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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRSSince 2001, the Administration:
The President’s 2008 Budget:
FOCUSING ON THE NATION’S PRIORITIESExpanding Access to Health Care for VeteransThe President’s 2008 Budget for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) proposes $36.6 billion (including collections) for medical care—83 percent more than when President Bush took office. VA operates the largest direct health care delivery system in the country, providing care at over 800 locations to over five million veterans. The Department is recognized as a leader in using high standards and technology to improve the quality of health care.
Today, VA treats a million more veteran patients a year than it did in 2001. Caring for returning combat veterans and veterans with military disabilities, low incomes, and special needs has always been VA’s core medical care mission and its highest priority. To continue to prioritize resources for these targeted veterans, the 2008 Budget proposes income-based enrollment fees and higher pharmaceutical copayments for all other veterans, better aligning the VA system with the fees paid by career military retirees under the healthcare system at the Department of Defense (DOD). VA continues to expand access to non-institutional long-term care, enabling veterans to live and be cared for near or in the comfort of their homes surrounded by family. In addition, veterans from all combat eras are requiring more prosthetics and sensory aids. The Budget proposes $1.3 billion to meet this need. The President’s Budget also recognizes the increased need for mental health care services and provides a total investment of $3 billion to afford a full continuum of care for veterans with mental health issues. The 2008 Budget provides $750 million in medical care construction funds to better align facilities with patient needs, bringing the total investment to $3.7 billion since 2004. This funding will provide care in places where veterans needs are greatest, improving access to both primary and specialty care services. Improving Benefits for Veterans and their FamiliesVeterans’ disability compensation is a monthly cash benefit paid to veterans for income loss due to service-related disabilities. In 2008, more than three million veterans and beneficiaries will receive approximately $37 billion in tax-free benefits from VA, an 84-percent increase in total payments from 2001. When President Bush took office, the number of disability benefit claims waiting to be processed had soared to over 600,000, resulting in many veterans waiting an average of over 230 days for VA to process their claims. Several statutory requirements have expanded eligibility and increased claim volume over the last six years, further impeding timeliness. The Administration and VA are committed to reducing processing time by continually improving methods and technology. In 2006, the average length of time to process a veteran’s disability claim dropped to 177 days. To continue improvement in processing veterans’ disability claims, the Budget provides resources to further reduce the processing time to 145 days. VA honors veterans with a hallowed final resting place at 125 national veterans’ cemeteries in 39 States and Puerto Rico. These cemeteries are maintained as national shrines and serve as a lasting tribute to commemorate veterans’ sacrifice for this Nation. VA is currently experiencing the largest expansion of the national cemetery system since the Civil War. On Veterans Day 2003, the President signed into law P.L. 108-109, the National Cemetery Expansion Act of 2003, directing the establishment of six new national cemeteries—two in Florida and one each in Alabama, California, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina. The 2008 Budget fully funds the final design and construction of these cemeteries and advances the President’s goal of ensuring that most veterans have a final resting place within 75 miles of their homes. Ensuring a Seamless Transition for Veterans Leaving the MilitaryPresident Bush identified increased coordination of VA and DOD programs and systems as one of the 14 key management priorities for his Administration, and these efforts have resulted in more efficient delivery of services and benefits to active and separated servicemembers and their families. In 2008, nearly 263,000 returning servicemembers from Iraq and Afghanistan will receive medical care from VA. VA outreach programs ensure that returning combat veterans know how to access care quickly and with minimal paperwork. VA caseworkers are stationed at major DOD hospitals to make direct contact with those leaving the service. VA and DOD are also working together to identify departing servicemembers who may be at risk for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and to determine the appropriate care best suited to each veteran. The Departments have made great progress in sharing electronic data necessary to make eligibility determinations for VA benefits and services for separated servicemembers. Over the past year, the Departments have reduced the time it takes for making DOD deactivation and separation data available to VA hospital and benefits processing centers from 90 days to within 3 days. Increased data sharing between VA and DOD lessens the burden on the veteran for providing requested information, thus reducing the time necessary for VA to complete decisions and for the veteran to receive benefits and services. VA continues to reach out to educate all servicemembers on VA benefits, offering assistance in applying for these benefits prior to separation from active duty. Under this Administration, VA and DOD have proactively partnered to better share valuable resources benefiting veterans and military beneficiaries.
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