Question:
Jim,
I just recently became aware of VA Watchdog and I have only seen your most recent articles concerning the CVSO’s NSO’s in Ohio. Before I continue I would ask that you shed some light on your background as a veterans advocate. (I am a CVSO in Ohio.)
Have you ever filed a claim for a veteran and have you worked that claim from the initial application to the award? If the claim was denied have you filed an appeal and followed the claim through the appeals process to the BVA or beyond?
Besides being a veteran yourself, what other qualifications, experience, education, credentials do you possess that would qualify you to place in judgment the CVSO’s and NSO’s in Ohio (or anywhere else)?
Awaiting your reply.
Answer:
I'm not a VSO, I do not represent veterans to the VA. I am a disabled veteran who became disgusted with the way my claim had been handled by VSO's over the years. To win my claim ultimately required that I fire my representatives and become educated as to how to handle it myself. After correcting numerous errors that occurred in a 4 year span, I won my benefits at my VARO by DRO review.
I served in the Army 1967-1970 as a 91D20 Surgical Technician. I'm not a Vietnam veteran, I served in Germany.
After my honorable service I attended college at U of F and UTSA along with a couple of junior colleges. I have no college degree.
I worked in health care in civilian hospitals using my excellent Army skills and training. I specialized in heart and vascular surgery procedures as an assistant to surgeons. As my career progressed I started climbing corporate ladders to management positions, ultimately becoming a VP of a large cardiovascular medicine, surgery and business consulting firm.
Along the way I managed heart health programs in Houston, Atlanta and other cities. I also worked with a major medical device manufacturer in Boston. I was a field service clinical educator and interacted with the FDA.
I was forced into retirement by my health in about 2002. I began to write and blog about all things that concern veterans about 3 years ago.
I had time to fill after 2002 and I began to work as a volunteer at my VA CBOC as well as my VA hospital. I volunteered to consult with DVA as they began to develop the HealthE-Vet web site http://www.myhealth.va.gov/ and I participated in research in D.C. As well as on national conference calls with DVA leaders to promote and refine that effort.
I work closely with the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project http://www.loc.gov/vets/ and I've been very fortunate to have interviewed numerous heroic men from 4 generations of American warriors. I'm sponsored by the VA Voluntary Services in that project and in 2006 I was a local Volunteer of the Year by VAVS.
I also ride with Patriot Guard Riders to honor veterans.
My father is a retired Marine, my stepson has recently returned from 16 months in Ramadi. I live near Ft. Stewart and Hunter Army Air field so I'm blessed to meet with active duty soldiers often.
I was picked up as a columnist at VAWatchdog about 2 years ago. Larry Scott and I met on-line and he generously offered me bandwidth on his site. The VAWatchdog site is very popular, second only to the DVA web site itself for its niche. I receive no remuneration of any sort for my efforts. My work is freely available to anyone who cares to republish it and it's to be found on many veteran-centric web sites.
I promote that any veteran who is able to is likely better served by taking care of his own claim than using a VSO. I coach, I teach, I lecture on how to do so.
The reason I believe that is because there is no national standard of quality across America to ensure that veterans will receive a reasonable service when choosing a representative. While you likely do an outstanding job, 200 miles from you a veteran may choose a part time volunteer VSO who he meets at a VFW bar. There is no standard.
If a veteran isn't capable of a DIY handling of his case, I always recommend that he contact a state or county VSO...never a representative of any of the "Veterans Service Organizations" that so often fail to provide the service needed.
As you take the time to read through my past work, you'll probably notice that I often go to great lengths to connect veterans with county veterans service offices.
Contrary to what you seem to think, I did not, "...place in judgment the CVSO's and NSO's in Ohio". I was contacted by a number of people who are in Ohio and I was asked to review the pending legislation there. I have openly offered my thoughts about the system that is failing veterans in your state and others.
In researching why Ohio is dead last or near last in a number of areas important to veterans, I've had conversations with the governor's office, a number of veterans activists and Ohio CVSO's.
I've recommended to the governor's office that the current system is problematic. My recommendation is that Ohio (and others) do away with any financial support of the Veterans Service Organizations (they have plenty of money) and turn that money over to the county system that is often strapped for cash. Then, if a veteran comes to you to file a claim, you interact with DVA as his POA representative. If a veteran chooses to work with DAV, VFW, etc., that's all well and good but they would not be funded by the state of Ohio.
If the veteran chooses to DIY his claim, just as I did, good for him.
I've also recommended strict quality controls be placed so that productivity, a win/loss record and other parameters that measure how well a given county office is representing veterans be tracked and tweaked as needed.
Although I don't "file" claims or represent veterans, my desk is stacked with the mistakes of others. I'm currently working with Congressional offices in 3 states to correct flawed decisions and I work with lawyers who I turn work over to. Veterans who I've coached or helped with letters win.
I believe I'm exceptionally well qualified to comment on the state of the services provided to veterans across America, as well as in Ohio. I am well studied and experienced on most of the issues and I am in daily communications with upper level management DVA-VBA employees, Ohio CVSO's, QTC examiners and VHA staff. There are very few people who are as involved as I am to the depth I am.
And...I hear from a *lot* of veterans who keep me well aware of the reality of our world across America.