NEWS FROM .
CONGRESSMAN LANE EVANS
RANKING DEMOCRATIC MEMBER
COMMITTEE ON VETERANS AFFAIRS
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
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FOR RELEASE: July 20, 2000
House Committee Follows Evans Leadership
To End "Catch-22" for Disabled Veterans
Bipartisan Bill Would Restore VAs Duty to Assist Veterans;
Service Organizations Attest to Need for Change
Washington, DC - "The Catch-22 that veterans filing claims for service-connected compensation benefits have faced this year may be close to an end," said Congressman Lane Evans of Illinois, Democratic Leader of the House Veterans Affairs Committee. "Weve added some additional useful ideas to the legislation I introduced last year, weve got wide-spread bipartisan support, and the House Veterans Affairs Committee has adopted it. Were an important step closer to eliminating this obstacle for Americas disabled veterans."
A July 14, 1999, ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in Morton v. West overturned the long-standing responsibility of the VA to assist veterans in developing claims for Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) benefits. Under the Court ruling, VA is now prohibited from assisting veterans with claims for VA benefits until after the veterans establish that their claims are "well grounded."
"It has been a classic Catch-22," Evans says. "If you can prove youve got a good case, the VA will help you prove youve got a good case. If you need help, they cant help you." The legislation approved today is based upon the Evans "Duty to Assist Veterans Act," which received unanimous support from the Nations principal veterans service organizations at a May 18 hearing of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Evans used several cases to illustrate the Catch-22 veterans have faced. The VA has rejected as "not well-grounded" the claims of veterans who applied for service-connected compensation immediately after leaving military service,
even when the disability was the reason the veteran was discharged from military service. In other cases, VA has also rejected as "not well-grounded" the claims of former prisoners of war who applied for a service-connected disability which federal law presumes is due to military service. VA has even rejected as "not well-grounded" the claim of a veteran who was diagnosed with Hepatitis C -- a chronic condition that never goes away -- during military service.Last summer, Evans introduced his Duty to Assist Veterans Act, H.R. 3193, which received very strong support -- 186 bipartisan cosponsors. The Evans bill inspired bipartisan legislation, H.R. 4864, the "Veterans Claims Assistance Act of 2000," introduced this week.
The nations principal veterans service organizations have supported the removal of the well-grounded claim requirement and other reforms implemented by the bill. The new bill incorporates input from the veterans service organizations and the VA.
The bipartisan bill adopted by the committee addresses what Evans sees as the most serious concerns expressed by the veterans organizations.
The new bill keeps the thrust of Congressman Evans original legislation, under which the VA would be required to assist any veteran who submits a claim for veterans benefits to develop information pertinent to a decision on the claim. That assistance would include:
The Court said in its Morton decision that if Congress didnt agree with its interpretation, Congress could eliminate the "well-grounded claim" requirement. "The Court made a mistake," Evans said. "Assistance in establishing a benefits claim is critical if service-disabled veterans are to receive a fair decision. We need legislation now to make clear VAs duty to assist our veterans."
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