Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Veterans’ widows denied benefits

Cash wrongly seized from survivors’ accounts

Akaka (Marco Garcia / The Spokesman-Review)
By HOPE YEN Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Surviving spouses of war veterans have been wrongfully denied up to millions of dollars in government benefits over the past 12 years due to computer glitches that often resulted in money being seized from the elderly survivors’ bank accounts.

The Veterans Affairs Department said Saturday it wasn’t fully aware of the problem. It pledged to work quickly to give back the pension and disability checks – ranging from $100 to more than $2,500 – that hundreds of thousands of widows or widowers should have received during the month of their spouse’s death.

“This problem must be fixed,” said VA Secretary James Peake. The department indicated in an “action plan” that up to millions of dollars in back payments could be given to the surviving spouses sometime after February, once it can identify them.

Congress passed a law in 1996 giving veterans’ spouses the right to keep their partners’ final month of benefits. It instructed the VA to make changes as needed to comply with the law, which took effect for spouses of veterans who died after Dec. 31, 1996.

But the VA never updated its automated computer systems, which send out checks and notification letters. As a result, widows or widowers were either denied the final month of payment or asked to send the checks back. In many cases, if the checks were already deposited or spent, the U.S. Treasury moved to seize the money directly from their accounts.

Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, confronted Peake about the problem in a letter last week after receiving a complaint from a widow. In response, Peake instructed the Veterans Benefits Administration to update its systems as quickly as possible to prevent future denials of benefits.

“This flawed practice has caused serious hardship for many widows,” Akaka said Saturday. “Now that this problem has been brought to light, I trust that surviving spouses will receive the benefits they are due.”

The disclosure comes as the VA is scrambling to upgrade government technology systems before new legislation providing for millions of dollars in new GI education benefits takes effect next August. Thousands of veterans currently also endure six-month waits for disability benefits, despite promises by Peake and his predecessor, Jim Nicholson, to reduce delays.

President-elect Barack Obama has pledged to “fix the benefits bureaucracy” at the VA. Last week, he named Retired Gen. Eric K. Shinseki, a former Army chief of staff, to be the next VA secretary.