The Hon. Warren Snowdon MP,
Minister for Defence Science and Personnel
CUTTING
RED TAPE FOR VETERANS AND ADF
Delivering on a key election promise, the Rudd Government has cut red
tape and delays facing veterans and ex‑service personnel trying to access
their entitlements.
The Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, Alan Griffin, and the Minister for
Defence Science and Personnel, Warren Snowdon, said today the Interdepartmental
Working Group had been established and was already reducing the bureaucracy
involved in making claims.
“Prior to the election I was approached by many veterans and ex-service
personnel frustrated by the administrative burden created by dealing with
multiple Government agencies. I promised to establish an Interdepartmental
Working Group to address this issue and am pleased to report it is already
having a positive effect,” Mr Griffin said.
The Interdepartmental Working Group has already:
·
Reduced the medical reviews veterans must undertake;
·
Commenced information sharing across Department of
Veterans’ Affairs (DVA), Centrelink and ComSuper ‑ resulting in
around 250 DVA disability pensioners already being exempted from further
ComSuper reviews;
·
Published a practical transition handbook on accessing
interdepartmental entitlements;
·
Listed the Australian Defence Force (ADF) Identification
Card as an acceptable Proof of Identity document across Government; and
·
Commenced a trial to expand the final Defence medical
examination to cover the requirements of a liability claim to DVA or ComSuper,
and eliminate the need for further medical examinations in most cases.
Delivering on another election promise, the establishment of a Special
Claims Unit at DVA has reduced average times taken to process claims. A comparison of the two financial years
2006-2007 and 2007-2008, shows processing time reductions of 15.7 per cent in
VEA claims, 7.8 per cent for SRCA initial liability claims and 30.9 per cent
for MRCA initial liability claims.
“The process of accessing entitlements should place minimal additional
stress upon veterans and ex-service personnel, particularly as many of the
people claiming are older veterans who were injured during their service,” Mr
Griffin said.
“Reducing the burden of government bureaucracy on these people is an
important objective.”
Mr Snowdon said he welcomed efforts to end the duplicate – even
triplicate – medical examinations that separating personnel need to undergo to
access entitlements.
“A successful trial to expand the role of the final Defence medical
examination will reduce the complexity and delays facing some of the personnel
leaving the ADF each year,” Mr Snowdon said.
Mr Snowdon added while some initiatives are about simplification, like
listing the ADF Identification Card as a Government Proof of Identity document,
others highlight the critical importance of inter-agency co-operation.
“The protocol developed by Defence and DVA to follow in the event of a
death in service or serious injury on deployment has been expanded to include
Centrelink and ComSuper, ensuring senior level case management across all
agencies. This means that relevant
agencies are able to co-ordinate the full range of Government assistance that
is available in these circumstances,” Mr Snowdon said.
The working group brings together representatives from the Department of
Veterans’ Affairs, the Department of Defence, Centrelink, the Department of
Human Services and Comsuper.
Representatives from the ex-service community have also been consulted
by the working group.
Mr Griffin said: “There are still issues to address, but I’m pleased
we’ve already started to get results from this process.”
Media contacts:
Kate
Sieper (Warren Snowdon): 02 6277
7620 or 0488 484 689
Laura
Ryan (Alan Griffin): 02 6277 7820 or 0437 863 109
Defence
Media Liaison: 02 6265 3343 or 0408 498 664