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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity, Committee on Veterans' 
Affairs, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT: 

Wednesday, April 20, 2005: 

Vocational Rehabilitation: 

VA Has Opportunities to Improve Services, but Faces Significant 
Challenges: 

Statement of Cynthia A. Bascetta, Director, Education, Workforce, and 
Income Security: 

GAO-05-572T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-05-572T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Economic Opportunity, Committee on Veterans' Affairs, House of 
Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Department of Veterans Affairs’ Vocational Rehabilitation and 
Employment (VR&E) program has taken on heightened importance due, in 
large measure, to the number of servicemembers returning from 
Afghanistan and Iraq with serious injuries and their need for 
vocational rehabilitation and employment assistance. This statement 
draws on over 20 years of GAO’s reporting on VA’s provision of 
vocational rehabilitation and employment assistance to American 
veterans and focuses primarily on the results of two recent GAO 
reports. The first, issued in June 2004, commented on the report of the 
VA-sponsored VR&E Task Force, which performed a comprehensive review of 
VR&E activities and made extensive recommendations that, if 
implemented, would affect virtually every aspect of VR&E’s operations. 
The second, issued in January 2005, focused on the steps VA has taken 
and the challenges it faces in providing services to seriously injured 
veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. 

What GAO Found: 

The past year has presented the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) 
with an unprecedented opportunity to begin strengthening its provision 
of vocational rehabilitation and employment services to veterans. The 
VR&E Task Force has developed a blueprint for the changes needed to 
improve numerous programmatic and managerial aspects of VR&E’s 
operations. We generally agree with the Task Force’s three key findings.

Key VR&E Task Force Findings: 

Finding #1: VR&E has not been a VA priority in terms of returning 
veterans with service-connected disabilities to the workforce.
Finding #2: VR&E has limited capacity to manage its growing workload.
Finding #3: The VR&E system must be redesigned for the 21st century 
employment environment.

[End of table]

We also generally agree with the Task Force’s key recommendations to 
streamline eligibility and entitlement, institute a new employment-
driven service delivery process, expand counseling benefits, reorganize 
and increase VR&E staffing, and improve information technology 
capabilities and intra-and inter-agency coordination.

VR&E faces three overriding challenges as it responds to the Task Force 
recommendations. First, providing early intervention assistance to 
injured servicemembers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq is 
complicated by

* differences and uncertainties in the recovery process, which make it 
difficult for VR&E to determine when a servicemember will be able to 
consider its services; 
* the Department of Defense’s (DOD) concerns that VA’s outreach could 
work at cross purposes to the military’s retention goals; and
* lack of access to DOD data that would allow VA to readily identify 
and locate all seriously injured servicemembers.

Second, VR&E needs to upgrade its information technology system. The 
Task Force report pointed out that VR&E’s IT system is limited in its 
ability to produce useful reports. Third, VR&E needs to use new results-
based criteria to evaluate and improve performance. The Task Force 
recommended that VR&E develop a new employment-oriented performance 
measurement system, including measures of sustained employment longer 
than 60 days. In fiscal year 2004, VR&E included four employment-based 
performance criteria in its performance and accountability report. 
However, as of February 2005, VR&E had not yet reported results using 
these longer-term measures.

What GAO Recommends: 

This statement contains no recommendations. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-572T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Cynthia A. Bascetta at 
(202) 512-7215 or bascettac@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

We are pleased to be here today to provide our views on efforts of the 
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to help disabled veterans obtain 
suitable employment through its Vocational Rehabilitation and 
Employment (VR&E) program. This program is crucial to helping veterans 
with disabilities caused or aggravated by their service in the military 
obtain and maintain employment, especially now as servicemembers return 
from Afghanistan and Iraq. Further, at a time when the American 
workforce is shrinking, the importance of VA's VR&E program and other 
federal programs that help individuals with disabilities return to work 
is paramount. For this and other reasons, we have designated federal 
disability programs, including VR&E, as "high risk."[Footnote 1]

In 2003, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs established a VR&E Task 
Force[Footnote 2] to conduct an independent review of the agency's VR&E 
program and make recommendations for improving its operation. At the 
time, there were concerns regarding the management of the program. 
These concerns included, among other things, the program's continued 
focus on education rather than employment, the time it took 
participants to become rehabilitated, and the program's poor track 
record for helping disabled veterans find suitable employment. 

As you requested, my comments are focused on GAO's views about key VR&E 
Task Force findings and recommendations and challenges that the program 
currently faces in meeting the needs of disabled veterans. My statement 
is based largely on prior GAO reports and testimonies. Since 1984, we 
have reported on the operation of VA's VR&E program, the VR&E Task 
Force findings and recommendations, and VA's efforts to provide 
vocational rehabilitation services to injured servicemembers returning 
from Afghanistan and Iraq. We did our work in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. 

In summary, GAO's past work and the recent Task Force report point to 
the need for VR&E to increase its emphasis on finding jobs for veterans 
with disabilities and managing its operations. We reported as early as 
1984[Footnote 3] that the VR&E program primarily focused on training 
veterans and not finding them suitable employment. Twenty years later, 
the Task Force reached similar conclusions and recommended most notably 
that VR&E institute an employment-driven system for providing services 
to veterans that would re-emphasize the importance of employment. We 
noted that implementing a system focused on employment would require a 
cultural shift away from VR&E's long-standing emphasis on education. 
[Footnote 4] VR&E would also need to overcome the incentive for 
veterans to use its education benefits, which provide more financial 
assistance than those available though other VA education benefits 
programs. While we generally agreed with the Task Force findings and 
recommendations, we also reported that VR&E faces three important 
challenges. First, although intervening early after a disabling injury 
increases the likelihood that a disabled veteran would return to work, 
VA faces significant challenges in expediting VR&E services to 
seriously injured servicemembers. We recommended in January 2005 that 
VA improve its efforts to expedite services for veterans returning from 
Afghanistan and Iraq and improve its policies and procedures to ensure 
that veterans obtain the services they need, which VA is in the process 
of doing. In addition, VR&E at this time does not have the information 
technology systems needed to properly manage its operations. 
Furthermore, it has just begun to initiate the process of using results-
based criteria to measure success; that is, whether its services help 
veterans with disabilities achieve sustained employment. 

Background: 

Since the 1940s, VA has provided vocational rehabilitation assistance 
to veterans with service-connected disabilities to help them find 
meaningful work and achieve maximum independence in daily living. In 
1980, the Congress enacted the Veterans' Rehabilitation and Education 
Amendments, which changed the focus of VA's vocational rehabilitation 
program from providing primarily training aimed at improving the 
employability of disabled veterans to helping them find and maintain 
suitable jobs. VA estimates that in fiscal year 2004 it spent more than 
$670 million on its VR&E program to serve about 73,000 participants. 
This amount represents about 2 percent of VA's $37 billion budget for 
nonmedical benefits, most of which involves cash compensation for 
service connected disabilities. 

VR&E services include vocational counseling, evaluation, and training 
that can include payment for tuition and other expenses for education, 
as well as job placement assistance. Interested veterans generally 
apply for VR&E services after they have applied and qualified for 
disability compensation based on a rating of their service-connected 
disability. This disability rating--ranging from 0 to 100 percent in 10 
percent increments--entitles veterans to monthly cash payments based on 
their average loss in earning capacity resulting from a service-
connected injury or combination of injuries. To be entitled to VR&E 
services, veterans with disabilities generally must have a 20 percent 
disability rating and an employment handicap as determined by a 
vocational rehabilitation counselor. Although cash compensation is not 
available to servicemembers until after they separate from the 
military, they can receive VR&E services prior to separation under 
certain circumstances.[Footnote 5] To make these services available 
prior to discharge, VA expedites the determination of eligibility for 
VR&E by granting a preliminary rating, known as a memorandum rating. 

Implementing Task Force Recommendations Should Improve VR&E Services: 

We generally agree with the Task Force's key findings, which broadly 
address three areas of VR&E's operations. (See table 1.)

Table 1: Key VR&E Task Force Findings: 

Finding #1: VR&E has not been a VA priority in terms of returning 
veterans with service-connected disabilities to the workforce.
Finding #2: VR&E has limited capacity to manage its growing workload.
Finding #3: The VR&E system must be redesigned for the 21st century 
employment environment.

Source: GAO. 

[End of table]

First, the Task Force found that VR&E has not been a priority in terms 
of returning veterans with service-connected disabilities to the 
workforce. Between 1984 and 1998, we issued three reports all of which 
found that the VR&E program had not emphasized its mandate to find jobs 
for disabled veterans. In 1992,[Footnote 6] we found that over 90 
percent of eligible veterans went directly into education programs, 
while less than 3 percent went into the employment services phase. We 
also found that VA placed few veterans in suitable jobs. We reported in 
1996[Footnote 7] that VA rehabilitated less than 10 percent of veterans 
found eligible for vocational rehabilitation services and recommended 
switching the focus to obtaining suitable employment for disabled 
veterans. VA program officials told us that staff focused on providing 
training services because, among other reasons, the staff was not 
prepared to provide employment services because it lacked adequate 
training and expertise in job placement. Years later, the Task Force 
similarly reported that top VR&E management had not demonstrated a 
commitment to providing employment services and lacked the staffing and 
skill resources at the regional offices to provide these services. 

The Task Force also found that VR&E has a limited capacity to manage 
its growing workload. The Task Force had concerns about, among other 
things, VR&E's organizational, program, and fiscal accountability; 
workforce and workload management; information and systems technology; 
and performance measures. In our report on the Task Force, we stated 
that, although we have not specifically reviewed VR&E's capacity to 
manage its workload, we agree that many of the VR&E management systems 
identified by the Task Force as needing improvement are fundamental to 
the proper functioning of federal programs, regardless of workload. 

In addition, the Task Force found that the VR&E system must be 
redesigned for the 21st century employment environment. The Task Force 
reported that the VR&E program does not reflect the dynamic nature of 
the economic environment and constant changes in the labor market. The 
report suggested that, as a result, only about 10 percent of veterans 
participating in the VR&E program had obtained employment. We agree 
with the Task Force finding that the VR&E system needs to be 
modernized. Our high risk report emphasized that outmoded criteria used 
to establish eligibility need to be updated. 

The Task Force made 105 recommendations, which we grouped into six 
categories. (See table 2.) The first category of recommendations was 
directed at streamlining VR&E program eligibility and entitlement for 
veterans in most critical need, including (1) servicemembers who have 
been medically discharged or are pending medical discharge; (2) 
veterans with a combined service-connected disability rating of 50 
percent or greater; and (3) veterans receiving compensation for the 
loss, or loss of the use, of a limb. In our report, we commented that, 
among other things, VA's outmoded disability criteria raise questions 
about the validity of its disability decisions because medical 
conditions alone are generally poor predictors of work incapacity. For 
example, advances in prosthetics and technology for workplace 
accommodations can enhance work capacity by compensating for 
impairments. As a result, the Task Force recommendation to focus on 
severity of disability rather than on employability may not ensure that 
veterans with the most severe employment handicaps receive priority 
services from VR&E. 

Table 2: Key VR&E Task Force Recommendations: 

Category: #1; 
Recommendation: Streamline eligibility and entitlement for those 
veterans in most critical need. 

Category: #2; 
Recommendation: Replace the current VR&E process with a 5-track 
employment-driven service delivery process. 

Category: #3; 
Recommendation: Expand counseling benefits to provide VR&E services to 
pre-discharge servicemembers and post-discharge service members. 

Category: #4; 
Recommendation: Reorganize VR&E and increase staffing. 

Category: #5; 
Recommendation: Improve the capacity of the information technology 
systems. 

Category: #6; 
Recommendation: Improve intra-and interagency coordination. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table]

Second, the Task Force sought to replace the current VR&E process with 
a 5-track employment-driven service delivery system. The five tracks 
include rapid access employment for veterans with skills, self-
employment, re-employment at a job held before military service, 
traditional vocational rehabilitation services and, when employment is 
not a viable option, independent living services.[Footnote 8] We 
commented that the 5-track process could help VR&E focus on employment 
while permitting the agency to assist veterans less likely to obtain 
gainful employment on their own. We added, however, that the new system 
would require a cultural shift from the program's current emphasis on 
long-term education to more rapid employment. We also observed that, as 
long as the education benefits available under VR&E provide more 
financial assistance than those available through other VA educational 
benefits programs, eligible veterans will have strong incentives to 
continue to use VR&E to pursue their education goals. 

Third, the Task Force recommended that VR&E expand counseling benefits 
to provide VR&E services to servicemembers before they are discharged 
and to veterans who have already transitioned out of the military. We 
agreed that providing vocational and employment counseling prior to 
military discharge is essential to enable disabled servicemembers to 
access VR&E services as quickly as possible after they are discharged. 
In prior reports, we highlighted the importance of early intervention 
efforts to promote and facilitate return to the workplace. In 1996, for 
example, we reported research findings that rehabilitation offered as 
close as possible to the onset of disabling impairments has the 
greatest likelihood of success. [Footnote 9] In addition, receptiveness 
to participate in rehabilitation and job placement activities can 
decline after extended absence from work. 

Fourth, the Task Force made several recommendations directed at 
redesigning the VR&E central office to provide greater oversight of 
regional office operations and to increase staff and skill sets to 
reflect the new focus on employment. We agreed that program 
accountability could be enhanced through more central office oversight. 
We pointed out that, over the past 3 years, VA Inspector General 
reports had identified VR&E programs at regional offices that did not 
adhere to policies and procedures and sometimes circumvented 
accountability mechanisms, such as those for managing and monitoring 
veterans' cases and those requiring the development of sound plans 
prior to approving purchases for those veterans seeking self-
employment. [Footnote 10]

Fifth, the Task Force recommended that VR&E improve the capacity of its 
information technology systems. Many of the Task Force's 
recommendations in this area are consistent with GAO's governmentwide 
work reporting that agencies need to strengthen strategic planning and 
investment management in information technology. In addition, we 
recognized that VR&E would benefit from a more systematic analysis of 
current information technology systems before making further investment 
in its current systems. 

Finally, the Task Force recommended that VR&E strengthen coordination 
within VA between VR&E and the Veterans Health Administration, and 
between VR&E and the Departments of Defense (DOD) and Labor.[Footnote 
11] Improving coordination with agencies that have a role in assisting 
disabled veterans make the transition to civilian employment should 
help these agencies more efficiently use federal resources to enhance 
the employment prospects of disabled veterans. 

VA Continues to Face Significant Challenges in Improving Its VR&E 
Program: 

While VR&E responds to the Task Force recommendations, it faces 
immediate challenges associated with providing vocational 
rehabilitation and employment services to injured servicemembers 
returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. As we reported in January 
2005,[Footnote 12] VR&E is challenged by the need to provide services 
on an early intervention basis; that is, expedited assistance provided 
on a high priority basis. VR&E also lacks the information technology 
systems needed to manage the provision of services to these 
servicemembers and to veterans. In addition, VR&E is only now beginning 
to use results-based criteria for measuring its success in assisting 
veterans achieve sustained employment. 

VR&E Challenged to Provide Services as Early as Possible: 

VR&E faces significant challenges in expediting services to disabled 
servicemembers. An inherent challenge is that individual differences 
and uncertainties in the recovery process make it difficult to 
determine when a seriously injured service member will be able to 
consider VR&E services. Additionally, as we reported in our January 
2005 report, given that VA is conducting outreach to servicemembers 
whose discharge from military service is not yet certain, VA is 
challenged by DOD's concerns that VA's outreach about benefits, 
including early intervention with VR&E services, could adversely affect 
the military's retention goals. Finally, VA is currently challenged by 
a lack of access to DOD data that would, at a minimum, allow the agency 
to readily identify and locate all seriously injured servicemembers. VA 
officials we interviewed both in the regional offices and at central 
office reported that this information would provide them with a more 
reliable way to identify and monitor the progress of those 
servicemembers with serious injuries. However, DOD officials cited 
privacy concerns about the type of information VA had requested. 

Our January 2005 report found that VR&E could enhance employment 
outcomes for disabled servicemembers, especially if services could be 
provided early in the recovery process. Unlike previous conflicts, a 
greater portion of servicemembers injured in Afghanistan and Iraq are 
surviving their injuries--due, in part, to advanced protective 
equipment and in-theater medical treatment. Consequently, VR&E has 
greater opportunity to assist servicemembers in overcoming their 
impairments. While medical and technological advances are making it 
possible for some of these disabled servicemembers to return to 
military occupations, others will transition to veteran status and seek 
employment in the civilian economy. According to DOD officials, once 
stabilized and discharged from the hospital, servicemembers usually 
relocate to be closer to their homes or military bases and be treated 
as outpatients by the closest VA or military hospital. At this point, 
the military generally begins to assess whether the servicemember will 
be able to remain in the military--a process that could take months to 
complete. The process could take even longer if servicemembers appeal 
the military's initial disability decision. 

We also reported that VA had taken steps to expedite VR&E services for 
seriously injured servicemembers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. 
Specifically, VA instructed its regional offices to make seriously 
injured servicemembers a high priority for all VA assistance. Because 
the most seriously injured servicemembers are initially treated at 
major military treatment facilities, VA also deployed staff to these 
sites to provide information on VA benefits programs, including VR&E 
services to servicemembers injured in Afghanistan and Iraq. Moreover, 
to better ensure the identification and monitoring of all seriously 
injured servicemembers, VA initiated a memorandum of agreement 
proposing that DOD systematically provide information on those 
servicemembers, including their names, location, and medical condition. 

Pending an agreement, VA instructed its regional offices to establish 
local liaison with military medical treatment facilities in their areas 
to learn who the seriously injured are, where they are located, and the 
severity of their injuries. Reliance on local relationships, however, 
has resulted in varying completeness and reliability of information. In 
addition, we found that VA had no policy for VR&E staff to maintain 
contact with seriously injured servicemembers who had not initially 
applied for VR&E services. Nevertheless, some regional offices reported 
efforts to maintain contact with these servicemembers, noting that some 
who are not initially ready to consider employment when contacted about 
VR&E services may be receptive at a future time. 

To improve VA's efforts to expedite VR&E services, we recommended that 
VA and DOD collaborate to reach an agreement for VA to have access to 
information that both agencies agree is needed to promote 
servicemembers' recovery to work. We also recommended that the 
Secretary of Veterans Affairs direct that Under Secretary for Benefits 
to develop a policy and procedures for regional offices to maintain 
contact with seriously injured servicemembers who do not initially 
apply for VR&E services, in order to ensure that they have the 
opportunity to participate in the program when they are ready. Both VA 
and DOD generally concurred with our findings and recommendations. 

Outmoded Information Technology Systems Pose a Challenge: 

GAO's governmentwide work has found that federal agencies need to 
strengthen strategic planning and investment management in information 
technology. The Task Force expressed particular concern that VR&E's 
information technology systems are not up to the task of producing the 
information and analyses needed to manage these and other activities. 
The Task Force pointed out that VR&E's mission-critical automated case-
management system is based on a software application developed by four 
VA regional offices in the early 1990s and redesigned to operate in the 
Veterans Benefits Administration's information technology and network 
environments. 

The Task Force identified specific concerns with the operation of 
VR&E's automated case management system. For example, 52 of VR&E's 138 
out-based locations[Footnote 13] cannot efficiently use the automated 
system because of VBA's policy to limit staff access to high-speed 
computer lines. As a result of this policy, many VR&E locations use 
dial-up modem capabilities, which can be unreliable and slow. The Task 
Force concluded that VR&E's automated system is so intertwined with the 
delivery of VR&E services that lack of reliable access and timely 
system response has degraded staff productivity and its ability to 
provide timely services to veterans. 

In addition, the Task Force pointed out that the number of reports that 
VR&E's automated case management system can generate is limited. For 
example, workload data available from the automated system provide only 
a snapshot of the veterans in the VR&E program at a given point in 
time. The automated system cannot link a veteran's case status with the 
fiscal year in which the veteran entered the program so that the 
performance of veterans entering the program in a fiscal year can be 
measured over a period of time. Also, the Task Force reported that VR&E 
does not have the capabilities it needs to track the number of veterans 
who drop out of the program or interrupt their rehabilitation plans. 

VR&E Faces the Challenge of Developing Meaningful Outcome Measures: 

VA faces the challenge of using results-oriented criteria to measure 
the long-term success of the VR&E program. The Task Force recommended 
that VR&E develop a new outcomes-based performance measurement system 
to complement the proposed 5-track employment-driven service delivery 
system. Currently, VR&E still identifies veterans as having been 
successfully rehabilitated if they maintain gainful employment for 60 
days. In its fiscal year 2004 performance and accountability report, 
VR&E included four employment-based performance measures: the 
percentage of participants employed during the first quarter (90 days) 
after leaving the program, the percentage still employed after the 
third quarter (270 days), the percentage change in earnings from pre-
application to post-program, and the average cost of placing a 
participant in employment. However, as of February 2005, VR&E was still 
in the process of developing data for these measures and had not 
reported results. 

Until VR&E is farther along in this process, it will continue to 
measure performance using the 60-day criteria, which may not accurately 
predict sustained employment over the long-term. In 1993,[Footnote 14] 
we reported that the 60-day measure of success used by state vocational 
rehabilitation agencies may not be rigorous enough because gains in 
employment and earnings of clients who appeared to have been 
successfully rehabilitated faded after 2 years.[Footnote 15] Moreover, 
the earnings for many returned to pre-vocational rehabilitation level 
after 8 years. As VR&E further develops its four employment-based 
performance measures, it will also face challenges associated with 
coordinating its efforts with those of other federal agencies, 
including the Departments of Labor and Education, as they seek to 
develop common measures[Footnote 16] of vocational rehabilitation 
success. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared remarks. I will be happy to 
answer any questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee may 
have. 

Contact and Acknowledgments: 

For further information, please contact Cynthia A. Bascetta at (202) 
512-7215. Also contributing to this statement were Irene Chu and Joseph 
Natalicchio. 

[End of section]

Related GAO Products: 

VA Disability Benefits and Health Care: Providing Certain Services to 
the Seriously Injured Poses Challenges (GAO-05-444T, Mar. 17, 2005): 

Vocational Rehabilitation: More VA and DOD Collaboration Needed to 
Expedite Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers (GAO-05-167, 
Jan. 14, 2005): 

VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Program: GAO Comments on 
Key Task Force Findings and Recommendations (GAO-04-853, Jun. 15, 
2004): 

Vocational Rehabilitation: Opportunities to Improve Program 
Effectiveness (GAO/T-HEHS-98-87, Feb. 4, 1998): 

Veterans Benefits Administration: Focusing on Results in Vocational 
Rehabilitation and Education Programs (GAO/T-HEHS-97-148, Jun. 5, 
1997): 

Vocational Rehabilitation: VA Continues to Place Few Disabled Veterans 
in Jobs (GAO/HEHS-96-155, Sept. 3, 1996): 

Vocational Rehabilitation: Evidence for Federal Program's Effectiveness 
Is Mixed, (GAO/PEMD-93-19, Aug. 27, 1993): 

Vocational Rehabilitation: VA Needs to Emphasize Serving Veterans With 
Serious Employment Handicaps (GAO/HRD-92-133, Sept. 28, 1992): 

VA Can Provide More Employment Assistance to Veterans Who Complete Its 
Vocational Rehabilitation Program (GAO/HRD-84-39, May 23, 1984): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, High Risk Series: An Update, GAO-05-207 (Washington, D.C.: 
January 2005)

[2] VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Task Force, Report to 
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs: The Vocational Rehabilitation and 
Employment Program for the 21st Century (Washington, D.C.: March 2004)

[3] GAO, VA Can Provide More Employment Assistance to Veterans Who 
Complete Its Vocational Rehabilitation Program, GAO/HRD-84-39 
(Washington, D.C.: May 23, 1984). 

[4] GAO, VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Program: GAO 
Comments on Key Task Force Findings and Recommendations, GAO-04-853 
(Washington, D.C.: June 15, 2004). 

[5] Hospitalized military personnel pending discharge may receive all 
vocational rehabilitation and employment benefits--such as counseling, 
evaluation, and training--except for the monthly subsistence allowance. 
38 U.S.C. §§ 3102, 3104, and 3113. 

[6] GAO, Vocational Rehabilitation: VA Needs to Emphasize Serving 
Veterans With Serious Employment Handicaps, GAO/HRD-92-133 (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 28, 1992)

[7] GAO, Vocational Rehabilitation: VA Continues to Place Few Disabled 
Veterans in Jobs GAO/HEHS-96-155 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 3, 1996)

[8] The Independent Living program is tailored to the veteran whose 
service-connected disability or disabilities or overall condition make 
employment goals infeasible at the time of application. The program 
might incorporate such devices or services as assistive technology, 
Independent Living skills training, or connection to community-based 
support services to improve quality of life with the possibility of 
employment later. 

[9] GAO, SSA Disability: Program Redesign Necessary to Encourage Return 
to Work, GAO/HEHS-96-62 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 24, 1996). 

[10] For recent examples, see Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of 
Inspector General, Combined Assessment Program Review of the VA 
Regional Office, Providence, Rhode Island, Report No.04-00731-110 
(Washington, D.C.: March 24, 2005); Combined Assessment Program Review 
of the VA Regional Office, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Report No. 04-
03200-96 (Washington, D.C.: March 3, 2005); and Combined Assessment 
Program Review of the VA Regional Office, Indianapolis, Indiana, Report 
No. 04-00603-65, (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 10, 2005). 

[11] The Department of Labor provides vocational rehabilitation 
services through Local Veterans' Employment Representatives and the 
Disabled Veterans' Outreach Program. 

[12] GAO, Vocational Rehabilitation: More VA and DOD Collaboration 
Needed to Expedite Services for Seriously Injured Servicemembers, GAO-
05-167 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 14, 2005)

[13] VR&E has staff in locations other than VR&E central office and VA 
regional offices. These out-based personnel may be located in 
government buildings or in leased space. 

[14] GAO, Vocational Rehabilitation: Evidence for Federal Program's 
Effectiveness Is Mixed, GAO/PEMD-93-19 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 27, 1993)

[15] The Social Security Act states that people applying for disability 
benefits should be promptly referred to state vocational rehabilitation 
agencies for services in order to maximize the number of such 
individuals who can return to productive activity. The 60-day measure 
used by state agencies is less rigorous than the criterion used by the 
Social Security Administration--9 continuous months of employment in 
any substantial gainful activity. 

[16] VR&E is working with the Office of Management and Budget and other 
federal agencies to develop common measures of performance for 
vocational rehabilitation.