|
Who
We Are
Articles
Upcoming
Events
Past
Events
Downloads
Links
No
Child Left Behind
Political
Cartoons
Contact
Us
|
Insult to Injury
Linda Robinson, US News & World Report
April 16, 2007
In the
middle of a battle in Fallujah in April 2004, an M80 grenade landed a
foot away from Fred Ball. The blast threw the 26-year-old Marine
sergeant 10 feet into the air and sent a piece of hot shrapnel into his
right temple. Once his wound was patched up, Ball insisted on rejoining
his men. For the next three months, he continued to go on raids, then
returned to Camp Pendleton, Calif.
But Ball was not all right. Military doctors
concluded that Ball was suffering from a traumatic brain injury,
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), chronic headaches, and balance
problems. Ball, who had a 3.5 grade-point average in high school, was
found to have a sixth-grade-level learning capability. In January of
last year, the Marine Corps found him unfit for duty but not disabled
enough to receive full permanent disability retirement benefits and
discharged him.
Ball's situation has taken a dire turn for the
worse. The tremors that he experienced after the blast are back, he can
hardly walk, and he has trouble using a pencil or a fork. Ball's case
is being handled by the Department of Veterans Affairs-he receives $337
a month-but while his case is under appeal, he receives no medical
care. He works 16-hour shifts at a packing-crate plant near his home in
East Wenatchee, Wash., but he has gone into debt to cover his $1,600
monthly mortgage and support his wife and 2-month-old son. "Life is
coming down around me," Ball says. Trained to be strong and
self-sufficient, Ball now speaks in tones of audible pain.
Fred Ball's story is just one of a shocking number
of cases where the U.S. military appears to have dispensed low
disability ratings to wounded service members with serious injuries and
thus avoided paying them full military disabled retirement benefits.
While most recent attention has been paid to substandard conditions and
outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the first stop for
many wounded soldiers stateside, veterans' advocates say that a more
grievous problem is an arbitrary and dysfunctional disability ratings
process that is short-changing the nation's newest crop of veterans.
The trouble has existed for years, but now that the country is at war,
tens of thousands of Americans are being caught up in it.
Now an extensive investigation by U.S. News and a
new Army inspector general's report reveal that the system is beset by
ambiguity and riddled with discrepancies. Indeed, Department of Defense
data examined by U.S. News and military experts show that the vast
majority-nearly 93 percent-of disabled troops are receiving low
ratings, and more have been graded similarly in recent years. What's
more, ground troops, who suffer the most combat injuries from the
ubiquitous roadside bombs, have received the lowest ratings.
One counselor who has helped wounded soldiers
navigate the process for over a decade believes that as many as half of
them may have received ratings that are too low. Ron Smith, deputy
general counsel for the Disabled American Veterans, says: "If it is
even 10 percent, it is unconscionable." The DAV is chartered by
Congress to represent service members as they go through the evaluation
process. Its national service officers are based at each rating
location, and there is a countrywide network of counselors. Smith says
he recently asked the staff to cull those cases that appeared to have
been incorrectly rated. Within six hours, he says, they had forwarded
him 30 cases. "So far," Smith says, "the review supports the conclusion
that a significant number of soldiers are being fairly dramatically
underrated by the U.S. Army."
Magic Number
In an effort to learn how extensive the problem is,
U.S. News spent six weeks talking to wounded service members, their
counselors, and veterans advocacy groups and reviewing Pentagon data.
At first glance, the disability ratings process seems straightforward.
Each branch of service has its own Physical Evaluation Boards, which
can comprise military officers, medical professionals, and civilians.
The PEBs determine whether the wounded or ill service members are fit
for duty. If they are, it's back to work. Those found unfit are
assigned a disability rating for the condition that makes them unable
to do their military job. The actual rating is key, and here's why:
Service members who have served less than 20 years-the great majority
of wounded soldiers-who receive a rating under 30 percent are sent home
with a severance check. Those who receive a rating of 30 percent or
higher qualify for a host of lifelong, enviable benefits from the DOD,
which include full military retirement pay (based on rank and tenure),
life insurance, health insurance, and access to military commissaries.
But the system is hideously complicated in practice.
The military doctors who prepare the case for the PEBs pick only one
condition for the service member's rating, even though many of the
current injuries are much more complex. The PEBs use the Department of
Veterans Affairs ratings scale, which grades disabilities in increments
of 10-a leg amputation, for example, puts a soldier at between 40 and
60 percent disabled. The PEBs claim they have the leeway to rate a
soldier 20 percent disabled for pain, say, rather than 30 percent
disabled for a back injury. If rated at 20 percent or below and
discharged, the soldier enters the VA system as a retiree where he is
evaluated again to establish his healthcare benefits. Ball, for
example, was found by the VA to be 50 percent disabled for PTSD.
Since 2000, 92.7 percent of the disability ratings
handed out by PEBs have been 20 percent or lower, according to Pentagon
data analyzed by the Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission, which
Congress formed in 2004 to look into veterans' complaints (Page 47).
Moreover, fewer veterans have received ratings of 30 percent or more
since America went to war in Afghanistan and Iraq, according to the
Pentagon's annual actuarial reports. As of 2006, for example, 87,000
disabled retirees were on the list of those exceeding the 30 percent
threshold; in 2000, there were 102,000 recipients. Last year, only
1,077 of 19,902 service members made it over the 30 percent threshold
(chart, Page 49).
The total amount paid out for these benefit awards
has remained roughly constant in wartime and peacetime, leading
disabled veterans like retired Lt. Col. Mike Parker, who has become an
unofficial spokesperson on this issue, to allege that a budgetary
ceiling has been imposed to contain war costs. A DOD spokesperson, Maj.
Stewart Upton, said that the Pentagon "is committed to improving the
Disability Evaluation System across the board and to ... a full and
fair due process with regard to disability evaluation and compensation."
Other data reveal glaring discrepancies among the
military services. Even though most of those wounded in Iraq and
Afghanistan have been ground troops, the Army and Marine Corps have
granted far fewer members full disabled benefits than the Air Force.
The Pentagon records show that 26.7 percent of disabled airmen have
been rated 30 percent or more disabled, while only 4.3 percent of
soldiers and 2.7 percent of marines made the grade. Services engaged in
close combat, experts say, could be expected to find more members unfit
for duty and meriting full retirement benefits. Instead, the Air Force
decided that 2,497 airmen fall into that category while the much larger
Army, with its higher tally of wounded, has accorded those benefits to
only 1,763 soldiers since 2000.
How many of these veterans' cases have been decided
incorrectly? Nobody knows. These statistics show trends that are
clearly at odds with what logic would dictate, but there has been no
effort to discover how many of those low ratings were inaccurately
conferred or to ascertain why the number receiving full benefits has
declined during wartime or why there is such a discrepancy between the
Air Force and the other services. But there is abundant anecdotal
evidence of a process cloaked in obscurity and riddled with anomalies,
and of ratings that are inconsistent and often arbitrarily applied.
DAV lawyer Smith, for example, took on the case of a
soldier whose radial nerve of his dominant hand had been destroyed, the
same affliction former Sen. Bob Dole has. Like Dole, the soldier was
unable to write with a pen or to button his shirt. "There is one and
only one rating for that condition, which is 70 percent disability,"
says Smith. The PEB gave the soldier 30 percent, the lawyer said,
"which I found to be fairly outrageous." Upon appeal to the Army
Physical Disability Agency, the entity that oversees that service's
disability evaluation process, the rating was raised to 60 percent.
Smith recently took on another case, that of Sgt. Michael Pinero, a
soldier who developed a degenerative eye condition called keratoconus
that required him to wear contact lenses. Army regulations prohibit
wearing contacts in combat, which should have made him ineligible for
deployment and therefore unfit to perform his specific military duties.
But the PEB ignored the eye condition, which Smith believes merited a
30 percent rating or more, and rated Pinero 10 percent disabled for
shin splints. Smith has asked the Army to clarify whether it considers
the regulation on contact lenses binding or, as one board member
alleged, merely a guideline. Disputes over such distinctions are common
in the Alice in Wonderland world of disability ratings.
Controversy frequently surrounds decisions on which
conditions make a soldier unfit for duty. Smith took issue with a
recent statement made by the Army Physical Disability Agency's legal
adviser, quoted in Army Times newspaper. The official said that
short-term memory loss would not necessarily render soldiers unfit for
duty since they could compensate by carrying a notepad. "Memory loss is
a common sign of TBI," Smith said, using the abbreviation for traumatic
brain injury, which has afflicted many soldiers hit by the roadside
bombs commonly used in Iraq. "The rules of engagement are a seven-step
process.... If a suicide bomber is coming at you, you cannot stop and
consult your notepad," he added. "I find this demonstrative of the
attitude that pervades the Physical Disability Agency," which is in
charge of reviewing evaluations for accuracy and consistency.
Trying to overturn a low rating can be a full-time
job-and an exasperating one. Take Staff Sgt. Chris Bain, who lost the
use of his arms but not his sense of humor. "They call me T-Rex because
I have a big mouth and two hands and I can't do nothing with them," he
jokes. He left the Army in February, but he still has plenty of fight
in him. During an ambush in Taji, Iraq, in 2004, a mortar round
exploded 2 feet away from him, ripping through his left arm and hand. A
sniper's bullet passed through his right elbow. His buddies saved his
life, throwing Bain on the hood of a humvee and rushing him to a combat
hospital. Once transferred to Walter Reed, Bain refused to have his arm
amputated and underwent eight surgeries to save it. That choice cost
him. While an amputation would have automatically put him over the 30
percent threshold, the injury to his left arm was rated at 20 percent
even though he cannot use the limb.
Bain was angry. A noncommissioned officer who had
planned on 20 or 30 years in the Army, he knew his career was over, but
he wasn't going to go quietly. "I wanted to be an example to all
soldiers," he said. "My job was to take care of troops." He went to
find Danny Soto, the DAV representative at Walter Reed he'd heard so
much about. "Danny is just an awesome guy. He took great care of me,
but he should not have had to," Bain says. Soto is a patron saint to
many soldiers at Walter Reed. He walks the halls, finding the newly
injured and urging them to collect documents for their journey through
the tortuous-and, to many, capricious-system. Many soldiers are young,
and after they have spent months or years recuperating, they just want
to get home and are unwilling to argue for the rating they deserve.
Even though he missed his wife and three children, Bain decided: "I've
already been here two years, another one ain't going to hurt me. Too
many people are getting lowballed."
With Soto's help, Bain gathered detailed medical
evidence of his injuries and went to face the board. They gave him a 70
percent rating for injuries related to the blast except for his hearing
loss, which was not considered unfitting since he had a hearing aid.
Oddly enough, however, the board put him on the temporary disabled
retirement list instead of the permanent list. "What do they think,
that after three years, my arm is going to come back to life?"
A lifetime of adjusting lies ahead for Bain. "I
can't tie my shoes, open bottles of water, or cut my own food," he
says. "I have to ask for help." The 35-year-old veteran has found a new
sense of purpose. He's decided to run for Congress in 2008, and fixing
the veterans' system is his top priority. "I do not want this s--- to
happen again to anyone. No one can communicate with each other. The
paper trail doesn't catch up." It's a tall order, but the soldier says
that he has "100,000 fights" left in him.
A systemic fix doesn't appear to be anywhere in
sight. A March 2006 report by the Government Accountability Office
found that Pentagon officials were not even trying to get a handle on
the problem. "While DOD has issued policies and guidance to promote
consistent and timely disability decisions," the report concluded,
"[it] is not monitoring compliance." But the GAO report did spur Army
Secretary Francis Harvey, who was forced to resign last month in the
wake of the Walter Reed scandal, to order the Army's inspector general
to conduct an investigation of the disability evaluation system. After
almost a year of work, the inspector general's office last month issued
a 311-page report that begins to pierce the confusion and opacity
surrounding the process. While it does not determine how many erroneous
ratings were accorded to the nearly 40,000 soldiers rated 20 percent
disabled or less since 2000, it does make three critical points: 1) the
ambiguity in applying the ratings schedule should end; 2) wide variance
in ratings is indisputable, even among the three Army boards, and 3)
the Army's oversight body is not doing its job.
Way Overdue
Army officials met with U.S. News to discuss the
inspector general's report. "This is something that has been near and
dear to our hearts for a long time, and it's probably way overdue as
far as having someone go and take a look at it," says a senior Army
official. The inspector general's team found that Army policy was not
consistent with the policies of either the Pentagon or the Department
of Veterans Affairs. It recommended that the Army "align [its]
adjudication of disability ratings to more closely reflect those used
by the Department of Veterans Affairs." For years, the Army has
asserted that it has the right to depart from VA standards on grounds
that it is assessing fitness for duty and compensating for loss of
military career, not decreased civilian employability.
Veterans' advocates argue that federal law requires
the military to use the Veterans Affairs Schedule for Rating
Disabilities as the standard for assigning the ratings. But over the
years, Pentagon directives on applying the schedule have opened up a
whole new gray area by saying the schedule is to be used only as a
guide. And the services have interpreted them in different ways,
engendering further discrepancies. Soto, the DAV national service
officer at Walter Reed, says that inconsistencies are especially
prevalent in complex cases of traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic
stress disorder. "There is a saying going around the compound here,"
Soto says, "that if you are not an amputee, you are going to have to
fight for your rating."
The inspector general's report calls for ending the
ambiguities. "What we're saying is it shouldn't be left to
interpretation; it should be clearly defined," says one Army official.
"If there were a way to cut down on that ambiguity, I think that
variance would decrease."
Finally, the report bluntly concludes that the
system's internal oversight mechanism is not functioning. "The Army
Physical Disability Agency's quality assurance program does not conform
to DOD and Army policy," it says-the same conclusion the GAO came to a
year ago. The inspector general's report adds evidence of just how
little the watchdog is doing to ensure that cases are correctly
decided. The agency is supposed to send cases to either of two review
boards when soldiers rebut their rating evaluations, but from 2002
through 2005, the agency sent only 45 out of 51,000 cases to one of the
boards. The other review board has not been used at all.
The inspector general's team made 41 recommendations
in all, finding among other things that the Army lacks a formal course
for training the liaison officers who are supposed to guide soldiers
through the PEB process, that the disposition of cases lags badly, that
the computerized information systems are antiquated, and that the two
key medical and personnel databases are not integrated and cannot
communicate with each other. The report has been forwarded to the
action team that Army Vice Chief of Staff Richard Cody convened-one of
many official groups formed since the revelations of substandard
conditions and bureaucratic delays at Walter Reed.
Veterans' advocates are skeptical that the
administration or the military bureaucracy will make major changes
anytime soon. In testimony to Congress last month, Veterans for America
director of veterans' affairs Steve Robinson recommended taking the
entire ratings process away from the Pentagon and giving it to the
Department of Veterans Affairs. "It's hard to ignore the fact that in
time of war they are giving out less disability," he says. "Is it
policy? I don't know. But it is a fact."
Congress has not responded to this problem. Says
Rep. Vic Snyder, the Arkansas Democrat who chairs the House Armed
Services subcommittee on military personnel: "This whole issue of
disability ratings is very complex. It is not well understood by many
people, including many in Congress. That is why we set up the [
Veterans' Disability Benefits] Commission in 2004. We are hoping it
will help us sort this out."
A lot is riding on the commission. Its chairman is
Lt. Gen. Terry Scott, who retired in 1997 and ran Harvard's Kennedy
School of Government's National Security Program until 2001. After the
Pentagon data on the disability process were presented to the
commission last week, Scott said "we still don't understand the whys
and wherefores" of the skewed ratings. The core problem, he believes,
is that "the military was not designed to look after severely wounded
people for a long time." The commission has not yet decided what
changes it will recommend, but he said there is a general sense that
"one physical exam at the end of service should be enough for both
agencies, DOD and VA."
Cash and Staff
Any solutions that call for transferring more
responsibility to the Department of Veterans Affairs will have to be
matched by enormous infusions of cash and staff. Already, the VA is
reeling under a backlog of over 600,000 claims from retired veterans,
which the agency predicts will grow by an additional 1.6 million in the
next two years. Harvard Prof. Linda Bilmes, an economist who has
published two studies on the costs of the Iraq war and the associated
veterans' costs, projects that as much as $150 billion more will be
required to deal with the wounded returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, people like Danny Soto want to know who
is going to stop the military boards from giving out ratings like the
10 percent given to one soldier for a skull fracture and traumatic
brain injury, when the VA later assigned a 100 percent rating. Soto is
also frustrated by a recent case in which a soldier whose legs had been
severely injured in a blast in Iraq was given only a 20 percent
disability rating for pain and by the treatment of a man who has a
bullet hole through his eye and suffers from seizures. As Soto sat with
that soldier in front of the board, he asked why he had been placed on
the temporary list. "At what point do you think he is going to fall
below 30 percent?"
Soto is unsparing in his criticism of the
bureaucracy. "This system," he says, " is so broke." Old soldiers say
the root of the problem is an Army culture that preaches a "suck it up"
attitude. "If you ask for what you are due, you are perceived to be
whining or trying to pad your pocket," says a retired command sergeant
major. "If you're not bleeding, you're not hurt. That's what we were
taught."
This archive consists of a topically organized selection of
articles culled by members of the Counter-Recruitment List Serve from printed
publications and web sites. The archive is not complete. We have chosen
material relevant to the work of Eugene,
Oregon’s Committee for Countering
Military Recruitment that we think may be of use to others individuals and
groups with similar goals.
Because our web site is public, personal comments about the
articles and (frequent) corrections of reporters’ errors are also not included.
If an article interests you, we encourage you to return to the
Counter-Recruitment List Serve and put the article’s headline into the search
line, which should bring up (often wise and useful) commentary and corrections.
If you do not belong to the List Serve, it can be found at counter-recruitment@yahoogroups.com
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the articles
on this site are posted without profit to those who have expressed prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposed.
|