http://www.veteranstoday.com/2012/10/08/louisville-denies-most-lejeune-claims/
VA denies most compensation claims from toxic water wells. Marine veterans left to their own resources.
(LOUISVILLE, KY) - The latest statistics from the VA’s
Louisville office on Camp Lejeune’s disability compensation claims show
an 84% denial rate for medical conditions claimed by veterans for Camp
Lejeune’s contaminated water wells.
According to a Congressional source, 16% of Camp Lejeune’s claims for
medical conditions linked to the contaminated water were approved by
the VA’s Louisville office as of September 2012. The Louisville office
approved 517 medical conditions out of 3,233.
On January 11, 2011, the VA established an office in Louisville to
process all Camp Lejeune associated with the contaminated water wells.
According to this directive, “As the ATSDR, which has been contracted by
the Department of the Navy, continues to research the effects of
exposure from this incident, VA must be prepared to evaluate claims
based on such exposure in a consistent manner. By centralizing
jurisdiction to the Louisville RO, VA enhances its ability to process
these claims efficiently and consistently.”
We don’t know the reasons for the high rate of denials. By
establishing an office dedicated to processing Camp Lejeune compensation
claims, the VA’s Louisville personnel should be more knowledgeable
about Lejeune’s contaminated well water than the Regional Offices
The unanswered question is the VA looking for reasons to deny these
claims and simply processing denials faster to avoid complaints about
backlogs?
For example, lung cancer is linked to cigarette smoking as well as
exposure to organic solvents. At one time, cigarettes were included in
rations and Marines were not discouraged to quit smoking. It follows
that veterans who don’t deny smoking and have lung cancer would be at
some high risk of denial. That may explain some of the denials; other
claims without medical nexus opinions are candidates for denial. At some
point, the VA will have to brief Congress on the efforts of the
Louisville office, including the claims processed, approved and denied
and the reasons for the denials.
The same Congressional source provided information for Lejeune
dependents and civilian workers and their dependents that lived on the
base during the 30 year period (1957-1987) when the base water was
contaminated with volatile organic compounds, including benzene, vinyl
chloride, tetrachloroethylene (PCE) and trichloroethylene (TCE).
CIVILIAN WORKERS ARE ‘OUT OF LUCK’
Civilian workers and dependents that lived with them at Camp Lejeune
during the period 1957 to 1987 are not covered by any existing Federal
law. Civilian workers injured by the contaminated water are ‘out of
luck.’ Workers and dependents can file Federal tort claims but the Navy
is sitting on all Camp Lejeune tort claims, possibly awaiting the
results of ATSDR scientific studies. The Congressional source said
that: “At this time, DOL [Department of Labor] cannot cover civilian
[workers] dependents and children per the statute they operate under. I
don’t know if any of that would change in the future if Congress decided
to take it up.”
With regard to health insurance, this same source recommended that no dependents cancel health insurance
since “VA hasn’t clarified the conditions or financial limitations for
VA to be payer of last resort. Cancelling insurance is not something
anyone should do as we don’t yet know if just having insurance, even if
it was inadequate, would disqualify someone from getting VA to pay for
care.”
In December 2010, Barbara Barrett, reporting for the McClatchy Newspapers,
“VA takes steps to deal with mounting Lejeune water claims” wrote that,
“VA would train a specialized workforce in Louisville to handle
disability compensation claims related to the base’s contaminated water
wells.
According to Barrett, the “move is more than bureaucratic; it could
prove significant to Marine veterans across the country who are
suffering from cancers and other diseases that they think are related to
the poisonous chemicals that flowed through Lejeune’s water from the
mid-1950s to the mid-1980s.”
The facts are the Louisville office has been a significant
development for Lejeune veterans and the VA. But, not one in favor of
Marine veterans.
The VA is reducing its backlog of claims, denying most of them.
READ MORE: http://www.veteranstoday.com/2012/10/08/louisville-denies-most-lejeune-claims/
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