DENIGRATING THE VA

Allow me to apologize to a large contingent of the Veterans Benefits Agency (VBA). I speak of the rank and file who handle our claims. They are represented by the AFGE, a union I am sure wants the best outcome for Vets.

As usual, the operational  disconnect often happens between the upper and lower management groups. The rank and file VA employees carrying the water on our claims develop them according to the dictates of the M 21-1MR. They are bound by this and cannot deviate from it. On paper, it looks like the real deal. In practice, the convoluted requirements disqualify almost all of us. This is what I have been working on for the last 5 years.

Often, you can feel your way around a dark room even without having entered it before. Certain precepts are a given. All bedrooms have a bed somewhere. Locate that and chances are you’ll find the nightstand close by. From there, the layout firms up in your mind. Filing a claim with the VA is similarly confounding. I have explored this phenomenon to its logical conclusion and written a book to help you navigate it. This website also updates and amplifies what we find. Filing a claim should not require a book. It shouldn’t require a detailed description of semantic punji pits to avoid, verbal trip wires that invoke automatic denials and mostly, it should be a non adversarial process as  advertised.

I get mail from AFGE members who implore me not to identify them. Some describe feelings almost akin to deep depression over their inability to help Veterans. Many are Veterans so the angst is even more genuine. For years I suspected that VA employees were indifferent to our plight. I made jokes about their apparent laziness or inability to accomplish some of the most mundane tasks. I remember the old VA of the 70’s. You could walk right in and sit down with the dude in charge of VA loans. You didn’t even need an appointment. They could figure it out (with paper files) in a heartbeat and have you on your way. What has changed is the upper management and the rulebook. Actually , it hasn’t changed. We did. We figured out this game. We now file claims whereas before we didn’t. Now there are too many of us storming the gates such that it endangers the financial viability of the system. All those upper management bonuses have to be paid.

No more is a simple claim “simple”. Everything has to go through India via snail mail. Twenty people have to get their mitts in it before you get the inevitable denial. After a long, protracted fight, you win but it shouldn’t have happened that way. AFGE members are aware of this. They cringe every time a new outfit arrives from the Central Office with some newly acronymed program designed to speed things up. At some point the acronyms sink the boat. This, in great measure, is what has happened. It was gradual and provoked by endless wars and their inevitable fallout-us. Too many of us.

Now, if you even doubted me or those poor souls mired in acronyms before now, I would like to set the record straight. As I mentioned above. I apologize. The apology extends to the rank and file, not the hierarchy who administer it. I urge you to read this AFGE web site in hopes you can understand the plight many of the VA employees find themselves in these days. They get to hear a steady drum roll of criticism about how inept and inefficient they are. Congress denigrates their efforts daily. Hell, VA upper management denigrates the rank and file and excoriates them for their inability to overcome the backlog-and then arrives with another laundry basket full of acronymed programs to institute. It reminds me of the hell officers put us through to accomplish our tasks.

Real Life

I’m sure you’ve often heard the term “At some point one has to shoot the engineers and begin production”. That time has come. Moreover, the support long promised for all these asinine “improvements” , so long held back, is now an imperative. VA has been doing this since 1775 as well so one would think they’d be past masters of the art form.

With the roll out of the new VBMS and a paperless system, vast quantities of support are needed and there is none. The hardware to support it is non-existent and nowhere to be seen on the horizon yet the troops are expected to crank these claims out as if it were there. The article I wrote about the VBMS several days ago that encompassed the OIG’s findings was rather tame. The IG is loathe to throw rocks in their own house and ostracize their brethren over at the VBA . This is why their diatribes are laced with “Wouldn’t it be nice if…” and “We and the Under Secretary for Benefits concurred that…”  and “it was felt that with more training and communication, a higher level of accomplishment will ensue”.

I urge all of you who feel the urge to pick up large stones and throw them at VAROs to peruse this website and “see how the other half lives”. Look at it from their perspective. Many of these people take the same pride in their jobs that we all do. I’m sure they are less than enchanted about the way the M21 is written and how it always seems to find us on the wrong side of the fence. Anyone, and especially Vets, feel compassion toward their own because they are often aware of the trials and tribulations associated with military service. They are also well-acquainted with the acronym SNAFU. That is what we have in common. Their dilemma is in how to get us service connected without running afoul of a hierarchy bent on denying us at every turn. We, in turn, are thwarted by inept VSOs with the IQ of goats. I take that back. It unfairly impugns goats everywhere. Day to day management of the VA rating process falls on the shoulders of many in the lower GS categories. They take the brunt of the abuse when production figures aren’t met. Prior to mow, I blamed them all as one faceless bureaucracy. I stand corrected. It’s patently obvious where the problem lies.

Fellow Veterans heed this. There is much more here than meets the eye. The more AFGE members who contact me and express outrage, as well as feelings of remorse when they see us disenfranchised, convinces me we are in for a long, bumpy ride well past the promised milk and honey of 125 day/98%  land in 2015. Unless there is a major sea change in how the Orlando Vacation Planning Office does business, we (Vets) and rank and file AFGE workers who rate us are going to both suffer unending years of abuse.

Look at this website and read the correspondence which is being given lip service by the Central Office. Witness the true feelings of VA employees who are forbidden to show any empathy to you. As I pointed out, in the 70s a much different paradigm was employed. Employees had names. They had telephones and they answered them. They signed their names to documents you received. There was interplay. Sadly, all that is a thing of the past. Acronyms have put paid to that. At what point did computer programs become the enemy? When forty people-ahem-technicians-are involved in a decision-making process, the opportunity for finger pointing is vastly expanded. No one has an individually recognized work product. It is the amalgam of many. No error can attach to it. Add in haste to produce with an inept process and you can see why the error rate exceeds 60% with no accountability  If vehicles were coming off the line in Detroit with no transmissions or u joints, someone would be summoned and asked why.

Maybe it’s time to forge an alliance. After all, we are the sole reason VA raters have a job and they exist to serve us. At what point does it become necessary to cut the Gordian knot and solve the quandary of benefits dispersal? Red tape might have been an apt metaphor twenty years ago. Now it consists of Challenge training, VBMS, CORE, IDEAL, PIES, VIS, BIRLS and VID. Somewhere, I suspect there’s an M-2? manual that is devoted entirely to identifying all the abbreviations. None of this means anything when the employee finishes his /her training only to be told “Well, that’s all well and fine but we don’t do it that way here in Salt Lake. Only back east. Just keep doing what we tell you or you’ll get the boot.”

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Tattoos as an important risk factor for HCV: Study says “…No place for doubt…”

tattoo by Kiedove. released as a public domain image.

“I used to love tattoos” Click for larger image.

Multi-national study title: Tattooing and the risk of transmission of hepatitis C: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Publication: International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 14, Issue 11 , Pages e928-e940, November 2010

The full text is also accessible from the UK’s Hepatitis C Trust report page under: Systematic Tattoo Review or as a link from Pubmed.

Results: A total of 124 studies were included in this systematic review, of which 83 were included in the meta-analysis. The pooled odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) of the association of tattooing and hepatitis C from all studies was 2.74 (2.38–3.15). In a subgroup analysis we found the strongest association between tattooing and risk of hepatitis C for samples derived from non-injection drug users.

Conclusion (from the last page):

“…the association between tattooing and risk of transmission of hepatitis C was so strong in seven out of eight subgroups that this leaves no place for doubt in considering tattooing as an important risk factor in the transmission of hepatitis C.

The data on the subgroups and pooled data in this report should be evidence enough for the VA to grant service-connection for HCV if the tattoo was received during military service.

 

Posted in HCV Health, HCV Risks (documented), Nexus Information, Tips and Tricks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

VETS OVERPAID

Here’s a good one from LawBob. Vets were overpaid. Really? $943 mil. since 1993.  But, but! Well, gee, if VA makes a mistake 60% of the time, how many billions did they underpay us since 1993? VA math is some of the most intriguing in the world of compensation.

VA COLLECTION CO.

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HOW MUCH DID WE PAY YOU?

SEND IT BACK MUEY PRONTO

Post script: Here’s the link to the the document. Read all about how VA has been profligate with our monies.

Posted in VAOIG Watchdogs | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

#33’s STORY-MARK DOES DC

This is one of those warm fuzzy moments where I get to nod (my head) and say “Toldja”. Long before even a thought of a book had crossed Cupcake’s mind, I met Mark. The how and why was not important but it was through the old HCVets Delphi Forums page where we all hung out. Mark wondered how I had won and I explained the “Win or Die” scenario. He had filed earlier in 2002 and, like most of us, lost and didn’t appeal. Boy, does that ever ring a bell with moi.

He was like all of us. We were given the Risk Factors Questionnaire (RFQ) to fill out. Unprotected sex? Check. Tattoo? Check. IVDU? Negatory. Maybe some killer Afghan hash a time or two; Extremely Trashed Or Hammered (ETOH) many, many times but definitely no hanky panky. Well, perhaps a few whiffs of the White Lady and some disco biscuits but definitely  not the hardcore stuff.

Mark, like me (once), was still laboring under the misconception that the VA actually subscribed to the “For he who shall have borne the battle” theory. It’s the VA, right? They work for us, right? I don’t get it.  Then how come I lost?

The ink was barely dry on my rating in 08 when Mark and I got together. In fact, several others were also asking for tips. I had to do some triage and Mark’s plight was the worst. It was so bad I was looking for help getting a Thanksgiving dinner to him. Seriously.

As you will read in his decision, Mark possessed about what all of us had when we came to them twenty five years later. A lot of lay testimony, some STDs in service, and an undocumented tattoo which he fortunately kept a picture of comprised the meat of his argument. Well, that and a nexus letter I  suggested he get.  The good old boys down at the California Department of Veterans Affairs had somehow neglected to tell him about that part of the process.

2013-02-06 145540

Mark went through exactly what I thought would be a winning process but VA cheated. They couldn’t bring themselves to believe with their own eyes what wasn’t written             (evidence of tattoo on SF88 separation physical) nor could they accept what was written (their own RFQ that said unprotected sex may cause HCV). It’s a disease prevalent among VA Examiners. They’ll see it when they believe it.

Here, the “Examiner” decided not to decide. At the VA, this isn’t a denial.  In the NFL, they call it punting on 4th and long.  She was willing to concede that the picture in 1978 accurately depicted tattoos identical to the ones he currently was wearing. She ventured further and acknowledged he had STDs in service. At that point she hit the “Deny if you can. Grant if you must” wall. It was December of 2009. Unwilling to risk her annual bonus, she came out with what we call the Immaculate Conception theory. You know the one where you get knocked up but didn’t do the dirty deed? Mark had not gotten it from unprotected sex. God gave it to him. The evidence pointed to it happening about that time judging by what stage the hepatitis had progressed to but it wasn’t unprotected sex that caused it. God had. Therefore, if you divide the two risks, ignore the first one and then say it’s simply too speculative to decide one way or another on the second one, you have artfully denied Mark without making a call on either one. When all else fails, send it to DC. But that hinges on whether the Vet appeals. Most don’t.

VA decided Mark’s sexcapades were not at least as likely as not the cause. Furthermore, Mark was in the Neutral Zone. He was a peacetime soldier in between wars. He wasn’t going to get the 38 USC §1154 (b) combat dispensation that his word was gold.  100 missions over Inga and only shot down twice does not a risk factor make.

In the end, she simply threw up her hands and pretended to have the vapors…

“while not going so far as to confirm the Veteran obtained his tattoos in service, she did confirm that he had tattoos in service. She ultimately concluded that it was not possible to state whether the Veteran’s hepatitis C could be attributed to unsafe sexual practices during military service without resorting to mere speculation. She did not opine as to whether the Veteran’s obtaining tattoos could have been a contributing factor to his hepatitis C.” 

Hearin lies the legal problem. All the VA Examiner is permitted (or required) to do is look at any and all risk factors and rate them in order of of descending importance. Tattoos are higher than unprotected sex in most cases. Here, they admitted Mark had some mighty funny-looking ink on his arms in a contemporary picture. They theorized he might have gotten them in 1978 judging by the photo but they sure weren’t going to go out on a limb and say that the tattoos in the old photo were the exact same tattoos they were looking at in December 2009 at his illustrious Dog and Pony Show. It was equally possible that he had obtained period military dress and makeup, illegally entered the base and had someone snap a picture recently with a really old Polaroid One Step.  Any grant based on that would be resorting to mere speculation. You see, the Examiner was only 5 years old in 1978 and she lived in a different state. She didn’t personally witness Mark get the ink so it was speculative to even venture an opinion.

Nurse

Now for the divide and conquer. Nurse Ratched has disposed of the 800 pound tattoo by ignoring it and now moves on to the sex thing. She uses her own intuition to make the medical call on the STDs. VA lists it on the RFQ. It’s a recognized risk by even the CDC. Mark’s nexus letter by a genuine MD cites this as the premiere risk. And he lost.

The Examiner missed the legal boat. All she had to do was make the “at least as likely as not” call based on the evidence and the benefit of the doubt. That is the legal standard. With two risks, the scales of justice tilted even more favorably. By having only one story,one scenario,one photo, one nexus and two documented risks, he had it in the bag but VA does not work that way. I beg to differ with some of the other Veterans websites who are convinced the VA is moral and upstanding. That only happens in Grimm’s Faery Tales.

Mark was crushed. I consoled him by pointing out the inevitable next step. He had all the ingredients for the recipe but no one would accept them. And then I started getting sick. Puke sick. Interferon sick. Go to the Hospital for a year sick. I quickly and carefully assembled everything we had, enlarged and sharpened the photo and told him how to take his Protein Pill and put his helmet on. I have to hand it to him. Most would have said piss on the fire and call in the dogs. Mark simply got out the Rand McNally atlas and asked for instructions on how to get there and what to say when he arrived. Such is the  fabric Veterans are made of.

Fast forward two years and what I described in my book came to pass. The book was written about all the Marks, Cleotis’, Toms, WGMs and Squids- all the ones who have fought 5 and even ten years to get there. Mark really started in 2001 with Act I. This is just the culmination of Act II. Act III now begins with the battle to get his lowball 20% rating up to 100 P&T. Mark belongs to that unique Stage 4 Hepatitis club, and, like me, still hasn’t figured out how to kill the bug. What’s more, all those pesky secondary things like Diabetes 2 and Fibromyalgia are starting to crop up. Two or three Interferon parties will do that to you. I’m willing to bet his vision is also taking a hit and his thyroid is two quarts low. This didn’t happen a moment too soon.

Mark does not realize the importance of staying healthy for a while so I’ll spring the good news on him here. Mark just married his high school sweetheart. He needs to get this to P&T quickly so he can get the DIC for her. This is the golden time of the claim where 2007 is the magic date. Any rating he wins in the Fenderson Staged Ratings Phase is the rating that will be awarded back to that magic filing day in 2007. If his medical records clearly support a higher rating, it will dramatically change the amount of the award. In addition,  free college for the missus and medical insurance, the free $10,000.00 Whole Life Insurance paid in full every month-the list goes on.  He has to stay healthy for a year in order for her to qualify in the VA’s lexicon as a real “wife” and not a Russian mail-order flash in the pan. In fact, if VA can find anything wrong with her papers (prior marriages and divorces), they’ll hang Mark up for years until he straightens it out. Mark doesn’t have the luxury of years.

Mark is now inside the wire. He is no longer an adversary. He won. Now he begins the next chapter. Just like attaining rank in the Army, so now must Mark move up the ladder to Sargent and so on. He joins the ranks of the 15%ers-those who chose to stand and fight. I’ll never forget the day I was hanging over the porcelain filing cabinet puking in 2007 and said “What the Hell? I’m going to die from this so I might as well keep on fighting until I win.” Mark followed suit. No complaints. No “Will you do it for me?” He didn’t have a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of  and didn’t even bat an eyelash. And on 3 December 2012 he outlasted the bastards and won. He’s the Poster child for my book- as is WGM and all of you. You don’t give up.

And what I love most about doing this is you all come back and share your marvelous tale with us.  This not only shows others how to do it but that it can be done. We have the Force with us on this site.

Do... Or do not.To try is to fail. Win or Die we shall.

Do… Or do not.To try is to fail. Win or Die we shall. Yesssss.

Here’s the exciting tale of Mark does DC. Let it be a blueprint of what can happen if you persevere.

mark 1mark 2mark 4mark 7mark 8mark 9mark 10

Just for the record, The California Dept. Of Vet Affairs merely held Mark’s coat while he had this dust up. He did all the heavy lifting himself. I just whispered in his ear. Congratulations, sir. You entered the den and bearded the lion. What’s more, you did it yourself.

Here’s Mark’s BVA decision. It was just posted a day or so ago (2/15/13)

http://www.va.gov/vetapp12/Files6/1241087.txt

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Tips and Tricks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

LEFT-HANDED TOBACCO AND THE VA

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A member who wishes to remain anonymous asked me to publish this. Since I am in one of the two new states who recognize the right to do this recreationally, I think it bears discussion. I make no recommendations pro or con on this so please do not read any into it.

Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access (VMMA?) has a website on this subject here. It appears they have changed their name to Veterans for Medical Cannabis Access or VMCA.  I had no idea. In addition, they have been pestering the VA for some form of position paper on it. This is intriguing.

Since I report and you decide, I’d appreciate some input here. Some may not wish to use their names. Therefore I have chosen our venerable friend the anonymous poll to harvest the info. It requires no ID, is not a info collection device and I disable all the cookies that usually inhabit most of these things. Actually, I do it on all my polls. None has ever had a tracking cookie on it. It allows you to vote Chicago style. Unlike the VA, I trust you all. Well, everybody but member Kel who likes to stuff the ballot box. Inquiring minds need to know.

Posted in Medical News, polls, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Merck’s instructive narrated animation about HCV

Merck, known as MSD outside of the United States, has produced a 5-minute animation that provides details to help laypersons visualize and understand obscure terms and concepts presented in press releases and scientific materials. For example, the press release “Microbiotix Announces Exclusive Worldwide Licensing Agreement for HCV NS5B Non-Nucleoside Polymerase Inhibitors,” uses the term, NS5B.

This video shows viewers where NS5B comes into play in the viral replication process and why it’s important.  I learned that HCV attaches to a plasma lipid particle in the blood stream and together they travel to the liver.  This animation is the best I’ve seen thus far to help me understand HCV’s life cycle.  I’ve stopped it and replayed certain parts a few times.

 

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VBMS OR VBSM?

oig

Rarely do I launch into a diatribe against the VA. Strike that. That is one thing you can always be assured of reading here. Unless or until they pull the plug on me as they did Keith Roberts, I will continue to fight for you.

Thus it was with some approbation that I received this from the OIG this morning. I requested a feed from their news service several months ago. I have been having bad hair days ever since. Today’s brief on the new Veterans Benefits Management System (VBMS) seems to be full of hooey. It is couched in semantic non-isms of “While VA is to be complimented for getting off their dead asses and finally doing something about this intractable backlog, the methods leave much to be desired.”

It doesn’t work. It probably won’t for years and putting more lipstick on it isn’t going to make up for the fact that it can’t walk because it lacks two of the four legs necessary for locomotion. In fact, lipstick is the very least of their worries right now. Saying it works when it clearly doesn’t is called lying. When you notice the word “legacy” in the article, replace it with ” the old-fashioned way we used to do it on paper”.

As of September 2012, three major VBMS software releases had not provided all of the functionality necessary to support the entire claims process. VA designed the system to have seven major subcomponents lined up with each stage of the claims process, from initial application through review, rating, award, and benefits delivery. As such, all of the sub-components were at various stages of completion and were not yet fully functioning. Two of the seven modules had not been developed; the other five were only partially functional. For example, critical capabilities such as establishing claims and calculating disability benefits were not fully available in VBMS.

VA, as usual, is employing the standard approach of “Do something. Anything. Get them off our backs. We’ll come up with a repair order shortly. We just need time.” I call this the “build the plane and we’ll worry about making it fly later” syndrome. Few successful corporations have ever tried this design/build approach of constructing something and then actually trying to make it functional. Orville and Wilbur would have been in a pickle if they started on the premise of trying to get a bicycle airborne and then contemplated adding wings later. Yet VA approaches this in much the same manner. Consider the below:

va

Now for your new hairdo makeover. Here are  the new sites (VAROs) where VBSM has been installed. Brylcreem is not going to help. Your hair will still be standing on end after reading the article.

grapg

At this rate, 2015 looks like a typo. Perhaps Uncle Eric meant 2051. That seems far more doable at this stage after reading this whitepaper. I guess we can see which ROs will be the new logjams in the next few years. Of more import, once up and running, all of them will be. Wait. That’s what we have now.

VA will continue this charade for as long as they are allowed to. Congressional inquiries and hearings will regurgitate the same pablum for microphones. VSO “stakeholders” will swear their allegiance to Vets and return to their desks. VA will go right on holding their seminars in warm places with lots of adult beverages and Karaoke. The claims will eventually enter the nebulous world of the “cloud” but will be no more rapid than they are now. Envisage a submarine with screen doors or an airplane with no propulsion…

Maiden flight of the VBMS

Maiden flight of the VBMS

Posted in VA BACKLOG | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

PICTURES THAT SPEAK TO YOU

Trish Valley posted this on my Facepage. Thank you. Allow me to share it with America’s Vets if I may.

307418_155794601242167_270121692_nIt leaves a lump in your throat if you’ve ever been to a VA cemetery like Arlington. Many years ago when I was visiting one, someone said to her daughter “What a waste of humanity. Look at all these graves.” I prefer to look at them as individual testimonials to our freedom and the willingness of the fallen to ensure we stay that way. Waste? I don’t see it. Ultimate sacrifice comes to mind. None of us set out to get a spanky white tombstone with our name, rank and airspeed on it-but then I don’t know any who purposefully set out to avoid the danger inherent in the job.

Posted in Inspirational Veterans | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

“FIXING” THE VA BACKLOG

President Obama's response when told Shinseki had declared  125-day/98% rating accuracy by 2015.

President Obama’s response when told Shinseki had declared 125-day/98% rating accuracy by 2015.

Member JAVet was toying with this bone and I finally take the initiative and publish it.

He pointed out correctly that 16-17 Vets were checking out of the Hotel California each day in 2011-some without collecting their benefits check before leaving. I guess that confirms you can’t take it with you but it would be nice to make that decision with said benefits in hand beforehand.

After all the bad PR, the Baltimore Sun can’t even elicit a discouraging word out of them. I think Allison ‘chipmunk” Hickey put out the word that it’s no longer kosher for the VA PR Office to open mouth and insert backlog.

Nearly 19,500 veterans died from October 2011 to September 2012, the federal fiscal year, while they waited for benefits, according to an article published in San Francisco’s Bay Citizen. That figure is based on the $437 million in retroactive benefits paid to the survivors of the deceased veterans, according to the report. The number of veterans who died waiting during that period is likely higher.

Ruh oh Rorge. Sackcloth and ashes are the uniform of the day. Quick. Everybody pretend to care. See what happens when you don’t provide the actual numbers? Pesky media types will simply make them up and catastrophize it. Excellent proof of why they ought to revoke the First Amendment while they’re busy revoking the Second.

This article is even more confusing . When they start using data to prove an elephant can disappear up his own ass, you know it’s time to get out the Polaroid and hire an accountant.

 The report indicated the percentage of veterans who died by suicide decreased slightly since 1999, while the estimated total number of veterans who died by suicide increased.

Put this in perspective. Were you even aware, or for that matter,  do you thing this suicide issue was even on the VA’s radar in 1999? Then why start citing X percent of Vets were sucking on lead lollipops in 1999 and there were fewer, percentage-wise, out of said X percent but that NOW a smaller percentage of Vets ( [n=19,500]which inexplicably consists of a larger number of actual, physical, formerly warm bodies) are now imbibing the lead Koolaid™?

Only in America and at the VA can “more” be “less”. I  also feel sorry for Leigh and Paul. It’s always disheartening to see your VARO (Baltimore) has taken First Place in the Backlog Olympics. I wonder if VA updated their interactive map . Yep. Apparently they did. 344 days and a wakeup. This leaves me feeling squeamish. If Baltimore is at 344 +w/u, then why does my Ebenefits page say my claims are forecast for completion between August 16th, 2013 and April 14th, 2014? Is this some more of that wacky VA math? Seattle says 325.  It feels like Foghorn Leghorn is calling the shots.

 I said, I said listen heah, son. The trick to this is let the VA supply your nexus. Shucks, you don't need to bother, boy. Just trust me on this.

I said, I said listen heah, son. The trick to this is let the VA supply your nexus. Shucks, you don’t need to bother, boy. Just trust me on this. It’ll be done in no time at all. They got paperless VBMS  and DBQs now.

 Here I mentioned Leigh and Paul’s plight and I promptly found an article from him in the in box. 473 days, ladies and gentlemen. 2015 is pie-in-the-sky hopey/feely crap.  Read this one and feel free to use the comments section.

 

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LET’S PLAY CRASH THE SERVER

Okay Vets. Everyone go here and leave a comment for old Jim Limbach. This guy looks ten years older than God and is publishing anything he’s handed with a straight face. I’d be embarrassed to put my name on this without at least a little investigation. Remember the journalist from the San Francisco Chronicle who published the glowing article about the bustling religious commune down in Guyana run by the Most Rev. Jim Jones. You know. The one that served delicious grape Koolaid™ in the hot afternoons?  I’m guessing that was Mr. Limbach’s father.

images (1)Courtesy of (who else) member Randy who is legally

 entitled ( as am I) to imbibe in the magic peace pipe.

Posted in VA BACKLOG, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments