Faster Decisions, Stronger Outcomes: VA's Work to Streamline the Disability Claims Backlog

Statement of

 

Ryan Gallucci, Executive Director
Washington Office
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States

 

For the Record

 

United States House of Representatives
Committee on Veterans’ Affairs

 

With Respect To

 

Faster Decisions, Stronger Outcomes: VA's Work to Streamline the Disability Claims Backlog

  

Washington, D.C. 

 

Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano and Members of the Committee:

 

The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW) appreciates the opportunity to submit this statement for the record on ways the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) worked to address its disability claims backlog.

 

The VFW is a veterans service organization (VSO) recognized by Department of Veterans Affairs for the preparation, presentation, and prosecution of VA benefit claims before the agency under 38 U.S.C. Chapter 59. At the end of fiscal year 2025, the VFW held power of attorney in this process for more than 700,000 veterans and eligible dependents, with more than 600,000 active awards, totaling more than $16.2 billion in benefits delivered to veterans in FY2025.

 

Our global network of more than 2,000 accredited representatives assists claimants daily in navigating the complex VA benefits system. As such, the VFW offers a unique, ground-level perspective on both the progress and persistent challenges within the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA).

 

VA recently announced that it has reduced its disability claims backlog below 100,000 claims pending for more than 125 days. The VFW applauded VA Secretary Doug Collins and the VA workforce for this achievement. However, this should also serve as an inflection point for the Department as it seeks better ways to deliver timely benefits to veterans who have earned them.

 

The backlog of VA disability claims first started to tick up during the COVID-19 pandemic when VA paused examinations but then accelerated after the implementation of the Honoring our PACT Act of 2022, when VA started to process an influx of presumptive toxic exposure claims from veterans across multiple generations.

 

VA initially projected that its PACT Act claims inventory would peak around March 2024 with an estimated 600,000 backlogged claims. VA outperformed this projection. The backlog peaked instead in January 2024 at about 400,000 claims, while total receipts for claims far exceeded VA’s initial projections. By increasing ratings output and automating certain back-end processes, VA more effectively managed its claims workload, despite the persistent influx of benefit claims. In fact, for the preceding three fiscal years, VA adjudicated more claims than ever before. Moreover, VA learned a strong lesson from 2013 and ensured it did not ignore its non-PACT Act workload, continuing to deliver non-PACT Act rating decisions in a timely manner. 

 

The VFW has not viewed this claims backlog in the same way as past backlogs because the veterans we represent did not view it the same way. In fact, we told VA officials over the years that we would no longer use the term “backlog” to talk about VA’s pending workload because this old way of talking about the process did not accurately capture the expectations or experiences of veterans navigating this complex system.

 

Instead, we recommended that VA provide a more transparent assessment of how a claim proceeded from the time of filing, establishing the claim, initial processing, development (gathering evidence and completing exams), building the rating, and processing the award. Each of these phases is instructive to where bottlenecks persist and should be viewed as individual pain points – or “backlogs.” Looking at an arbitrary 125 days from start to finish fails to account for variance in number of conditions claimed, complexity of the claim, and difficulty in acquiring records or exams. For example, the backlog of military sexual trauma claims, which required specialized processing, was fundamentally different from the backlog of PACT Act claims related to gastrointestinal conditions when VA updated the regulations and required rework of many pending claims. These problems demanded very different solutions and different ways to manage expectations for veterans. However, VA does not offer this granular level of information publicly to veterans, which leaves accredited representatives to manage expectations, hoping that our clients trust the explanation.  

 

This backlog was fundamentally different from 2013 because today’s bottlenecks were almost exclusive to development, evidence gathering, and examinations. Thanks to innovations that VA implemented to resolve last decade’s backlog, the processes that VA controls directly – initial processing, rating, and processing awards – are either automated or take days to complete instead of weeks for most rating bundle actions.

 

During the 2013 backlog, development lagged as well, but VA’s internal processes could also take weeks because the system was paper-based and often handled by a single VA regional office. This also meant that processing timelines varied wildly across the enterprise, with busier offices facing backlogs far exceeding one full year.

 

The situation was so bad in 2013 that VA’s average days to complete a claim at the end of FY2013 was 378 days. At the peak of the current backlog in FY2024, VA’s average days to complete was 152 days and continued to fall throughout FY2025 (121 days), currently standing at 81 days through this fiscal year.

 

Several advancements make today’s situation drastically different:

To ensure that recent progress leads to lasting reform, the VFW offers the following recommendations:

The VFW commends VA for its progress in reducing the claims backlog and preventing the kinds of outlandish wait times veterans experienced in 2013. This achievement reflects meaningful improvements in technology, workforce capacity, and operational focus.

 

However, backlog reduction alone cannot be the sole measure of success. The goal must be a system that delivers accurate, timely, and fair decisions for every veteran through a transparent and nimble process.

 

The VFW stands ready to work with Congress, VA, DoD, and their partners to ensure that recent gains lead to lasting reform. We urge the Committee to continue its oversight and to ask critical questions about not just how the backlog has been reduced, but whether the system is truly improving for veterans.

 

Chairman Bost and Ranking Member Takano, thank you for the opportunity to submit this statement for the record and we look forward to further dialogue with the committee and responding to any questions members of the Committee may have.