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Vets Suffer From DD214
Errors
Week of March 03, 2008
According to recent reports thousands of
veterans are finding it difficult to access their benefits due
to errors on the DD214 Discharge Documents. The Army alone has
a backlog of 1,890 veterans seeking corrections on their discharge
papers and some have been waiting for three years, according
to the U.S. Department of Defense. Many other veterans probably
have faulty discharge papers but don't know it because they have
not sought benefits.
Read
the full story at Military.com or
see below...
Vets Suffer as DD214 Errors Increase
Buffalo News | By Lou Michel | February 25, 2008
Christopher M.
Simmance helped keep the peace as an American Soldier in the
Middle East, but when he returned home and later suffered a breakdown,
he was turned away from the VA hospital because the government
didn't acknowledge his overseas duty.
Dana Cushing as a Marine
served two tours of duty in Iraq and a third in east Africa, but
when she returned home, she found herself labeled a "conscientious
objector" and also was denied
medical care by the government.
Simmance is one local veteran among roughly 2,000 across the country
trying to get corrected incomplete or inadequate discharge papers.
Cushing only recently got hers corrected after trying for a year.
The result is that many now face a bureaucratic nightmare that
prevents them from getting the health benefits they are entitled
to receive.
The Army alone has a backlog of 1,890 veterans seeking corrections
on their discharge papers, and some have been waiting for three
years, according to the U.S. Department of Defense. Many other
veterans probably have faulty discharge papers but don't know it
because they have not sought benefits.
Efforts are being made to speed up the corrections on faulty discharge
papers, Army officials said.
But it can't come quick enough for Simmance, the City of Tonawanda
Army veteran who ended up broke and homeless late last year after
he suffered service-related psychological problems and was unable
to get help because of his faulty discharge paper.
"I lived on my parents' couch for a couple months, but it
was a cramped living space and I couldn't stay there. I went to
the Little Portion Friary and then to the City Mission," said
Simmance, who finally found permanent lodging in a subsidized apartment
a few weeks ago.
The 31-year-old entered a free fall in 2006, when he started experiencing
service-related mental illness. He lost a $65,000-a-year job, his
apartment and his truck while living in Seattle.
When he returned home to Buffalo Niagara and sought help from
the local Veterans Affairs office, he said he was told his discharge
papers were not in order and he was ineligible for help. Simmance
said he was turned down twice for treatment at the VA's Batavia
residential facility for post-traumatic stress disorder.
"The kicker is, I have my official U.S. military passport
with all the stamps of the countries I was in overseas, and the
Batavia hospital didn't even want to look at it," he said. "I
served in the Middle East in 2001 with an international peacekeeping
force and saw combat."
He says he continues to wait for a corrected version of his discharge
papers -- a wait that started seven months ago and shows no sign
of ending soon.
Issue called disgraceful
Simmance's story highlights the struggles of other local veterans
who have had difficulty receiving medical and disability benefits
from the VA.
Upset over the clerical errors veterans face after serving overseas,
often in combat situations, several veterans advocates and public
officials met recently at Rep. Louise Slaughter's office in Niagara
Falls to discuss clearing up the backlog.
"It is absolutely unacceptable and, frankly, disgraceful
that any veteran would be delayed or denied the benefits they earned
after putting their life on the line in service to our country," said
Slaughter, DFairport. "Veterans must be shown nothing less
than the same commitment that they showed to us."
Errors are occurring more frequently on discharge papers, known
as DD214 forms, because the work is often farmed out to civilians,
according to Patrick W. Welch, director of Erie County's Department
of Veterans Services.
"In the olden days, it was usually military records personnel
who were processing you out. They were active duty military people.
They had a better feel for what you were entitled to and they would
ask questions," said Welch, a Vietnam veteran.
Civilians who never served in the armed forces, he said, are more
likely to make mistakes.
"So as they're looking through records, they do not properly
interpret service," said Welch, who has worked as an advocate
for years and has assisted many vets in correcting their discharge
papers.
"The other part of it is that, when they are processing you
out, the person leaving just wants to get his paperwork and get
out and may not notice errors," he said. "Quite frankly,
I don't know of any veteran whose DD214 form is 100 percent accurate."
Military officials, contacted by The Buffalo News, said those
leaving the armed forces should carefully check their records because
they are in the best position to know if the papers are complete
and accurate.
"That's not true. This is your very first DD214, so how do
you know what to look for? On top of that, you don't know what
the code numbers stand for. Unless you work with those codes daily,
you don't know what they mean," said Ronal R. Bassham, a veterans
advocate for United Auto Workers Region 9.
But the Defense Department says it is the service member's responsibility
to make sure everything is in order.
"It's important to note that the Soldier is responsible for
reviewing the DD214 and ensuring it is accurate before he/she signs.
The Soldier is his/her own best defense against DD214 errors," said
Lt. Col. Jonathan Withington of the Defense Department.
The errors often aren't noticed until weeks or months and sometimes
even years later, according to advocates.
And the consequences can be devastating.
Veterans suffer
When a veteran later seeks benefits at the Department of Veterans
Affairs, a worker looks over the discharge paper listing campaign
ribbons, Purple Hearts, notations of overseas service and other
evidence the veteran experienced combat or served in a war zone,
Welch said.
Without that paper or with an incomplete or faulty discharge paper,
he said, "you're denied services."
Joseph P. Shydlinski, commander of the Disabled Veterans organization
in Kenmore, is also very familiar with the problems caused by inaccurate
discharge papers.
"Vets have to go back to the Department of Defense, and half
the time the department doesn't want to listen and there is a hell
of a backlog," said Shydlinski, another Vietnam veteran. "Sometimes
the vets get lucky and get it fixed in a day or two, other times
it can take months. In the meantime, the veterans are suffering
because they are not being properly treated at the VAs."
That's what happened to Cushing, the former Marine who served
two tours of duty in Iraq and a third with an antiterrorism unit
in east Africa.
Cushing is a Canadian by birth who enlisted in the Marines to
gain U.S. citizenship more quickly.
Home and savings lost
But when she left the service and began suffering health problems
related to her military duty, she was denied benefits because of
clerical errors on her discharge papers. She ended up living in
her car last summer before getting enough money to pay for an inexpensive
apartment on Buffalo's West Side.
Despite her combat service and military citations, she left the
Marines with discharge papers that listed her as a "conscientious
objector." She didn't see the mistake because it was in a
code she said she did not recognize.
"We basically hand the American government a blank check
with a value of up to our life," she said.
"In my case," Cushing added, "the value of that
check is I'll never walk unassisted again, I have wicked PTSD,
asthma that will kill me quicker than smoking, radiation exposure
from depleted uranium. I'm being watched for skin cancer and soft
tissue cancer and I have chronic intestinal problems."
She was finally able to get her discharge papers amended after
50 weeks, a shorter wait, Cushing noted, than most.
But in the meantime, she burned through her life savings, $20,000,
ran up $7,000 in copayment medical bills that the VA refuses to
reimburse, and lost her home early last year.
She says she still can't get over the bureaucracy and how it ends
up harming veterans.
Another woman who shares Cushing's opinion is Tracy Kinn, a New
York State veteran counselor highly regarded among several local
veterans.
Kinn said she does not believe military employees maliciously
make errors in the discharge papers. Instead, she blames it on
a lack of knowledge.
"It's pure ignorance in training, staffing and rushing them
along. There are so many veterans and there aren't enough people
to take care of their needs," Kinn said.
Like other veteran advocates, Kinn says it is not uncommon for
her to catch errors in discharge papers.
"It's crazy. How do you leave something off like a citation
[medal]? I sent in a correction last June for notation of a Purple
Heart on discharge papers, and we're waiting for the correction
to come through," Kinn said.
Without a combat medal, she added, the onus is on the veteran
to prove he or she suffers from post-traumatic stress from military-related
service in order to get medical help or disability benefits.
Veterans, she added, may not have directly participated in a battle,
especially in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that does not preclude
them from witnessing and experiencing wartime horrors.
Legislation mulled
To help veterans work through the bureaucracy, State Sen. George
D. Maziarz, who attended the Niagara Falls meeting, said legislation
that would require county veterans services workers to review amended
discharge forms might help speed up the process.
"Maybe we should look at legislation that would require county
veteran services officers to at least offer the ability to come
in and review a veteran's documents," the Newfane Republican
said. "A review by an expert may avoid delays in getting benefits
that are rightfully due."
The organizer of the Niagara Falls meeting, Robert Saunderson,
said its purpose was to draw attention to the problems veterans
are facing with faulty discharge papers.
"We're trying to raise awareness in a unified advocacy," said
Saunderson, a Town of Niagara resident and volunteer with the Iraq
War Veterans Organization headquartered in California.
A follow-up meeting is set for early April to determine if improvements
have occurred. The meeting will include advocates and local VA
officials.
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