Tag Archives: veterans

George W. Bush, Laura Bush advocate for vets and their families


By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

Making the grade: Expert tips for covering veteran education


By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

WASHINGTON — Veteran education is a perennially urgent issue for members of the United States military.

In order to raise awareness about barriers to veteran education and initiatives being undertaken to improve it, National Louis University and Student Veterans of America joined forces to host March 26’s “Improving Veteran Education Symposium” at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center in Washington.

There, the Medill National Security Journalism Initiative spoke with two expert panelists (who also happen to be veterans themselves) to get the inside scoop on how the media can do a better job of covering veteran education.

Advice from Megan Everett, Northwestern University alum, Program Officer of the Veterans Program at the Robert R. McCormick Foundation and United States Navy veteran:

  • Put higher education institutions who are dropping the ball when it comes to serving veterans on blast in order to pressure them to step their games up.
    • Indicators to watch:
      • Does the school have staff members explicitly dedicated to serving veterans?
        • “We have certifying officials that work to certify the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill and do some financial aid work, but there’s no person who has ‘veteran’ in their title,” Everett said of Northwestern University, where she is currently working to improve the state of veterans’ resources on campus.
      • Do veterans have dedicated physical spaces on campus?
      • Does the school have a functional veteran service group?
      • Other data points and factors to keep an eye on
        • Veteran student recruiting
        • Veteran student retention
        • Utilization of veteran student skill sets

Advice from David Goldich, Senior Consultant at Gallup and United States Marine Corps veteran:

  • Don’t assume that very veteran’s experience is identical or make instant extrapolations about the entire military community based on a single person’s story.
    • “Realize that it’s not a monolith; it’s a mosaic, when you’re talking about veterans or the military,” he explained during the post-panel Q&A. He advised reporters to recognize how differences in areas such as military branch, employment status, gender, levels of physical ability and more impact individual experience.
  • “Connect the dots” and move from merely looking at veteran graduation rates to an analysis of “what works for who [sic] and why.”
    • “No one’s talking to each other,” he explained. “Everyone’s measuring their little own slice of the block—pie. They’ve got blinders.”
  • Questions to ask:
    • Does education lead to an improved quality of life
    • Does education lead to better employment?
    • What identifiable indicators led people to pursue higher education after their military service?
    • Find “thematic connections” between different stages of a veteran student’s life to better understand the stories behind different veteran outcomes.

The Veteran Student Continuum

Monthly VA disability claims backlog snapshot — through July 2014


By SB Anderson

Status through July of the backlog in Veterans Benefits Administration disability application processing.

Compared to rapid progress for much of the past year, progress seems to have stalled a bit this summer.

Chart and table below detail changes month-to-month, week-to-week and year-over-year.

Data is taken from the VBA’s weekly “Monday Morning Workload Reports” that track claims processing progress. We think monthly tracking is a better barometer of actual progress because it flattens out some of the temporary ups and downs the weekly reports reflect.

Weekly updates on claim processing. Image updates over time with fresh data.

 

CLAIMS PENDING OVER 125 DAYS % OVER 125 DAYS AVG. DAYS PENDING
End June 528,790 261,907 49.50% 158.9
End July 524,225 261,116 49.80% 160.4
Change 4,565 791 0.30 1.50
YTD Change -112,049 -127,062 -11.20 -13.4
End July 2013 733,171 485,600 66.20% 235.5

View earlier progress  summaries.

POGO: ‘Fear and retaliation at the VA’


By SB Anderson

POGO report of problems at the VA

The Project on Government Oversight and the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America asked veterans and Veterans Administration employees to share their stories about problems with the VA. The results so far:

In its 33-year history, POGO has never received as many submissions on a single issue—nearly 800 current and former VA employees and veterans contacted us. POGO reviewed each of the submissions, and the comments indicate that concerns about the VA go far beyond long or falsified wait times for medical appointments; they extend to the quality of health care services veterans receive.

POGO received allegations of wrongdoing from 35 states and the District of Columbia, and in the limited time we have had thus far to analyze the information, a recurring and fundamental theme has become clear: VA employees across the country fear they will face repercussions if they dare to raise a dissenting voice.

Full Story.

Employment improvement at last for most recent veterans at mid-point of 2014


By SB Anderson

After essentially stagnating during 2013, the unemployment rate among the group of veterans who have served since 9/11 declined significantly in the first half of this year, an analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows.

National Security Zone and On the Beat have aggregated veteran’s unemployment data back to 2006. That data is available for your use via this spreadsheet.

On average from January through June, the unemployment rate among so-called “Gulf War Era II” veterans was 7.8% — a 25% drop from the 9% rate for 2013. The unemployment rate during the second quarter of this year averaged 6.4% compared to 8% in the first quarter, indicating continued positive progress as the year unfolds.

By comparison, the rate for non-veterans in the first half of this year averaged 6.4%.

An average of 175,000 post-9/11 veterans was out of work each month for the first six months of this year.

The Gulf War II veteran jobless rate remains significantly higher than the veteran population as a whole — 27% above the average 5.7% rate for all veterans in the first six months. That is a tiny bit improved over last year, when the overall 9% rate for Gulf War II veterans was just over one-third higher.

Jobless rates Gulf and All Vets

VA claims backlog: It’s not only about disability claims


By SB Anderson

A good reminder from National Journal a few days ago that while the media seems most interested in the still-huge backlog of the Veteran’s Administration’s disability claims, a variety of other claims are clogged up as well.

The VA loves to talk about how it’s on track to reach its goal next year of completing all disability compensation and pension claims within 125 days—keeping them off the dreaded “backlogged” list. Frequently overlooked? The other two-thirds of VA claims—or more than 1 million requests—aren’t subject to the department’s 125-days, 98-percent accuracy goal. . . .

What are these other claims clogging up the VA’s system?

They run the gamut from aiming to change the amount of disability pay a veteran receives to appealing previous decisions by the department. They also include responses to congressional inquiries. So while the number of pending VA disability claims has shrunk in recent years, the number of overall claims has mushroomed to roughly 1.64 million. That’s compared with 941,666 in late 2009.

Full Story

Monthly VA disability claims backlog snapshot — through May 2014


By SB Anderson

The backlog in Veterans Benefits Administration disability application processing continued to shrink in May, with the number of claims pending over 125 days reduced by 33,000 and the average days pending down by just 2.4 days.

May  was the fourth consecutive month of progress after stalls in November and December of 2013.

Chart and table below detail changes month-to-month, week-to-week and year-over-year.

Data is take from the VBA’s weekly “Monday Morning Workload Reports” that track claims processing progress. We think monthly tracking is a better barometer of actual progress because it flattens out some of the temporary ups and downs the weekly reports reflect.

Weekly updates on claim processing. Image updates over time with fresh data.

 

CLAIMS PENDING OVER 125 DAYS % OVER 125 DAYS AVG. DAYS PENDING
End May 539,222 277,026 51.40% 163
End Apr. 563,379 310,180 55.10% 165.4
Change -24,157 -33,154 -3.70 -2.40
YTD Change -72,895 -77,998 -5.90 -8.4
End May 2013 778,425 530,325 68.10% N/A

View earlier progress  summaries.