| VA Department of
Veterans Affairs
Office of Public Affairs
Media Relations
Washington, DC 20420
(202) 461-7600
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 1, 2010
White
House Seeks $125 Billion for Veterans in 2011
WASHINGTON - To expand health care to a record-number of Veterans,
reduce the number of homeless Veterans and process a dramatically increased
number of new disability compensation claims, the White House has announced
a proposed $125 billion budget next year for the Department of Veterans
Affairs.
"Our budget proposal provides
the resources necessary to continue our aggressive pursuit of President
Obama's
two over-arching goals for Veterans," said Secretary of Veterans
Affairs Eric K. Shinseki.
"First, the requested budget will help transform VA into a 21st century
organization.
And second, it will ensure that we approach Veterans' care as a lifetime
initiative, from the day they take
their oaths until the day they are laid to rest."
The $125 billion budget request,
which has to be approved by Congress, includes $60.3 billion for discretionary
spending (mostly health care) and $64.7 billion in mandatory funding (mostly
for disability compensation and pensions).
"VA's 2011 budget request covers many areas but focuses on three
central issues that are of critical importance to our Veterans - easier
access to benefits and services, faster disability claims decisions, and
ending the downward spiral
that results in Veterans' homelessness," Shinseki said.
Reducing Claims Backlog
The president's budget proposal includes an increase of $460 million and
more than 4,000 additional claims
processors for Veterans benefits.
This is a 27 percent funding increase over the 2010 level.
The 1,014,000 claims received in
2009 were a 75 percent increase over the 579,000 received in 2000.
Shinseki said the Department expects a 30 percent increase in claims -
to 1,319,000 - in 2011 from 2009 levels..
One reason for the increase is VA's expansion of the number of Agent Orange-related
illnesses that automatically
qualify for disability benefits.
Veterans exposed to the Agent Orange herbicides during the Vietnam War
are likely to file additional claims that will have a substantial impact
upon the processing system for benefits, the secretary said.
"We project significantly increased claims inventories in the near
term while we make fundamental improvements to the way we process disability
compensation claims," Shinseki said.
Long-term reduction of the inventory
will come from additional manpower, improved business practices, plus
an infusion of $145 million in the proposed budget for development of
a paperless claims processing system,
which plays a significant role in the transformation of VA.
Automating the GI Bill
The budget proposal includes $44
million to complete by December 2010 an automated system for processing
applications for the new Post-9/11 GI Bill.
VA also plans to start development next year of electronic systems to
process claims from other VA-administered educational programs.
The Post-9/11 GI Bill authorizes
the most extensive educational assistance opportunity since the passage
of the
original GI Bill in 1944. Over $1.7 billion in regular Post-9/11 GI Bill
benefit payments have been issued since the implementation of the program
on Aug. 1, 2009.
In 2011, VA expects the number of all education claims to grow by 32 percent
over 2009, going from 1.7 million to
2.25 million.
"To meet this increasing workload
and process education claims in a timely manner,
VA has established a comprehensive strategy to develop industry-standard
technologies to modernize the delivery of these important educational
benefits," Shinseki said.
Eliminating Homelessness
The budget proposal includes $4.2 billion in 2011 to reduce and help prevent
homelessness among Veterans.
That breaks down into $3.4 billion for core medical services and $799
million for specific homeless programs and expanded medical care, which
includes $294 million for expanded homeless initiatives.
This increased investment for expanded homeless services is consistent
with the VA secretary's established goal of ultimately eliminating homelessness
among Veterans.
On a typical night, about 131,000
Veterans are homeless.
They represent every war and generation, from the "Greatest Generation"
to the latest generation of Veterans
who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
To date, VA operates the largest system of homeless treatment and assistance
programs in the nation.
Targeting Mental Health, Preventing Suicides
"The 2011 budget proposal continues the department's keen focus on
improving the quality, access and value of
mental health care provided to Veterans," Shinseki said.
The spending request seeks $5.2 billion
for mental health, an increase of $410 million (or 8.5 percent) over current
spending, enabling expansion of inpatient, residential and outpatient
mental health services, with emphasis on
making mental health services part of primary care and specialty care.
The secretary noted that one-fifth
of the patients seen last year in VA's health care facilities had a mental
health diagnosis, and that the department has added more than 6,000 new
mental health professionals since 2005,
bringing to 19,000 the number of employees dedicated to mental health
care.
The budget request will enable the
department to continue expanding its programs for post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI), along with the diagnosis
and treatment of depression, substance abuse
and other mental health problems.
Shinseki called PSTD treatment "central to VA's mission."
The proposed spending will continue VA's suicide prevention program.
Since July 2007, the department's suicide prevention hotline has received
nearly 225,000 calls from Veterans,
active-duty personnel and family members.
The hotline is credited with saving the lives of nearly 7,000 people.
Reaching Rural Veterans
For 2011, VA is seeking $250 million to strengthen access to health care
for 3.2 million Veterans enrolled in
VA's medical system who live in rural areas.
Rural outreach includes expanded use of home-based primary care and mental
health.
A key portion of rural outreach -
which shows promise for use with Veterans across the country - is VA's
innovative "telehealth" program.
It links patients and health care providers by telephones and includes
telephone-based data transmission,
enabling daily monitoring of patients with chronic problems.
The budget provides an increase of
$42 million for VA's home telehealth program.
The effort already cares for 35,000 patients and is the largest program
of its kind in the world.
Serving Women Veterans
The 2011 budget provides $217.6 million to meet the gender-specific health
care needs of women Veterans,
an increase of $18.6 million (or 9.4 percent) over the 2010 level.
Enhanced primary care for women Veterans remains one of the Department's
top priorities.
The number of women Veterans is growing rapidly and women are increasingly
using VA for their health care.
Shinseki said the expansion of health
care programs for women Veterans will lead to higher quality care,
increased coordination of care, enhanced privacy and dignity, and a greater
sense of security among women patients.
Among the initiatives for women in the 2011 budget proposal are expanded
health care services in Vet Centers,
increased training for health care providers to advance their knowledge
and understanding of women's health issues,
and implementing a peer call center and social networking site for women
combat Veterans.
This call center will be open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Delivering World-Class Health Care
During 2011, VA expects to treat 6.1 million patients, who will account
for more than 800,000 hospitalizations
and 83 million outpatient visits.
The total includes 439,000 Veterans
who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, for whom $2.6 billion is included
in
the budget proposal.
That's an increase of $597 million - or 30 percent - from the current
budget.
The proposed budget for health care includes:
$6.8 billion for long-term care, an increase of $859 million (or 14 percent)
over 2010.
This amount includes $1.5 billion for non-institutional long-term care;
Expanding access to VA health care system for more than 99,000 Veterans
who were previously denied care
because of their incomes;
$590 million for medical and prosthetic research; and Continuing development
of a "virtual lifetime electronic record,"
a digital health record that will accompany Veterans throughout their
lives.
VA is requesting $54.3 billion in advance appropriations for 2012 for
health care, an increase of $2.8 billion over
the 2011 enacted amount.
Planned initiatives in 2012 include better leveraging acquisitions and
contracting, enhancing the use of referral agreements, strengthening VA's
relationship with the Defense Department, and expanding the use of medical
technology.
Preserving National Shrines
"VA remains steadfastly committed to providing access to a dignified
and respectful burial for Veterans choosing to
be buried in a VA national cemetery," Shinseki said.
"This promise requires that we maintain national cemeteries as shrines
dedicated to the memory of those who served
this nation in uniform."
The requested $251 million for cemetery
operations and maintenance will support more than 114,000 interments in
2011,
a 3.8 percent increase over 2010. In 2011, the department will maintain
8,441 acres with 3.1 million gravesites.
The budget request includes $37 million to clean and realign an estimated
668,000 headstones and repair
100,000 sunken graves.
Building for the Future
$1.15 billion requested for major construction for 2011 includes funding
for medical facilities in New Orleans; Denver;
Palo Alto, Calif.; Alameda, Calif.; and Omaha, Neb.
Also budgeted for 2011 are major expansions and improvements to the national
cemeteries in Indiantown Gap, Pa.;
Los Angeles; and Tahoma, Wash., and new burial access policies that will
provide a burial option to an additional
500,000 Veterans and enhance service in urban areas.
A requested budget of $468 million for minor construction in 2011 would
fund a wide variety of improvements at VA facilities.
http://www4.va.gov/budget/products.asp
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