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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow some veterans exploit $193 billion VA program, due to lax controls
Military veterans are swamping the U.S. government with dubious disability claims including cases of brazen fraud totaling tens of millions of dollars that are exploiting the countrys sacred commitment to compensate those harmed in the line of duty, according to a Washington Post investigation.
Taxpayers will spend roughly $193 billion this year for the Department of Veterans Affairs to compensate about 6.9 million disabled veterans on the presumption that their ability to work is impaired. VA officials say most veterans disability claims are legitimate.
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Over the past quarter-century, veterans have flooded VA with an escalating number of claims. In 2001, veterans received benefits for a total of nearly 6 million disabilities. By last year, that figure had risen to 41.7 million, a sevenfold increase.
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The surge in disability claims has come as the population of living veterans has shrunk by around one-third, from 26 million in 2001 to 17.6 million today. And in other critical ways, VAs compensation system has failed to keep up with medical advances and changes in the workplace.
Washington Post

leftstreet
(37,554 posts)OMG OMG OMG
Thank heavens private defense contractors like Northrop Grumman, Lockheed, Boeing don't rip off the gubmint
haele
(14,722 posts)Chances are most Vets have.
It's not quite like SSDI -more like Worker's Compensation but with a more "future vision".
The purpose is to cover specific service related medical conditions throughout the lifetime of the recipient, whether they can work or not. Their quality of life and ability to work has been adversely impacted by something their service to the Federal Government caused.
My hearing, knees, hips, and ankles were adversely affected by my time in service. I was exposed to asbestos and industrial chemicals that have not only caused bone density loss and spots on my lungs, but have caused severe allergies that require me to carry Benadryl and prescription migraine medication to remain somewhat functional in many common public situations.
These medical conditions would not have been present if I was, say, a teacher, musician, or even a old school electrical/software engineer - my other options out of high school.
While it's true some Vets probably don't need the VA (allowing the GOP to consider it a "waste of taxpayer funds" ), for way too many others, it's the difference between having minimal health service to function or being homeless.
But as usual, point out the 2 - 5% outliers to destroy a program you don't want to see funded or think provides an advantage to "the wrong sort of people".
maxrandb
(16,904 posts)Last edited Mon Oct 6, 2025, 04:49 PM - Edit history (2)
Hey Dickweed! How many fucking Amazon workers are on public assistance, or Medicaid?
Guess veterans ought to just piss in a plastic bottle like his fucking warehouse employees.
This is such bullshit!
Please allow someone who was there, and intimately involved in the "rise in claims" since 2001 explain it.
This increase was due to "bipartisan" work in Congress. Passed during the Clinton administration and strengthened during the Bush II and Obama years.
It was an initiative called the "Transition Assistance Program", or TAP for short.
For decades, veterans retiring or separating from military service were simply presented some appreciation certificates, parting gifts, a couple of phone numbers, a DD214 and a handshake, or salute.
What we in the military discovered, is that veterans were leaving billions in earned compensation on the table.
Hell, there were hundreds of thousands of vets that NEVER used their GI Bill for education, leaving millions in ALREADY OBLIGATED DOD FUNDS unused. Former Virginia Senator James Webb is the one who helped push through changes in the GI Bill that allowed veterans to transfer some, or all of their unused EARNED education benefits to their spouse, or children.
This was all part of the TAP program.
The TAP Program made it MANDATORY, for ALL Honorably separated military members to attend a one week course in what benefits were available to them as they transitioned to civilian life.
One thing TAP required, was to have experts from the VA review the veterans Medical Records to identify things that might entitle the veteran to some disability coverage, or VA Medical care. These were things like asbestos exposure, hearing loss, joint and bone injuries, chronic disease, vision loss, burn pit exposure, etc.
Even if the VA found something, the veteran still needed to apply and go through a rigorous screening and review process to determine if they were eligible for disability.
The reason for the increase in claims, is because America FINALLY took action to ensure our veterans were provided more than a KICK IN THE ASS when they separated.
These disability claims are ALL PART OF THE CONTRACT AMERICA MADE WITH HER VETERANS.
Of course, the multi-hundred-billion, billionaire delivery person, would see these veterans as takers and losers.
Let me give you just one example of what VA Disability means to one of my good friends and Shipmates.
He served Honorably for 26 years, obtaining the rank of Senior Chief Petty Officer. Several years after he retired, his body began to breakdown. He has Huntingtons Disease. A terrible, disastrous genetic disease that I wouldn't even wish on Jeff Bozos.
Here is how military service works. I was on-duty 24/fucking 7, 365. If you were involved in a car accident, or hurt in a pick-up Basketball game while on active duty...YOU WERE IN THE LINE-OF-DUTY when injured.
It took a long time and some work for my friend to be able to show that you have Huntingtons Disease from the day you were born. Therefore, even though the symptoms didn't show up until after he retired...he had this disease while he was IN THE LINE OF DUTY.
Mosby
(19,104 posts)Claims for irritable bowel syndrome have also soared; since 2013, approved cases have risen 400 percent. Cases of hiatal hernia, a condition that causes heartburn and acid reflux, have increased tenfold since 2005.
For many of the most common disabilities, including migraines, depression and back pain, there is no conclusive way to determine whether a veteran is telling the truth about the severity of their symptoms. Under federal law, VA must give a veteran the benefit of the doubt and approve their claim when evidence is evenly split.
Veterans categorized as 100 percent disabled often still hold normal, full-time jobs. Most have an assortment of ailments like arthritis, diabetes, scars or a deviated septum that by themselves are not incapacitating but that add up to a 100 percent rating under VA rules.
Yet VA, clinging to decades-old rules, considers most veterans who are prescribed a sleep apnea mask to be 50 percent disabled. That rate entitles them to $1,102 per month in tax-free payments, more if they have dependents.
Sleep apnea is now one of VAs most frequently claimed disabilities. Last year, 659,335 vets received compensation for it. Thats about 11 times the number who did in 2009, VA figures show.
The most-claimed disability by far is tinnitus, or ringing in the ears, another condition that is difficult to confirm with certainty. Last year, nearly 3.3 million veterans more than half of those on disability received benefits for it. By itself, tinnitus carries a 10 percent rating, which pays $176 a month, more with dependents.
She said that she never considered herself disabled and that her hysterectomy didnt affect her ability to earn a living. I wasnt going to put in for it, she added, explaining that a veterans service organization advised her to submit the claim. But it would have been foolish of me to turn down the benefit. Still, Ramsey said she thinks its unfair that combat-wounded veterans receive less than her: Nobody ever shot at me.
HAB911
(9,952 posts)HAB911
(9,952 posts)Over 1 million veterans and their survivors have received disability compensation benefits under the PACT Act, and nearly 740,000 veterans have enrolled in VA health care since its implementation. Additionally, more than 5.6 million veterans have been screened for toxic exposures related to the Act.
LAS14
(15,350 posts)Maru Kitteh
(30,814 posts)payment structures, so that will continue to drive this trend.