FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 5, 2010
VA Announces Test of Paperless Claims Processing
System
Initiative Will Improve Process and Speed Payments to Veterans
WASHINGTON
The Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) has selected its regional benefits office in Providence, R.I.,
to test a paperless system and new procedures to improve processing of
Veterans’ claims for disability compensation.
“This test program marks a major milestone in VA’s move to
paperless processing,”
said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki.
“It supports VA’s transformation of the claims process to
ensure speedy delivery of benefits to Veterans, their families
and their survivors.”
The pilot, which initially focuses on compensation benefits, is expected
to start at the Providence facility in November, with completion in May
2011.
Additional pilots are expected before the new claims system is deployed
to all 57 VA regional benefits offices.
The Providence pilot is part of the Veterans Benefits Management System,
one of more than three dozen initiatives in progress at VA to “break
the back of the backlog.”
This first VBMS pilot comes after completion of the Virtual Regional Office
project collocated at the Baltimore Regional Office in May 2010.
VA brought claims processors from around the country to Baltimore this
past spring to assist in the rapid prototyping of
a demonstration system.
Secretary Shinseki has set a goal that by 2015 VA will process all claims
within 125 days with 98 percent accuracy.
VA will provide compensation, pension, education, loan guaranty, vocational
rehabilitation, employment,
and insurance benefits valued at nearly $70 billion this year to Veterans,
their families and survivors through 57 VA regional offices.
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