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GAO:

November 2004:

Veterans' Benefits:

More Transparency Needed to Improve Oversight of VBA's Compensation and 
Pension Staffing Levels:

GAO-05-47:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-47, a report to the Committee on Veteran’s 
Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Chairman and Ranking Minority Member, Senate Committee on 
Veterans’ Affairs, asked GAO to assist the committee in its oversight 
of the Veterans Benefits Administration’s (VBA) disability compensation 
and pension programs. This report examines (1) VBA’s determination and 
justification of claims processing staffing levels, and the role of 
productivity in such determinations, and (2) VBA’s projections of 
future claims workload and complexity.

What GAO Found:

VBA’s fiscal year 2005 budget justification did not clearly explain how 
the agency would achieve the productivity improvements needed to meet 
its compensation and pension claims processing performance goals with 
fewer employees. According to VBA officials, productivity improvements, 
workload changes, and employee attrition were considered in developing 
its fiscal year 2005 budget request. While some of these factors were 
identified in VBA’s budget justification, they were not linked to the 
requested full-time equivalent (FTE) employment levels. Also, VBA’s 
justification did not specifically address its claims processing 
productivity or how much VBA planned to improve productivity. Finally, 
VBA does not explain the impacts of VBA budgetary decisions on long-
term productivity. VBA officials identified information technology 
improvements and training programs that could help improve productivity 
but have been delayed because VBA shifted funding from these 
initiatives to support higher staffing levels. This was done to help 
meet VBA’s shorter-term goal to improve claims decision timeliness, in 
particular the Secretary of Veterans Affairs’ goal to reduce decision 
time for rating-related claims to an average of 100 days. More 
transparent budget justifications would better inform congressional 
oversight of VBA by making it easier to evaluate whether the agency’s 
budget requests reflect the resources, particularly staffing, needed to 
achieve expected performance.

VBA estimated the number of claims it expects to receive (receipts) in 
fiscal year 2005 based on historical workload trends, with adjustments 
for factors that could affect future receipts, notably the impact of 
legislation allowing some military retirees to concurrently receive 
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) disability compensation and 
military retirement pay. The accuracy of VBA’s projections of rating-
related receipts for fiscal years 2000 through 2004 was mixed, varying 
from underprojecting by about 11 percent to overprojecting by about 19 
percent. Actual receipts in fiscal year 2004 exceeded VBA’s 
projections. Meanwhile, VBA did not project claims complexity in its 
fiscal year 2005 budget justification and did not explain how it 
expected claims complexity to affect its productivity and requested 
staffing levels. A claim’s complexity can be affected by many factors, 
such as the number and types of disabilities claimed. VBA’s budget 
justification could be improved if the agency explained how changes in 
complexity affect workload and staffing requirements.

What GAO Recommends:

To assist the Congress in its oversight of VBA’s compensation and 
pension claims processing operations, GAO recommends that the Secretary 
of Veterans Affairs direct the Under Secretary for Benefits to prepare 
several types of information and work with the appropriate 
congressional committees and subcommittees on how best to make it 
available for their use. This includes information on (1) the expected 
impact of specific initiatives and changes in incoming claims workload 
on requested staffing levels; (2) claims processing productivity, 
including how VBA plans to improve productivity; and (3) how claims 
complexity is expected to change and the impact of these changes on 
productivity and requested staffing levels.

VA concurred with GAO’s recommendation.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-47.

To view the full product, including the scope  and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Cynthia A. Bascetta at 
(202) 512-7215 or bascettac@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

VBA's Budget Justification Did Not Clearly Explain the Basis for Its 
Fiscal Year 2005 Compensation and Pension Staffing Estimates:

VBA Projected Claims Workload Is Based on Historical Trends and Other 
Factors but VBA Did Not Project Claims Complexity:

Conclusions:

Recommendation:

Agency Comments and Our Response:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: Comments from the Secretary of Veterans Affairs:

Table:

Table 1: VBA Projected versus Actual Rating-Related Claims Receipts, 
Fiscal Years 2000-04:

Figure:

Figure 1: VBA Compensation and Pension FTEs, Fiscal Years 1998-2005:

Abbreviations:

BDN: Benefits Delivery Network: 
DOOR: Distribution of Operational Resources: 
FTE: full-time equivalent: 
IDA: Institute for Defense Analyses: 
OMB: Office of Management and Budget:
RBA: Rating Board Automation: 
STAR: Systematic Technical Accuracy Review: 
TPSS: Training and Performance Support Systems: 
VA: Department of Veterans Affairs: 
VBA: Veterans Benefits Administration: 
VSR: Veterans Service Representative:

United States Government Accountability Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

November 15, 2004: 

The Honorable Arlen Specter: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Bob Graham: 
Ranking Minority Member:
Committee on Veterans' Affairs: 
U.S. Senate:

In fiscal years 1998 through 2003, the Veterans Benefits Administration 
(VBA) added significant numbers of employees to process veterans' 
disability compensation and pension benefit claims. With these 
additional employees, VBA significantly increased its production of 
rating-related claims decisions in fiscal years 2002 and 2003, and this 
increase in turn reduced the agency's claims inventory and led to 
improved decision timeliness.[Footnote 1] Also, according to VBA, these 
employees' increased proficiency, due to experience and training, will 
lessen the impact of attrition of its most experienced employees. In 
its fiscal year 2004 and 2005 budget justifications, VBA requested 
funding to support lower staffing levels than in fiscal year 2003 while 
maintaining ambitious performance goals, in particular the Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs' goal to complete rating-related decisions within an 
average of 100 days.

At your request, we reviewed the basis for the agency's estimation of 
its disability compensation and pension claims processing staffing 
needs and workload levels. Specifically, we assessed how VBA (1) 
determined and justified its staffing requests for fiscal year 2005, 
including the extent to which productivity was considered, and (2) 
projected the volume and complexity of future workloads.

We focused our review on VBA's fiscal year 2005 budget justification to 
the Congress, specifically the request for funding of compensation and 
pension administration. We also reviewed VBA's budget justifications 
for fiscal years 2000 through 2004 to compare the fiscal year 2005 
justification with previous justifications, identify trends in 
requested and actual funding and staffing, and obtain background 
information on specific management initiatives and workload trends. We 
discussed VBA's fiscal year 2005 budget and staffing estimates with VBA 
officials. To review VBA's estimation of the number of claims it 
expects to receive (receipts) in fiscal year 2005, we interviewed VBA 
officials and reviewed records of how they developed the receipts 
estimates for its fiscal year 2005 budget justification. To assess the 
accuracy of VBA's estimates, we compared original estimates with actual 
rating-related receipts for fiscal years 2000 through 2004. We also 
interviewed VBA and Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) officials and 
reviewed documentation on the IDA receipt projection model. Finally, we 
interviewed VBA officials on the agency's capability to measure 
disabilities per claim. We assessed the reliability of VBA's workload 
data and found it adequate for purposes of this report. For additional 
scope and methodology information, including data reliability, see 
appendix I. We conducted our review from April through September 2004, 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

Although VBA officials said they considered productivity improvements, 
claims workload changes, and employee attrition in developing its 
compensation and pension fiscal year 2005 budget request, VBA did not 
clearly explain the impacts of these factors on meeting its claims 
processing performance goals with fewer employees. VBA officials said 
they considered productivity, workload, and attrition when developing 
VBA's fiscal year 2005 compensation and pension budget estimate, 
including its estimated staffing levels. The justification identified a 
number of factors that could affect VBA's staffing requirements, such 
as implementation of specialized claims processing teams in VBA's 
regional offices, projected increases in receipts of compensation 
claims, and expected attrition of experienced claims processing staff. 
However, VBA did not clearly explain how each of these initiatives and 
projections affected its estimated staffing requirements and funding 
request for fewer employees in fiscal year 2005. Also, VBA's budget 
justification did not provide information on its productivity or 
identify how it planned to improve productivity. Without such 
information, it is difficult to assess whether the agency can make the 
productivity improvements needed to process more claims faster with 
fewer staff resources while improving accuracy. Finally, VBA did not 
clearly explain the impacts of budget decisions that delayed training 
and information technology initiatives that could improve productivity. 
The lack of transparency in VBA's budget makes it difficult for the 
Congress to assess whether VBA has requested the resources it needs to 
meet its performance goals.

VBA estimated the number of rating-related claims it expects to receive 
in fiscal year 2005 using historical trends and VBA judgments about the 
impacts of various factors on receipts, such as enactment of 
legislation allowing some military retirees to receive both military 
retirement pay and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) disability 
compensation. VBA's projections in the recent past have been mixed in 
their accuracy. For fiscal years 2000 through 2004, the variances 
between VBA's original projections of the number of rating-related 
claims it would receive and actual receipts ranged from an 
underprojection of about 11 percent to an overprojection of about 19 
percent. Actual compensation receipts in fiscal year 2004 exceeded 
VBA's original projections for that fiscal year. VBA has been working 
to improve its ability to project rating-related claims receipts 
through a model developed by IDA. Meanwhile, VBA did not provide 
projections of claims complexity in its fiscal year 2005 budget 
justification and did not explain the impact of complexity on 
productivity and requested staffing levels. A claim's complexity can be 
affected by many factors, such as the number and types of disabilities 
claimed. For example, the Congress and VA have established presumptions 
of eligibility for some types of disabilities that can make a claim 
easier to complete because less evidence is needed to support the 
decision. Like information on productivity and workload, information on 
complexity and its impact on staffing requirements could help the 
Congress better evaluate VBA's staffing requests.

This report contains a recommendation to the Secretary of Veterans 
Affairs to direct VBA to provide additional information to support its 
staffing requests and work with appropriate congressional committees 
and subcommittees on how best to make it available for their use.

Background:

When a veteran submits a claim for disability benefits to a VBA 
regional office, Veterans Service Center staff process the claim in 
accordance with VBA regulations, policies, procedures, and guidance. A 
Veterans Service Representative (VSR) in a Pre-Determination Team 
develops the claim; that is, assists the claimant in obtaining 
sufficient evidence to decide the claim. The claim then goes to a 
Rating Team, where a Rating Veterans Service Representative (also known 
as a Rating Specialist) makes a decision on the claim, based on the 
available evidence and VBA's criteria for benefit entitlement. VSRs 
also perform a number of other duties, including establishing claims 
files, authorizing payments to beneficiaries and generating 
notification letters to claimants, conducting in-person and telephone 
contacts with veterans and other claimants, and assisting in the 
processing of appeals of claims decisions.

VBA's administrative costs, including personnel costs, are funded 
through VA's General Operating Expenses account. VBA, as part of VA's 
annual budget justification, asks for specific amounts for each of its 
programs, including compensation and pension programs. Funding is 
requested to support an estimated full-time equivalent (FTE) employment 
level.[Footnote 2] In fiscal year 2003, VBA spent about $878 million to 
administer its compensation and pension programs. This funding included 
support for about 9,350 FTEs.

From fiscal year 1998 through 2003, staffing levels for VBA's 
compensation and pension programs increased significantly, 
particularly for staff who process compensation and pension claims at 
VBA's 57 regional offices, as shown in figure 1 below. In fiscal year 
1998, VBA had 6,770 compensation and pension FTEs; by fiscal year 2003, 
employment had increased by about 38 percent to 9,352 FTEs. 
Compensation and pension FTE levels rose by about 900 in fiscal years 
2001 and 2002. Staffing levels increased because VBA hired hundreds of 
new rating specialists and VSRs in anticipation of a large number of 
future retirements. Also, these additional staff helped VBA respond to 
a sharp drop in the production of rating-related claims decisions in 
fiscal year 2001. In fiscal year 2002, these decisions rose from about 
481,000 to about 797,000, and to about 827,000 in fiscal year 2003.

Figure 1: VBA Compensation and Pension FTEs, Fiscal Years 1998-2005:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In fiscal year 2003, VBA's 57 regional offices received about 735,000 
rating-related claims from veterans and their families for disability 
benefits. This included about 167,000 original claims for compensation 
of service-connected disabilities (injuries or diseases incurred or 
aggravated while on active military duty) and about 434,000 reopened 
compensation claims.[Footnote 3] In addition, about 90,000 original and 
reopened claims were filed for pensions for wartime veterans who have 
low incomes and are permanently and totally disabled for reasons not 
service-connected and for their survivors.[Footnote 4] In addition, VBA 
received about 28,000 original claims for dependency and indemnity 
compensation by deceased veterans' spouses, children, and parents and 
to survivors of service members who died on active duty.

VBA's Budget Justification Did Not Clearly Explain the Basis for Its 
Fiscal Year 2005 Compensation and Pension Staffing Estimates:

VBA officials stated that productivity improvements, workload changes, 
and attrition of experienced claims processing staff are considered 
throughout the annual budget process. However, VBA's budget 
justification did not clearly explain how these factors affected its 
request. Early in this process, the Compensation and Pension Service 
makes a budget request that is reviewed by VBA's Office of Resource 
Management, under the direction of VBA's Chief Financial Officer and 
becomes part of VBA's total request. VBA's request eventually becomes 
part of VA's overall budget request, which is submitted to the Office 
of Management and Budget (OMB) for review.[Footnote 5]

VBA's fiscal year 2005 budget justification identified a number of 
initiatives and projections that could affect its staffing levels. For 
example, implementing specialized claims processing teams in VBA's 
regional offices and consolidating pension maintenance work at three 
regional offices could affect staffing levels. Also, VBA projected it 
would receive more disability compensation claims than in previous 
years, based on such factors as the enactment of concurrent receipt 
legislation in 2003. Specifically, the fiscal year 2005 budget 
justification stated that VBA expected to receive about 65,000 claims 
because of the enactment of legislation that allows military retirees 
with service-connected disabilities rated at 50 percent or higher to 
receive both VA disability compensation and military retirement pay. 
VBA officials said that this estimate was included in their 
negotiations with OMB. Further, VBA noted that it expects many 
experienced claims processing staff to leave VBA over the next several 
years.

Despite identifying these factors in its 2005 budget justification, VBA 
does not specify how such initiatives and projections will affect the 
number of employees it needs to meet its claims processing performance 
goals. For example, VBA projected that in fiscal year 2005, the number 
of original and reopened compensation claims receipts would increase by 
about 15 and 10 percent respectively from its fiscal year 2004 
estimates, and that original and reopened pension receipts would 
decrease by about 2 percent. However, VBA did not specifically identify 
how these anticipated workload trends had affected its requested 
staffing levels or its expected improvements in productivity. VBA's 
reduced staffing request was consistent with OMB guidance to agencies 
to assume increased productivity in their budget requests--for example, 
to do the same amount of work with fewer employees. However, the budget 
justification does not describe how its FTE staffing requirements are 
linked to the specific initiatives and projections that could affect 
these needs.

Also, VBA's fiscal 2005 budget justification provides no specific 
information on its compensation and pension claims processing 
productivity or on its planned improvements in productivity. VBA 
expressed confidence that it can improve productivity enough to meet 
its claims processing goals for fiscal year 2005 with fewer employees, 
despite a projected increase in the workload of compensation claims. To 
achieve expected improvements in timeliness and accuracy with fewer 
employees, while receiving more claims for disability compensation, 
VBA's claims processing operations will need to become more productive. 
However, the budget justification included no measurement of 
productivity, nor did it identify how it planned to achieve the needed 
productivity improvements.

Finally, VBA's fiscal year 2005 budget justification does not 
explicitly show the impact of budget decisions to shift funding away 
from initiatives that could improve productivity; such decisions were 
based on VBA's emphasis on meeting the Secretary's 100-day timeliness 
goal for deciding rating-related claims. According to VBA officials, in 
fiscal years 2002 and 2003, nonpayroll funds were shifted to help fund 
increased FTE employment levels in VBA regional office Veterans Service 
Centers, which are responsible for processing compensation and pension 
claims. This was done to increase the number of rating-related claims 
being decided and to meet the Secretary's fiscal year 2003 goals for 
improving timeliness and reducing the backlog of undecided claims. For 
example, VBA used nonpayroll funds to help support about 300 more FTEs 
than it had originally requested for fiscal year 2002, and about 400 
more FTEs than it had originally requested for fiscal year 2003. 
Specifically, in fiscal year 2002, VBA requested funding for 7,351 
compensation and pension FTEs but reported that it actually used 7,663, 
and in fiscal year 2003, VBA originally requested funding for 7,532 
FTEs but reported that it actually used 7,936. According to VBA 
officials, nonpayroll funds were shifted to help pay increased payroll 
costs associated with this higher FTE level. In addition, the fiscal 
year 2003 budget request assumed a 2003 pay raise of 2.6 percent, but 
the actual pay raise was 3.1 percent. VBA's fiscal year 2004 and 2005 
budgets reflect continued efforts to support as many FTEs as possible 
through reductions in nonpayroll funding to continue to support 
improvements in claims processing timeliness.

VBA officials identified training and information technology 
initiatives that have been delayed because of these cuts in nonpayroll 
funds. These include delays in developing new Training and Performance 
Support Systems (TPSS) modules and in updating existing TPSS modules to 
reflect changes in laws, regulations, and procedures. According to its 
fiscal year 2005 budget justification, VBA is relying on TPSS to 
improve productivity by helping new claims processing employees develop 
needed proficiency more quickly and by helping experienced employees 
maintain their proficiency. Delays in the progress of TPSS 
implementation could affect VBA's productivity, because existing 
modules may not be as useful as revised modules could be, and advanced 
modules may continue to be unavailable. VBA requested about $2.6 
million for TPSS implementation in fiscal year 2005, including funding 
to update some existing modules. However, VBA did not explain the 
impact of delays in developing new training modules and updating 
existing modules.

Another delayed initiative that could improve productivity is Virtual 
VA. This initiative involves the scanning of paper records into 
electronic claims folders. VBA expects efficiency and timeliness to 
improve when Virtual VA is fully implemented, in part because 
electronic claims folders could be transferred among regional offices 
more quickly. VBA has implemented Virtual VA at its three Pension 
Maintenance Centers.[Footnote 6] However, VBA requested fiscal year 
2005 funding only to maintain the existing Virtual VA program and 
anticipates that funding will not be available to expand the program 
beyond the Pension Maintenance Centers. VBA's justification stated that 
full implementation of Virtual VA would help improve claim processing 
and identified the need for additional staff to convert existing paper 
claims files to electronic format, such as for document preparation and 
scanning. However, VBA did not request these additional staffing 
resources and did not explain why. The budget justification stated that 
VBA expected no improvements in performance because of implementation 
of Virtual VA at regional offices in fiscal year 2005, but it did not 
identify how much productivity would be forgone because of VBA's 
decision to delay Virtual VA implementation.

The Congress relies on the budget justification as VBA's statement of 
how it plans to spend the funds it requested. The House and Senate 
Appropriations Committees have noted that VA's budget justification 
represents the agency's budget plan.[Footnote 7] VA's authorizing 
committees also rely on VBA's budget justification in conducting their 
oversight. In February 2004, both the Senate and House Veterans' 
Affairs Committees held hearings on VA's fiscal year 2005 budget 
request. Each committee then recommended funding levels to its 
respective Budget Committee. The Appropriations Committees also conduct 
oversight of VA through the annual budget process. Congressional 
oversight could be enhanced if VBA's budget justifications were more 
transparent.

VBA Projected Claims Workload Is Based on Historical Trends and Other 
Factors but VBA Did Not Project Claims Complexity:

VBA estimated the number of rating-related claims it would receive in 
fiscal year 2005 based on historical trends and judgments about the 
likely impacts of various factors on receipts, but it did not project 
claims complexity, such as average disabilities per claim. For example, 
VBA expected an increase in the number of claims received based on the 
enactment of legislation allowing some military retirees to receive 
both military retirement pay and VA disability compensation. Also, VBA 
officials stated that they factored in the return of veterans from 
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, but they were unclear as to how 
many claims VBA expected to receive from these veterans.

Previous VBA projections have been mixed in their accuracy. For fiscal 
years 2000 through 2004, VBA's projections of rating-related claims 
receipts varied from an underprojection of about 11 percent to an 
overprojection of about 19 percent, as shown in table 1.

Table 1: VBA Projected versus Actual Rating-Related Claims Receipts, 
Fiscal Years 2000-04:

Fiscal year: 2000; 
Projected receipts: 699,250; 
Actual receipts: 585,565; 
Variance: Overprojected by 19.4%.

Fiscal year: 2001; 
Projected receipts: 647,960; 
Actual receipts: 674,219; 
Variance: Underprojected by 3.9%.

Fiscal year: 2002; 
Projected receipts: 812,608; 
Actual receipts: 721,727; 
Variance: Overprojected by 12.6%.

Fiscal year: 2003; 
Projected receipts: 723,675; 
Actual receipts: 735,275; 
Variance: Underprojected by 1.6%.

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Projected receipts: 687,412; 
Actual receipts: 771,115; 
Variance: Underprojected by 10.9%. 

Sources: Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Submissions for fiscal 
years 2000-05, Veterans Benefits Administration fiscal year 2004 claims 
receipt data.

[End of table]

In its fiscal year 2004 budget justification, VBA projected that it 
would receive an average of about 57,300 rating-related claims per 
month. For its fiscal year 2005 budget justification, VBA revised its 
fiscal year 2004 projection to an average of about 63,900 receipts, 
based on actual receipts for October and November 2003. VBA's revised 
projection underprojected by only about 0.5 percent; actual fiscal year 
2004 receipts averaged about 64,300 per month.

VBA is working to improve its ability to project its rating claims 
workload by more accurately estimating the number of such claims it 
will receive. In June 2000, VBA received the first version of a model 
for forecasting original and reopened compensation claims receipts, 
developed under contract by the Institute for Defense Analyses. This 
model factored into its projections the changing size and demographics 
of the veteran population. Specifically, the model used historical 
claim submission data and projections of the veteran population to 
project VBA's future workload. Although the model was updated in June 
2002, its usefulness is limited by several factors. For example, it 
projects only original and reopened compensation claims and relies on 
outdated veteran population data. According to a VBA official, VBA's 
workload projections for its budget justifications were not based on 
this model, but the results of the model were used to check VBA's 
projections. An expanded model with more recent information is 
scheduled to be delivered in December 2004. The expanded model will 
project workload for more types of claims, including all rating-related 
claims, and will be updated to reflect the 2000 Census.

VBA did not project the complexity of its rating-related claims in its 
fiscal year 2005 budget submission and did not explain the impact of 
complexity on productivity and requested staffing levels. VBA has noted 
that disability compensation claims have become more complex because 
veterans are claiming more service-connected disabilities per claim, 
and VBA must make a decision whether each disability is service-
connected. Meanwhile, the Congress and VA have established presumptions 
of compensation and pension eligibility that can make some claims less 
complex. For example, the Congress and VA have identified several types 
of disabilities (such as type II diabetes) as service-connected based 
on the presumption that veterans who served in Vietnam were exposed to 
Agent Orange. Claims based on these disabilities can be simpler to 
decide because less evidence is needed to prove service connection. VBA 
did not specifically explain the impact of claims complexity on 
productivity and staff requirements.

VBA provided some data on average number of disabilities for completed 
compensation claims in its fiscal year 2005 budget justification. 
However, these data were based on incomplete information. The average 
number of disabilities per claim was based on calendar years 1998 
through 2001 data on completed claims from VBA's software application 
for preparing rating decisions, Rating Board Automation (RBA). 
According to a VBA official, the RBA data were incomplete because data 
on many rating decisions were not transmitted to VBA's central database 
for analysis. For example, according to a VBA official, employees who 
were working from home did not always upload rating information from 
computer disks into RBA and send the data to VBA's central database. 
Also, because making corrections to a rating once it had been entered 
into the central database was cumbersome, corrections were not always 
made to the incorrect information that had been entered in the 
database. VBA began implementing a new rating decision preparation 
package (RBA 2000) in October 2000. While VBA officials stated that RBA 
2000 provides more complete data on rating decisions, it cannot provide 
data by the end product code, which VBA uses to identify types of 
claims (for example, original and reopened compensation claims). VBA 
officials suggested that, in the future, it could measure issues per 
claim through its new claims development software application, MAP-D. 
VBA is not planning to provide information on disabilities per claim in 
its fiscal year 2006 budget justification.

Conclusions:

It is difficult to determine whether VBA's confidence that it can meet 
its key fiscal year 2005 claims processing goals is well founded 
because its budget justification lacks sufficient information to make 
such an assessment. VBA set ambitious goals for providing veterans and 
their families with more timely decisions. At the same time, VBA 
expects the volume of incoming rating-related claims to increase and to 
lose experienced claims processing staff to attrition. Nonetheless, VBA 
requested a reduction in claims processing staff in fiscal year 2005, 
on top of a decrease in fiscal year 2004. VBA's budget justification 
does not clearly explain how its estimated staffing requirements will 
be affected by its proposed initiatives to improve efficiency and 
accuracy, projected increases in compensation claims, and staff 
attrition.

To achieve its goals in the face of increasing workloads and decreased 
staffing, VBA will have to rely on productivity improvements. However, 
its budget justification does not provide information on VBA's claims 
processing productivity or how much VBA expects to improve 
productivity. Consequently, it is difficult to determine if VBA can 
achieve the productivity improvements it needs or determine how these 
improvements will be achieved. While VBA's budget assumes improved 
productivity, the agency has made budget decisions to delay initiatives 
that could help improve productivity, in order to protect funding for 
claims processing staff to help meet its top short-term priority--
improving timeliness. Its budget justification could have provided more 
information on the impacts of decisions to delay these initiatives. 
Further, VBA's budget justification did not clearly explain the effects 
on productivity of claims complexity, such as changes in the average 
number of disabilities per claim. Consequently, the effect of 
complexity on VBA's workload and staffing requirements is unclear. A 
more transparent budget justification would better inform the Congress' 
oversight of VBA, by making it easier to evaluate whether the agency's 
administrative budget requests adequately reflect the resources, 
particularly staff, needed to achieve expected performance.

Recommendation:

To assist the Congress in its oversight of VBA's compensation and 
pension claims processing operations, we recommend that the Secretary 
of Veterans Affairs direct the Under Secretary for Benefits to prepare 
the following information and work with the Committees on Veterans' 
Affairs and the Appropriations Subcommittees on Veterans Affairs, 
Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies on how best to 
make it available for their use:

* explanation of the expected impact of specific initiatives and 
changes in incoming claims workload on requested staffing levels;

* information on claims processing productivity, including how VBA 
plans to improve productivity; and:

* explanation of how claims complexity is expected to change and the 
impact of these changes on productivity and requested staffing levels.

Agency Comments and Our Response:

In its written comments on a draft of this report (see app. II), VA 
concurred with our recommendation. VA noted that VBA will work closely 
with VA's Office of Budget, OMB, and congressional authorizing and 
appropriating committees and subcommittees to ensure that appropriate 
supporting information is included in its future budget justifications.

We will send copies of this report to the Secretary of Veterans 
Affairs, appropriate congressional committees, and other interested 
parties. The report will also be available at GAO's Web site at http:/
/www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions regarding this report, please 
call me at (202) 512-7215 or Irene Chu, Assistant Director, at (202) 
512-7102. In addition to those named, Amy Buck, Denise Fantone, Martin 
Scire, Greg Whitney, and Gregory Wilmoth made key contributions to this 
report.

Signed by: 

Cynthia A. Bascetta: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues:

[End of section]

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

To assess how the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) determined and 
justified its staffing requests, we focused on VBA's fiscal year 2005 
budget justification to the Congress: specifically, its requests for 
discretionary administrative funding for VBA's compensation and pension 
programs.[Footnote 8] We also reviewed VBA's budget justifications for 
fiscal years 2000 through 2004 to identify funding and staffing trends 
and obtain background information on specific management initiatives 
and workload trends. We reviewed Office of Management and Budget 
guidance to agencies on how to prepare their fiscal year 2005 budget 
requests.[Footnote 9] In particular, we reviewed guidance on 
information to be included in budget requests, estimating staffing 
levels, and the budget formulation process. In addition, we interviewed 
VBA officials to identify the role of productivity and workload factors 
in VBA's internal budget process and to discuss the fiscal year 2005 
request. Specifically, we interviewed VBA officials responsible for 
compensation and pension programs, resource management, and field 
operations. In some instances, we relied on testimonial evidence from 
our interviews, along with written responses to detailed questions.

To review VBA's fiscal year 2005 receipts projections, we interviewed 
Compensation and Pension Service officials responsible for these 
estimates. We obtained records showing the workload data used to 
estimate receipts for fiscal years 2004 and 2005 as well as the 
adjustments VBA made to historical trends in developing its estimates. 
To assess the accuracy of receipts estimates for fiscal years 2000 
through 2004, we reviewed VBA's budget justifications for those fiscal 
years. For fiscal years 2000 through 2003 we compared initial estimates 
of rating-related claims for each fiscal year with actual VBA-wide 
receipts reported in VBA's budget justifications. We focused on rating-
related claims because they represent the types of claims VBA uses to 
develop key performance measures, such as timeliness (average days to 
complete rating-related claims). For fiscal year 2004, we compared 
VBA's estimate in its budget justification with VBA's Distribution of 
Operational Resources (DOOR) report of receipts for the fiscal year.

In addition, we reviewed documentation of the Institute for Defense 
Analyses (IDA) receipt estimation model and discussed the model with 
IDA and Compensation and Pension Service officials. Because VBA did not 
use this model to develop the compensation claims receipt estimates in 
its fiscal year 2004 and 2005 budget justifications, we did not conduct 
a detailed analysis of the model. In our discussions, IDA officials 
identified improvements in its model, such as projecting receipts for 
additional types of claims and using updated population data.

We assessed the reliability of end product data in VBA's Benefits 
Delivery Network (BDN). The end product code is a key data element 
because it identifies the type of claim. VBA's DOOR reports aggregate 
workload data from the BDN by end product. We reviewed 1997 and 1998 
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Inspector General reports that 
identified significant control deficiencies in BDN, leading to 
questionable reliability of workload and timeliness data. We reviewed 
VBA's system for identifying potentially erroneous end product 
transactions that might lead to inaccurate workload data. VBA adopted 
this system in response to the Inspector General's findings. We 
interviewed the VBA official responsible for sampling transactions to 
identify questionable end product instances--where a regional office 
may have improperly taken credit for completing a claim or for 
completing a claim in less time than was actually required. For 
example, this sample is designed to identify when a regional office has 
taken credit for more than one decision on the same claim, leading to 
overcounting of decision production. We also reviewed sample data from 
fiscal year 1999 through the second quarter of 2004.

We also reviewed how VBA's Systematic Technical Accuracy Review (STAR) 
program identifies questionable and erroneous end product codes. If a 
STAR reviewer determines that the end product code for a randomly 
sampled claim file is questionable or erroneous, the claim will be 
removed from the STAR sample and be replaced by another claim with the 
same end product code. For example, if a claim is identified as 
completed in BDN but no decision has been made on the claim, the claim 
is removed from the STAR sample. We interviewed a VBA official 
responsible for STAR and reviewed data on claims removed from the STAR 
sample in fiscal year 2003 and the first half of fiscal year 2004.

We determined that VBA's end product data are sufficiently reliable for 
the purposes of this report, which focuses on VBA-wide data. For 
example, VBA's sampling shows a decline in questionable end product 
codes from the second quarter of fiscal year 2003 to the second quarter 
of fiscal year 2004, from about 5.2 percent to 2.8 percent. However, we 
are aware that BDN is an aging information system. In its October 2001 
report, VA's Claims Processing Task Force noted this and recommended 
that VBA maintain BDN until the replacement VETSNET system is fully 
implemented. However, VBA officials stated that VBA was not planning to 
make significant investments in maintaining BDN because it will be 
replaced.

We interviewed VBA officials about the reliability of its Rating Board 
Automation (RBA) system as a source of data on average disabilities per 
claim. These officials noted that many rating decisions were not 
included in the RBA data used in VBA's fiscal year 2005 budget 
justification. On the basis of this, we determined that the data on 
average disabilities per compensation claim in VBA's budget 
justification were not reliable, and we do not use the data in our 
report. Finally, we did not assess the reliability of the full-time 
equivalent data VA reported in its budget submissions.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Comments from the Secretary of Veterans Affairs:

THE SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS: 
WASHINGTON:

November 1, 2004:

Ms. Cynthia A. Bascetta: 
Director:
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
U. S. Government Accountability Office:
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Ms. Bascetta:

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has reviewed your draft report, 
VETERANS' BENEFITS: VBA's Fiscal Year 2005 Compensation and Pension 
Staffing Request Could Have Been More Transparent (GAO-05-47) and 
agrees with your conclusions. The Veterans Benefits Administration will 
work closely with VA's Office of Budget, the Office of Management and 
Budget, and congressional authorizing and appropriating committees and 
subcommittees to ensure appropriate supporting information is included 
in future budget justifications.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on your draft report.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

Anthony J. Principi: 

[End of section]

FOOTNOTES

[1] Rating-related decisions are primarily decisions on original claims 
for compensation and pension benefits and reopened claims. For example, 
veterans may file reopened claims if they believe their service-
connected conditions have worsened. 

[2] Full-time equivalent employment is the basic measure of levels of 
employment used in the budget. It is the total number of hours worked 
divided by the total number of compensable hours in a fiscal year. For 
example, in fiscal year 2003 an FTE represented 2,088 hours (8 hours 
per day for 261 days).

[3] For example, a reopened compensation claim could be filed by a 
veteran seeking an increase in disability rating based on the worsening 
of a service-connected disability or by a veteran seeking compensation 
for a previously unclaimed disability.

[4] Veterans aged 65 or older do not have to be permanently and totally 
disabled to become eligible for pension benefits, as long as they meet 
the other requirements for income and military service. VBA also pays 
pensions to surviving spouses and unmarried children of deceased 
wartime veterans.

[5] Under OMB guidance (Circular A-11), agency FTE employment estimates 
should consider productivity improvements and workload assumptions. 

[6] The Pension Maintenance Centers are responsible for processing 
income and eligibility verifications and other related actions for 
VBA's pension beneficiaries. They are located at VBA's St. Paul, 
Minnesota, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 
regional offices. 

[7] Conference Report, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004, House 
Report 108-401, November 25, 2003. Specifically, Division G, p. 1033, 
which includes VA's appropriations. 

[8] Department of Veterans Affairs, Fiscal Year 2005 Budget Submission, 
Volume 1: Benefits Programs, February 2004. 

[9] Office of Management and Budget, Circular No. A-11, Preparation, 
Submission, and Execution of the Budget, July 2003.

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