anticipated. The VA staff assured FRA that
the VA is in communication with Hill staff and White House staff to
provide the VA with supplemental appropriations for the current fiscal
year (FY 2024) and FY 2025. Without additional funding, benefits will be
delayed as early as October 1, 2024. The VA claims that there has been a
39% increase in claims since FY 2022 and that 1.9 million claims have
already been processed in FY 2024. In addition, VA staff has increased
by 33% since October 2023.
Other
contributing factors to the budget shortfall include the implementation
of the comprehensive veteran’s toxic exposure law (PACT Act), increased
cost of drugs, and the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision (Rudisill v.
McDonough) expanding education benefits noted in the May 3, 2024
Newsbytes.
GAO: DoD Mental Health Program Fails to Reach Most Enrollees
A
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report (GAO-24-106189) found
that a Pentagon program designed to cover a “vulnerable” mental health
period for military members failed to reach 70% of those enrolled. The
program, named inTransition, is charged with connecting service members
leaving the military or returning from deployment with mental health
services. However, the program often waits 2 or 3 months to initiate
contact with members and made contact with less than 1-in-3, the
Government Accountability Office report found.
The
GAO found that the program didn’t connect with more than 70% of
automatically enrolled service members in 2022 (roughly 65,500 out of
91,000) because of its limited outreach strategy using telephone calls.
Program officials called cold calls “an outdated form of communication”
but said that they are required to use telephone calls as a primary
contact method and that email or text required a policy change. The GAO
also said that the program could benefit from expanding to email, text,
or location services to reach more enrollees. However, the contractor
did not have plans to incorporate texting into its outreach strategy.
Part
of the problem, the GAO found, may be that the joint Defense Department
and Department of Veterans Affairs committee in charge of overseeing
all transition activities does not assess “the effectiveness of these
efforts overall.” The GAO recommended that the committee start a
tracking system for better service member outcomes. The VA agreed with
the GAO’s recommendation to track these services and said joint DOD-VA
subcommittees would establish plans of action, milestones, and metrics
“to identify gaps or duplicative efforts.”
According
to the contractor that runs inTransition, its workers call service
members up to three times to ask if they want to remain enrolled or use
the program’s services. When they fail to connect with the service
member, they mark the case as “unresponsive” and disenroll them from the
program. A GAO analysis of 2022 data showed that 66% or nearly 60,000
service members were unenrolled this way. The GAO also found that in
some cases, the contractor was unable to make the three phone calls
because the DOD did not have accurate contact information. In 2022, more
than 5,700 people who were automatically enrolled could not be
contacted.
The
Defense Department and Department of Veterans Affairs have instituted a
slew of programs aimed at connecting service members coming home from
deployment or leaving the military with mental health services. The
DOD’s inTransition program is aimed at military members whose duties and
careers are in transition, either after deployment, a PCS, or
separation. Though open to all, troops are automatically enrolled in the
program if they received mental health or traumatic brain injury care
in the year prior to their separation.
VA Awards Grants for Legal Services for Homeless Veterans
The
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) awarded $26.8 million in legal
services grants to 108 public or non-profit organizations, with the goal
of increasing access to legal services for eligible veterans
experiencing or at risk for homelessness. These funds, made available as
part of VA’s Legal Services for Homeless Veterans and Veterans At-Risk
for Homelessness Grant Program, more than double the total dollars and
mark a 37% increase in grantees over last year’s inaugural grant cycle.
“Every veteran deserves access to safe, affordable, and permanent
housing, and we know that legal support is among the most needed
services by veterans experiencing or at risk for homelessness,” said VA
Secretary Denis McDonough. “Through these grants, we are working hard to
ensure veterans’ unique civil legal needs are met and drive towards our
ultimate goal of ending homelessness for all veterans and their
families.” Legal services are one way VA is working to eliminate veteran
homelessness and meet the goal of placing at least 41,000 veterans
experiencing homelessness into permanent housing this year. The number
of veterans experiencing homelessness has fallen by nearly 5% since
early 2020 and by more than 52% since 2010. The FRA advocates that the
VA and other government agencies should enhance and invest in efforts to
ensure that veteran homelessness is rare, brief, and nonrecurring.
In
related news, the House passed (408-10) the HOME Act (H.R. 3848),
sponsored by Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer (OR), to help lift veterans out of
homelessness. The HOME Act would increase the per diem rate the VA pays
nonprofit organizations, such as the Salvation Army, that assist
veterans with short-term transitional housing. The per diem rate would
also continue to adjust for inflation every year. The HOME Act also
creates a stipend that veterans experiencing homelessness can use to
purchase necessities such as food, shelter, clothing, and hygiene items;
transportation services; or communications equipment such as
smartphones so the veterans can maintain contact with health care
providers, prospective landlords, and family members. Members are urged
to use this Action Center to ask their Senators to support the bill at: https://www.votervoice.net/FRA/Campaigns/110027/Respond.
Korean War Armistice Day
Each
year, both America and South Korea observe National Korean War Veterans
Armistice Day on July 27. This day was started to commemorate and
recognize the treaty that triggered a ceasefire in a long-standing war
in 1953. The Korean War is a significant chapter in American history in
which approximately 50,000 American troops died in the conflict, over
100,000 were wounded, and thousands of others were held captive as
prisoners of war. On National Korean War Veterans Armistice Day, we
should take some time for reflection on the service and sacrifices of
American troops during this conflict.