Military Pay
Gaps in Pay and Benefits Create Financial Hardships for Injured Army National Guard and Reserve Soldiers
Gao ID: GAO-05-322T February 17, 2005
In light of the recent mobilizations associated with the Global War on Terrorism, GAO was asked to determine if the Army's overall environment and controls provided reasonable assurance that soldiers who were injured or became ill in the line of duty were receiving the pay and other benefits to which they were entitled in an accurate and timely manner. This testimony outlines pay deficiencies in the key areas of (1) overall environment and management controls, (2) processes, and (3) systems. It also focuses on whether recent actions the Army has taken to address these problems will offer effective and lasting solutions.
Injured and ill reserve component soldiers--who are entitled to extend their active duty service to receive medical treatment--have been inappropriately removed from active duty status in the automated systems that control pay and access to medical care. The Army acknowledges the problem but does not know how many injured soldiers have been affected by it. GAO identified 38 reserve component soldiers who said they had experienced problems with the active duty medical extension order process and subsequently fell off their active duty orders. Of those, 24 experienced gaps in their pay and benefits due to delays in processing extended active duty orders. Many of the case study soldiers incurred severe, permanent injuries fighting for their country including loss of limb, hearing loss, and back injuries. Nonetheless, these soldiers had to navigate the convoluted and poorly defined process for extending active duty service. The Army's process for extending active duty orders for injured soldiers lacks an adequate control environment and management controls--including (1) clear and comprehensive guidance, (2) a system to provide visibility over injured soldiers, and (3) adequate training and education programs. The Army has also not established user-friendly processes--including clear approval criteria and adequate infrastructure and support services. Many Army locations have used ad hoc procedures to keep soldiers in pay status; however, these procedures often circumvent key internal controls and put the Army at risk of making improper and potentially fraudulent payments. Finally, the Army's nonintegrated systems, which require extensive errorprone manual data entry, further delay access to pay and benefits. The Army recently implemented the Medical Retention Processing (MRP) program, which takes the place of the previously existing process in most cases. MRP, which authorizes an automatic 179 days of pay and benefits, may resolve the timeliness of the front-end approval process. However, MRP has some of the same issues and may also result in overpayments to soldiers who are released early from their MRP orders. Out of 132 soldiers the Army identified as being released from active duty, 15 improperly received pay past their release date--totaling approximately $62,000.
GAO-05-322T, Military Pay: Gaps in Pay and Benefits Create Financial Hardships for Injured Army National Guard and Reserve Soldiers
This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-05-322T
entitled 'Military Pay: Gaps in Pay and Benefits Create Financial
Hardships for Injured Army National Guard and Reserve Soldiers' which
was released on February 17, 2005.
This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this
document to Webmaster@gao.gov.
This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this
material separately.
Testimony:
Before the House Committee on Government Reform:
For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. Thursday, February 17,
2005:
Military Pay:
Gaps in Pay and Benefits Create Financial Hardships for Injured Army
National Guard and Reserve Soldiers:
Statement of Gregory D. Kutz, Director Financial Management and
Assurance:
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-322T]
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-05-322T, a testimony before the Committee on
Government Reform, House of Representatives
Why GAO Did This Study:
In light of the recent mobilizations associated with the Global War on
Terrorism, GAO was asked to determine if the Army‘s overall environment
and controls provided reasonable assurance that soldiers who were
injured or became ill in the line of duty were receiving the pay and
other benefits to which they were entitled in an accurate and timely
manner. This testimony outlines pay deficiencies in the key areas of
(1) overall environment and management controls, (2) processes, and (3)
systems. It also focuses on whether recent actions the Army has taken
to address these problems will offer effective and lasting solutions.
What GAO Found:
Injured and ill reserve component soldiers”who are entitled to extend
their active duty service to receive medical treatment”have been
inappropriately removed from active duty status in the automated
systems that control pay and access to medical care. The Army
acknowledges the problem but does not know how many injured soldiers
have been affected by it. GAO identified 38 reserve component soldiers
who said they had experienced problems with the active duty medical
extension order process and subsequently fell off their active duty
orders. Of those, 24 experienced gaps in their pay and benefits due to
delays in processing extended active duty orders. Many of the case
study soldiers incurred severe, permanent injuries fighting for their
country including loss of limb, hearing loss, and back injuries.
Nonetheless, these soldiers had to navigate the convoluted and poorly
defined process for extending active duty service.
Examples of Injured Soldiers with Gaps in Pay and Benefits:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
The Army‘s process for extending active duty orders for injured
soldiers lacks an adequate control environment and management
controls”including (1) clear and comprehensive guidance, (2) a system
to provide visibility over injured soldiers, and (3) adequate training
and education programs. The Army has also not established user-friendly
processes”including clear approval criteria and adequate infrastructure
and support services. Many Army locations have used ad hoc procedures
to keep soldiers in pay status; however, these procedures often
circumvent key internal controls and put the Army at risk of making
improper and potentially fraudulent payments. Finally, the Army‘s
nonintegrated systems, which require extensive error-prone manual data
entry, further delay access to pay and benefits.
The Army recently implemented the Medical Retention Processing (MRP)
program, which takes the place of the previously existing process in
most cases. MRP, which authorizes an automatic 179 days of pay and
benefits, may resolve the timeliness of the front-end approval process.
However, MRP has some of the same issues and may also result in
overpayments to soldiers who are released early from their MRP orders.
Out of 132 soldiers the Army identified as being released from active
duty, 15 improperly received pay past their release date”totaling
approximately $62,000.
What GAO Recommends:
GAO‘s related report (GAO-05-125) makes 22 recommendations including
(1) establishing comprehensive policies and procedures; (2) providing
adequate infrastructure and resources; (3) making process improvements
to compensate for inadequate, stovepiped systems; and (4) as part of
longer term system improvement initiatives, to integrate the Army‘s
order writing, pay, personnel, and medical eligibility systems. In its
written response to GAO‘s recommendations, the Department of Defense
briefly described its completed, ongoing, and planned actions for each
of the recommendations.
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-322T.
To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on
the link above. For more information, contact Gregory D. Kutz at (202)
512-9095 or kutzg@gao.gov.
[End of section]
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:
Thank you for the opportunity to discuss the Army's procedures for
providing pay and related benefits, including medical benefits, to Army
National Guard and Army Reserve soldiers being treated for service-
connected injuries or illness. Our related report[Footnote 1] released
today details weaknesses in the Army's control environment, processes,
and automated systems needed to provide reasonable assurance that
injured and ill reserve component soldiers receive the pay and benefits
to which they are entitled without interruption.
In response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Army
National Guard and Army Reserve mobilized and deployed soldiers in
support of Operations Noble Eagle and Enduring Freedom. When mobilized
for up to 2 years at a time,[Footnote 2] these soldiers performed
search and destroy missions against Taliban and al Qaeda members
throughout Asia and Africa, fought on the front lines in Afghanistan,
and guarded al Qaeda prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Similarly,
reserve component soldiers fought on the front lines in Iraq and are
now assisting in peacekeeping and reconstruction operations in Iraq
under Operation Iraqi Freedom. Until recently, reserve component
soldiers who were mobilized in support of the Global War on Terrorism
and were injured or became ill were released from active duty and
demobilized when their mobilization orders expired, unless the Army
took steps, at the soldier's request, to extend their active duty
service--commonly referred to as an active duty medical extension
(ADME). During the course of our audit, the Army implemented the
Medical Retention Processing (MRP) program, which takes the place of
ADME for soldiers returning from operations in support of the Global
War on Terrorism[Footnote 3] but is a similar mechanism for providing
pay and related benefits to reserve component soldiers being treated
for service-connected injuries or illness.
Because the Army did not maintain reliable, centralized data on the
number, location, and disposition of mobilized reserve component
soldiers who had requested to extend their active duty service because
they had been injured or become ill in the line of duty,[Footnote 4] it
was not possible to statistically test controls or the impact control
breakdowns had on soldiers and their families. Instead, we relied on a
case study and selected site visit approach for this work--performing
audit work at 10 Army installations throughout the country,
interviewing and obtaining relevant documentation from officials at the
Army Manpower Office[Footnote 5] at the Pentagon, all four of the
Army's Regional Medical Commands (RMC) in the continental United
States, and the Army Human Resource Command (HRC) in Alexandria,
Virginia. We also interviewed 38 reserve component soldiers who served
in the Global War on Terrorism and had experienced problems with the
ADME process at 4 military installations. Using Army pay and
administrative records, we corroborated information provided by
soldiers about disruptions in pay and benefits but were not always able
to validate other assertions made by injured soldiers about their
experiences. Further details on our scope and methodology and the
results of the case studies can be found in our related report.
Today, I will summarize the results of our work with respect to (1) the
problems experienced by selected injured or ill Army Reserve and
National Guard soldiers; (2) the weaknesses in the overall control
environment and management; (3) the lack of clear processes; (4) the
lack of integrated pay, personnel, and medical eligibility systems; and
(5) our assessment of whether the MRP program has resolved deficiencies
associated with ADME and will provide effective and lasting solutions.
Summary:
Poorly defined requirements and processes for extending injured and ill
reserve component soldiers on active duty have caused soldiers to be
inappropriately dropped from their active duty orders. For some, this
has led to significant gaps in pay and health insurance, which has
created financial hardships for these soldiers and their families.
Based on our analysis of Army Manpower data during the period from
February 1, 2004, through April 7, 2004, almost 34 percent of the 867
soldiers who applied to be extended on active duty orders--because of
injuries or illness--fell off their orders before their extension
requests were granted. For many soldiers, this resulted in being
removed from active duty status in the automated systems that control
pay and access to benefits, including medical care and access to the
Commissary and Post Exchange--which allows soldiers and their families
to purchase groceries and other goods at a discount. Through our case
study work, we have documented the experiences of 10 soldiers who were
mobilized to active duty for military operations in Afghanistan and
Iraq. Their stories illustrate the tremendous hardships faced by
injured and ill reserve component soldiers applying for ADME. Many of
the soldiers we interviewed had incurred severe, permanent injuries
fighting for their country including loss of limb, hearing loss, and
ruptured disks. Nonetheless, we found that the soldier carries a large
part of the burden when trying to understand and successfully navigate
the Army's poorly defined requirements and processes for obtaining
extended active duty orders.
With respect to the Army's control environment and the management
controls over the ADME process, we found that the Army has not provided
(1) clear and comprehensive guidance needed to develop effective
processes to manage and treat injured and ill reserve component
soldiers, (2) an effective means of tracking the location and
disposition of injured and ill soldiers, and (3) adequate training and
education programs for Army officials and injured and ill soldiers
trying to navigate their way through the ADME process. For example,
many of the soldiers we interviewed said that neither they nor the Army
personnel responsible for helping them clearly understood the process.
This confusion resulted in delays in processing ADME orders and for
some, meant that they fell from their active duty orders and lost pay
and medical benefits for their families.
The Army also lacks customer-friendly processes for injured and ill
soldiers who are trying to extend their active duty orders so that they
can continue to receive medical care. Specifically, the Army lacks
clear criteria for approving ADME orders, which may require applicants
to resubmit paperwork multiple times before their application is
approved. For example, one Special Forces soldier we interviewed, who
lost his leg when a roadside bomb destroyed the vehicle he was riding
in while on patrol for Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, missed three
pay periods totaling $5,000 because he fell off his active duty orders.
Although this soldier was clearly entitled to a medical extension,
according to approving officials at Army Manpower his application was
not immediately approved because it did not contain sufficiently
current and detailed information to justify this soldier's
qualifications for ADME. In addition, the Army has not consistently
provided the infrastructure needed--including convenient support
services--to accommodate the needs of soldiers trying to navigate their
way through the ADME process. This, combined with the lack of clear
guidance discussed previously and the high turnover of the personnel
who are responsible for helping injured and ill soldiers through the
ADME process, has resulted in injured and ill soldiers carrying a
disproportionate share of the burden for ensuring that they do not fall
off their active duty orders. This has left many soldiers disgruntled
and feeling like they have had to fend for themselves. While most of
the installations we reviewed took extraordinary steps to keep soldiers
in pay status, these steps often involved overriding required internal
controls in one or more systems. In some cases, the stopgap measures
ultimately caused additional financial hardships for soldiers or put
the Army at risk of significantly overpaying soldiers in the long run.
With respect to the Army's automated systems that control soldiers' pay
and benefits, overall, we found the current stovepiped, nonintegrated
order-writing, personnel, pay, and medical eligibility systems require
extensive error-prone manual data entry and reentry. Because the order-
writing system does not directly interface with these other systems,
once approved, hard copy or electronic copy ADME orders are distributed
and used to manually update the appropriate systems. However, the
Army's ADME guidance does not address the distribution of ADME orders
or clearly define who is responsible for ensuring that the appropriate
pay, personnel, and medical eligibility systems are updated. As a
result, ADME orders are not sent directly to the individuals
responsible for data input, but instead are distributed via e-mail and
forwarded throughout the Army and the Department of Defense--eventually
reaching individuals with access to the pay, personnel, and medical
eligibility systems. Not only is this process vulnerable to input
errors, but not sending a copy of the orders directly to the individual
responsible for input increases the risk that system updates will not
be entered in time to ensure continuation of the pay and benefits to
which soldiers are entitled.
The Army's new MRP program, which went into effect May 1, 2004, and
takes the place of ADME for soldiers returning from operations in Iraq
and Afghanistan, should resolve many of the front-end processing delays
experienced by soldiers applying for ADME by simplifying the
application process. However, MRP has not resolved the underlying
management control problems that plague ADME--including problems
associated with the lack of guidance, visibility over soldiers,
adequate training and education, and manual processes and nonintegrated
pay and personnel systems--and in some respects has worsened problems
associated with the Army's lack of visibility over injured soldiers.
For example, in September and October 2004, the Army did not know with
any certainty how many soldiers were on MRP orders, how many had
returned to active duty, or how many had been released from active duty
early. In addition, although MRP routinely authorizes 179-day
extensions and eliminates the need to reapply for new orders every 30
days, as was sometimes the case with ADME, it also presents new
challenges.
If the Army treats and releases soldiers from active duty in less than
179 days, our previous work has shown that weaknesses in the Army's
process for releasing soldiers from active duty and stopping the
related pay before their orders have expired--in this case before their
179 days is up--often resulted in overpayments to soldiers. Although
the Army did not have a complete or accurate accounting of soldiers who
were treated and released from MRP early, of the 132 soldiers that the
Army identified as released from active duty, we found that 15 were
improperly paid past their release date--totaling approximately $62,000.
Our companion report includes 22 recommendations focused on addressing
the weaknesses we identified in the overall control environment;
infrastructure, resources and processes; and automated systems used to
manage and treat injured reserve component soldiers. To its credit, in
response to these recommendations, the Department of Defense (DOD) has
outlined some actions already taken, others that are underway, and
further planned actions to address the weaknesses we identified.
Injured and Ill Reserve Component Soldiers Experience Gaps in Pay and
Benefits, Creating Financial Hardships for Soldiers and Their Families:
Poorly defined requirements and processes for extending injured and ill
reserve component soldiers on active duty have caused soldiers to be
inappropriately dropped from their active duty orders. For some, this
has led to significant gaps in pay and health insurance, which has
created financial hardships for these soldiers and their families.
Based on our analysis of Army Manpower data during the period from
February 1, 2004, through April 7, 2004, almost 34 percent of the 867
soldiers who applied to be extended on active duty orders fell off
their orders before their extension requests were granted. This placed
them at risk of being removed from active duty status in the automated
systems that control pay and access to benefits, including medical care
and access to the Commissary and Post Exchange--which allows soldiers
and their families to purchase groceries and other goods at a discount.
While the Army Manpower Office began tracking the number of soldiers
who have applied for ADME and fell off their active duty orders during
that process, the Army does not keep track of the number of soldiers
who have lost pay or other benefits as a result. Although, logically, a
soldier who is not on active duty orders would also not be paid, as
discussed later, many of the Army installations we visited had
developed ad hoc procedures to keep these soldiers in pay status even
though they were not on official, approved orders. However, many of the
ad hoc procedures used to keep soldiers in pay status circumvented key
internal controls in the Army payroll system--exposing the Army to the
risk of significant overpayment, did not provide for medical and other
benefits for the soldiers dependents, and sometimes caused additional
financial problems for the soldier.
Because the Army did not maintain any centralized data on the number,
location, and disposition of mobilized reserve component soldiers who
had requested ADME orders but had not yet received them, we were unable
to perform statistical sampling techniques that would allow us to
estimate the number of soldiers affected. However, through our case
study work, we have documented the experiences of 10 soldiers who were
mobilized to active duty for military operations in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
Figure 1 provides an overview of the pay problems experienced by the 10
case study soldiers we interviewed and the resulting impact the
disruptions in pay and benefits had on the soldiers and their families.
According to the soldiers we interviewed, many were living from
paycheck to paycheck; therefore, missing pay for even one pay period
created a financial hardship for these soldiers and their families.
While the Army ultimately addressed these soldiers' problems, absent
our efforts and consistent pressure from the requesters of the report,
it would likely have taken longer for the Army to address these
soldiers' problems. Further details on these case studies are included
in our related report.
Figure 1: Effects of Disruptions in Pay and Benefits:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
The Army Lacks an Effective Control Environment and Management Controls:
The Army has not provided (1) clear and comprehensive guidance needed
to develop effective processes to manage and treat injured and ill
reserve component soldiers, (2) an effective means of tracking the
location and disposition of injured and ill soldiers, and (3) adequate
training and education programs for Army officials and injured and ill
soldiers trying to navigate their way through the ADME process.
Clear and Complete Guidance Lacking:
The Army's implementing guidance related to the extension of active
duty orders is sometimes unclear or contradictory--creating confusion
and contributing to delays in processing ADME orders. For example, the
guidance states that the Army Manpower Office is responsible for
approving extensions beyond 179 days but does not say what organization
is responsible for approving extensions that are less than 179 days. In
practice, we found that all applications were submitted to Army
Manpower for approval regardless of the number of days requested. At
times, this created a significant backlog at the Army Manpower Office
and resulted in processing delays. In addition, the Army's implementing
guidance does not clearly define organizational responsibilities, how
soldiers will be identified as needing an extension, how ADME orders
are to be distributed, and to whom they are to be distributed. Finally,
according to the guidance, the personnel costs associated with soldiers
on ADME orders should be tracked as a base operating cost. However, we
believe the cost of treating injured and ill soldiers--including their
pay and benefits--who fought in operations supporting the Global War on
Terrorism should be accounted for as part of the contingency operation
for which the soldier was originally mobilized. This would more
accurately allocate the total cost of these wartime
operations.[Footnote 6]
The Army Lacks an Effective Means of Tracking the Location and
Disposition of Injured and Ill Soldiers:
As we have reported in the past, the Army's visibility over mobilized
reserve component soldiers is jeopardized by stovepiped systems serving
active and reserve component personnel.[Footnote 7] Therefore, the Army
has had difficulty determining which soldiers are mobilized and/or
deployed, where they are physically located, and when their active duty
orders expire. In the absence of an integrated personnel system that
provides visibility when a soldier is transferred from one location to
another, the Army has general personnel regulations that are intended
to provide some limited visibility over the movement of soldiers.
However, when a soldier is on ADME orders, the Army does not follow
these or any other written procedures to document the transfer of
soldiers from one location to another--thereby losing even the limited
visibility that might otherwise be achievable. Further, although the
Army has a medical tracking system, the Medical Operational Data System
(MODS), that could be used to track the whereabouts and status of
injured and ill reserve component soldiers, we found that, for the most
part, the installations we visited did not use or update that system.
Instead, each of the installations we visited had developed its own
stovepiped tracking system and databases.
Although MODS, if used and updated appropriately, could provide some
visibility over injured and ill active and reserve component soldiers-
-including soldiers who are on ADME orders--8 of the 10 installations
we visited did not routinely use MODS. MODS is an Army Medical
Department (AMEDD) system that consolidates data from over 15 different
major Army and DOD databases.The information contained in MODS is
accessible at all Army Military Treatment Facilities (MTF) and is
intended to help Army medical personnel administer patient care. For
example, as soldiers are approved for ADME orders, the Army Manpower
Office enters data indicating where the soldier is to receive
treatment, to which unit he or she will be attached, and when the
soldier's ADME orders will expire. However, as discussed previously,
the Army has not established written standard operating procedures on
the transfer and tracking of soldiers on ADME orders. Therefore, the
installations we visited were not routinely looking to MODS to
determine which soldiers were attached to them through ADME orders.
When officials at one installation did access MODS, the data in MODS
indicated that the installation had at least 105 soldiers on ADME
orders. However, installation officials were only aware of 55 soldiers
who were on ADME orders. According to installation officials, the
missing soldiers never reported for duty and the installation had no
idea that they were responsible for these soldiers.
The Army Lacks Adequate Training and Education Programs:
The Army has not adequately trained or educated Army staff or reserve
component soldiers about ADME. The Army personnel responsible for
preparing and processing ADME applications at the 10 installations we
visited received no formal training on the ADME process. Instead, these
officials were expected to understand their responsibilities through on-
the-job training. However, the high turnover caused by the rotational
nature of military personnel, and especially reserve component
personnel who make up much of the garrison support units that are
responsible for processing ADME applications, limits the effectiveness
of on-the-job training. Once these soldiers have learned the
intricacies of the ADME process, their mobilization is over and their
replacements must go through the same on-the-job learning process. For
example, 9 of the 10 medical hold units at the locations we visited
were staffed with reserve component soldiers.
In the absence of education programs based on sound policy and clear
guidance, soldiers have established their own informal methods--using
Internet chat rooms and word-of-mouth--to educate one another on the
ADME process. Unfortunately, the information they receive from one
another is often inaccurate and instead of being helpful, further
complicates the process. For example, one soldier was told by his unit
commander that he did not need to report to his new medical hold unit
after receiving his ADME order. While this may have been welcome news
at the time, the soldier could have been considered absent without
leave. Instead, the soldier decided to follow his ADME order and
reported to his assigned case manager at the installation.
Lack of Clear Processes Contributed to Pay Gaps and Loss of Benefits:
The Army lacks customer-friendly processes for injured and ill soldiers
who are trying to extend their active duty orders so that they can
continue to receive medical care. Specifically, the Army lacks clear
criteria for approving ADME orders, which may require applicants to
resubmit paperwork multiple times before their application is approved.
This, combined with inadequate infrastructure for efficiently
addressing the soldiers' needs, has resulted in significant processing
delays. Finally, while most of the installations we reviewed took
extraordinary steps to keep soldiers in pay status, these steps often
involved overriding required internal controls in one or more systems.
In some cases, the stopgap measures ultimately caused additional
financial hardships for soldiers or put the Army at risk of
significantly overpaying soldiers in the long run.
The Army Lacks Criteria for Approving ADME Orders:
Although the Army Manpower Office issued procedural guidance in July of
2000 for ADME and the Army Office of the Surgeon General issued a field
operating guide in early 2003, neither provides adequate criteria for
what constitutes a complete ADME application package. The procedural
guidance lists the documents that must be submitted before an ADME
application package is approved; however, the criteria for what
information is to be included in each document are not specified. In
the absence of clear criteria, officials at both Army Manpower and the
installations we visited blamed each other for the breakdowns and
delays in the process.
For example, according to installation officials, the Army Manpower
Office will not accept ADME requests that contain documentation older
than 30 days. However, because it often took Army Manpower more than 30
days to process ADME applications, the documentation for some
applications expired before approving officials had the opportunity to
review it. Consequently, applications were rejected and soldiers had to
start the process all over again. Although officials at the Army
Manpower Office denied these assertions, the office did not have
policies or procedures in place to ensure that installations were
notified regarding the status of soldiers' applications or clear
criteria on the sufficiency of medical documentation. For example, one
soldier we interviewed at Fort Lewis had to resubmit his ADME
applications three times over a 3-month period--each time not knowing
whether the package was received and contained the appropriate
information. According to the soldier, weeks would go by before someone
from Fort Lewis was able to reach the Army Manpower Office to determine
the status of his application. He was told each time that he needed
more current or more detailed medical information. Consequently, it
took over 3 months to process his orders, during which time he fell off
his active duty orders and missed three pay periods totaling nearly
$4,000.
The Army Has Not Consistently Provided the Infrastructure Needed to
Support Injured and Ill Soldiers:
The Army has not consistently provided the infrastructure needed--
including convenient support services--to accommodate the needs of
soldiers trying to navigate their way through the ADME process. This,
combined with the lack of clear guidance discussed previously and the
high turnover of the personnel who are responsible for helping injured
and ill solders through the ADME process, has resulted in injured and
ill soldiers carrying a disproportionate share of the burden for
ensuring that they do not fall off their active duty orders. This has
left many soldiers disgruntled and feeling like they have had to fend
for themselves. For example, one injured soldier we interviewed whose
original mobilization orders expired in January 2003 recalls making
over 40 trips to various sites at Fort Bragg during the month of
January to complete his ADME application.
Over time, the Army has begun to make some progress in addressing its
infrastructure issues. At the time of our visits, we found that some
installations had added new living space or upgraded existing space to
house returning soldiers. For example, Walter Reed Army Hospital has
contracted for additional quarters off base for ambulatory soldiers to
alleviate the overcrowding pressure, and Fort Lewis had upgraded its
barracks to include, among other things, wheelchair accessible
quarters. Also, installations have been adding additional case managers
to handle their workload. Case managers are responsible for both active
and reserve component soldiers, including injured and ill active duty
soldiers, reserve component soldiers still on mobilization orders,
reserve component soldiers on ADME orders, and reserve component
soldiers who have inappropriately fallen off active duty orders. As of
June 2004, according to the Army, it had 105 case managers, and
maintained a soldier-to-case-manager-ratio of about 50-to-1 at 8 of the
10 locations we visited while conducting fieldwork. Finally, to the
extent possible, several of the sites we visited co-located
administrative functions that soldiers would need--including command
and control functions, case management, ADME application packet
preparation, and medical treatment. They also made sure that Army
administrative staff, familiar with the paperwork requirements, filled
out all the required paperwork for the soldier. Centralizing document
preparation reduces the risk of miscommunication between the soldier
and unit officials, case managers, and medical staff. It also seemed to
reduce the frustration that soldiers would feel when trying to prepare
unfamiliar documents in an unfamiliar environment.
Ad Hoc Procedures to Keep Soldiers in Pay Status Circumvented Key
Internal Controls and Created Additional Problems for Soldiers:
The financial hardships discussed previously that were experienced by
some soldiers would have been more widespread had individuals within
the Army not taken it upon themselves to develop ad hoc procedures to
keep these soldiers in pay status. In fact, 7 of the 10 Army
installations we visited had created their own ad hoc procedures or
workarounds to (1) keep soldiers in pay status and (2) provide soldiers
with access to medical care when soldiers fell off active duty orders.
In many cases, the installations we visited made adjustments to a
soldier's pay records without valid orders. While effectively keeping a
soldier in pay status, this work-around circumvented key internal
controls--putting the Army at risk of making improper and potentially
fraudulent payments. In addition, because these soldiers are not on
official active duty orders they are not eligible to receive other
benefits to which they are entitled, including health coverage for
their families. One installation we visited issued official orders
locally to keep soldiers in pay status. However, in doing so, they
created a series of accounting problems that resulted in additional pay
problems for soldiers when the Army attempted to straighten out its
accounting. Further details on these ad hoc procedures are included in
our related report.
Nonintegrated Systems Contribute to Processing Delays:
Manual processes and nonintegrated order-writing, pay, personnel, and
medical eligibility systems also contribute to processing delays which
affect the Army's ability to update these systems and ensure that
soldiers on ADME orders are paid in an accurate and timely manner.
Overall, we found that the current stovepiped, nonintegrated systems
were labor-intensive and require extensive error-prone manual data
entry and reentry. Therefore, once Army Manpower approves a soldier's
ADME application and the ADME order is issued, the ADME order does not
automatically update the systems that control a soldier's access to pay
and medical benefits. In addition, as discussed previously, the Army's
ADME guidance does not address the distribution of ADME orders or
clearly define who is responsible for ensuring that the appropriate
pay, personnel, and medical eligibility systems are updated, so
soldiers and their families receive the pay and medical benefits to
which they are entitled. As a result, ADME orders were sent to multiple
individuals at multiple locations before finally reaching individuals
who have the access and authority to update the pay and benefits
systems, which further delays processing.
As shown in figure 2, once Army Manpower officials approve a soldier's
ADME application, they e-mail a memorandum to HRC-St. Louis authorizing
the ADME order. The Army Personnel Center Orders and Resource System
(AORS), which is used to write the order, does not directly interface
nor automatically update the personnel, pay, or medical eligibility
systems. Instead, once HRC-St. Louis cuts the ADME order it e-mails a
copy of the order to nine different individuals--four at the Army
Manpower Office, four at the National Guard Bureau (NGB) headquarters,
and one at HRC in Alexandria Virginia--none of which are responsible
for updating the pay, personnel, or medical eligibility systems.
Figure 2: Transaction Flow Between the Army's Order-Writing, Pay,
Personnel, and Medical Eligibility Systems:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
As shown in figure 2, Army Manpower, upon receipt of ADME orders, e-
mails copies to the soldier, the medical hold unit to which the soldier
is attached, and the RMC. Again, none of these organizations has access
to the pay, personnel, or medical eligibility systems. Finally, NGB
officials e-mail copies of National Guard ADME orders to one of 54
state-level Army National Guard personnel offices and HRC-Alexandria e-
mails copies of Reserve ADME orders to the Army Reserve's regional
personnel offices. HRC-Alexandria also sends all Reserve orders to the
medical hold unit at Walter Reed. When asked, the representative at HRC-
Alexandria who forwards the orders did not know why orders were sent to
Walter Reed when many of the soldiers on ADME orders were not attached
or going to be attached to Walter Reed. The medical hold unit at Walter
Reed that received the orders did not know why they were receiving them
and told us that they filed them.
At this point in the process, of the seven organizations that receive
copies of ADME orders, only two--the ANG personnel office and the Army
Reserve personnel office--use the information to initiate a pay or
benefit-related transaction. Specifically, the Guard and Reserve
personnel offices initiate a transaction that should ultimately update
the Army's medical eligibility system, the Defense Enrollment
Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS). To do this, the Army National
Guard personnel office manually inputs a new active duty order end date
into the Army National Guard personnel system, the Standard
Installation Division Personnel Reporting System (SIDPERS). In turn,
the data from SIDPERS are batch processed into the Total Army Personnel
Database-Guard (TAPDB-G), and then batch processed to the Reserve
Components Common Personnel Data System (RCCPDS). The data from RCCPDS
are then batch processed into DEERS--updating the soldier's active duty
status and active duty order end date. Once the new date is posted to
DEERS, soldiers and family members can get a new ID card at any DOD ID
Card issuance facility.[Footnote 8] The Army Reserve finance office
initiates a similar transaction by entering a new active duty order end
date into the Regional Level Application System (RLAS), which updates
Total Army Personnel Database-Reserve (TAPDB-R), RCCPDS, and DEERS
through the same batch process used by the Guard.
As discussed previously, the Army does not have an integrated pay and
personnel system. Therefore, information entered into the personnel
system (TAPDB) is not automatically updated in the Army's pay system,
the Defense Joint Military Pay System-Reserve Component (DJMS-RC).
Instead, as shown in figure 2, after receiving a copy of the ADME
orders from Army Manpower, the medical hold unit and/or the soldier
provide a hard copy of the orders to their local finance office. Using
the Active Army pay input system, the Defense Military Pay Office
system (DMO), installation finance office personnel update DJMS-RC. Not
only is this process vulnerable to input errors, but it is time
consuming and further delays the pay and benefits to which the soldier
is entitled.
The Army's New Medical Retention Program Will Not Solve All the
Problems Associated with ADME:
The Army's new MRP program, which went into effect May 1, 2004, and
takes the place of ADME for soldiers returning from operations in
support of the Global War on Terrorism, has resolved many of the front-
end processing delays experienced by soldiers applying for ADME by
simplifying the application process. In addition, unlike ADME, the
personnel costs associated with soldiers on MRP orders are
appropriately linked to the contingency operation for which they
served, and, therefore, will more appropriately capture the costs
related to the Global War on Terrorism. While the front-end approval
process appears to be operating more efficiently than the ADME approval
process, due to the fact that the first wave of 179-day MRP orders did
not expire until October 27, 2004, after we completed our work, we were
unable to assess how effectively the Army identified soldiers who
required an additional 179 days of MRP and whether those soldiers
experienced pay problems or difficulty obtaining new MRP orders. In
addition, the Army has no way of knowing whether all soldiers who
should be on MRP orders are actually applying and getting into the
system. Further, MRP has not resolved the underlying management control
problems that plagued ADME, and, in some respects, has worsened
problems associated with the Army's lack of visibility over injured
soldiers. Finally, because the MRP program is designed such that
soldiers may be treated and released from active duty before their MRP
orders expire, weaknesses in the Army's processes for updating its pay
system to reflect an early release date have resulted in overpayments
to soldiers.
According to Army officials at each of the 10 installations we visited,
unlike ADME, they have not experienced problems or delays in obtaining
MRP orders for soldiers in their units. In fact some installation
officials have said that the process now takes 1 or 2 days instead of 1
or 2 months. Because there is no mechanism in place to track
application processing times, we have no way of substantiating these
assertions. We are not aware of any soldier complaints regarding the
process, which were commonplace with ADME.
The MRP application and approval process, which rests with HRC-
Alexandria instead of the Army Manpower Office, is a simplified version
of the ADME process. As with ADME orders, the soldier must request that
this process be initiated and voluntarily request an extension of
active duty orders. Both the MRP and ADME request packets include the
soldier's request form, a physician's statement, and a copy of the
soldier's original mobilization orders. However, with MRP, the
physician's statement need only state that the soldier needs to be
treated for a service-connected injury or illness and does not require
detailed information about the diagnosis, prognosis, and medical
treatment plan as it does with ADME. As discussed previously,
assembling this documentation was one of the primary reasons ADME
orders were not processed in a timely manner. In addition, because all
MRP orders are issued for 179 days, MRP has alleviated some of the
workload on officials who were processing AMDE orders and who were
helping soldiers prepare application packets by eliminating the need
for a soldier to reapply every 30, 60, or 90 days as was the case with
ADME.
While MRP has expedited the application process, MRP guidance, like
that of ADME, does not address how soldiers who require MRP will be
identified in a timely manner, how soldiers requiring an additional 179
days of MRP will be identified in a timely manner, or how soldiers and
Army staff will be trained and educated about the new process. Further,
because the Army does not maintain reliable data on the current status
and disposition of injured soldiers, we could not test or determine
whether all soldiers who should be on MRP orders are actually applying
and getting into the system. In addition, because MRP authorizes 179
days of pay and benefits regardless of the severity of the injury, the
Army faces a new challenge--to ensure that soldiers are promptly
released from active duty or placed in a medical evaluation board
process upon completion of medical care or treatment in order to avoid
needlessly retaining and paying these soldiers for the full 179 days.
However, MRP guidance does not address how the Army will provide
reasonable assurance that upon completion of medical care or treatment
soldiers are promptly released from active duty or placed in a medical
evaluation board process.
MRP has also contributed to the Army's difficulty maintaining
visibility over injured reserve component soldiers. Although the Army's
MRP implementation guidance requires that installations provide a
weekly report to HRC-Alexandria that includes the name, rank, and
component of each soldier currently on MRP orders, according to HRC
officials, they are not consistently receiving these reports.
Consequently, the Army cannot say with certainty how many soldiers are
currently on MRP orders, how many have been returned to active duty, or
how many soldiers have been released from active duty before their 179-
day MRP orders expired. As discussed previously, if the Army used and
appropriately updated the agency's medical tracking system (MODS), the
system could provide some visibility over injured and ill active and
reserve component soldiers--including soldiers on ADME or MRP orders.
However, the Army MRP implementation guidance is silent on the use of
MODS and does not define responsibilities for updating the system.
According to officials at HRC-Alexandria, they do not update MODS or
any other database when they issue MRP orders. They also acknowledged
that the 1,800 soldiers reflected as being on MRP orders in MODS, as of
September 2004, was probably understated given that, between May 2004
and September 2004, HRC-Alexandria processed approximately 3,300 MRP
orders. Further, as was the case with ADME, 8 of the 10 installations
we visited did not routinely use or update MODS but instead maintained
their own local tracking systems to monitor soldiers on MRP orders.
Not surprisingly, the Army does not know how many soldiers have been
released from active duty before their 179-day MRP orders had expired.
This is important because our previous work has shown that weaknesses
in the Army's process for releasing soldiers from active duty and
stopping the related pay before their orders have expired--in this case
before their 179 days is up--often resulted in overpayments to
soldiers. According to HRC-Alexandria officials, as of October 2004, a
total of 51 soldiers had been released from active duty before their
179-day MRP orders expired. At the same time, Fort Knox, one of the few
installations that tracked these data, reported it had released 81
soldiers from active duty who were previously on MRP orders--none of
whom were included in the list of 51 soldiers provided by HRC-
Alexandria. Concerned that some of these soldiers may have
inappropriately continued to receive pay after they were released from
active duty, we verified each soldier's pay status in DJMS-RC and found
that 15 soldiers were improperly paid past their release date--totaling
approximately $62,000.
Actions to Improve the Accuracy, Timeliness, and Availability of
Entitled Pay and Benefits:
A complete and lasting solution to the pay problems and overall poor
treatment of injured soldiers that we identified will require that the
Army address the underlying problems associated with its all-around
control environment for managing and treating reserve component
soldiers with service-connected injuries or illnesses and deficiencies
related to its automated systems. Accordingly, in our related report
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-125] we made 20
recommendations to the Secretary of the Army for immediate action to
address weaknesses we identified including (1) establishing
comprehensive policies and procedures, (2) providing adequate
infrastructure and resources, and (3) making process improvements to
compensate for inadequate, stovepiped systems. We also made 2
recommendations, as part of longer term system improvement initiatives,
to integrate the Army's order-writing, pay, personnel, and medical
eligibility systems. In its written response to our recommendations,
DOD briefly described its completed, ongoing, and planned actions for
each of our 22 recommendations.
Concluding Comments:
The recent mobilization and deployment of Army National Guard and
Reserve soldiers in connection with the Global War on Terrorism is the
largest activation of reserve component troops since World War II. As
such, in recent years, the Army's ability to take care of these
soldiers when they are injured or ill has not been tested to the degree
that it is being tested now. Unfortunately, the Army was not prepared
for this challenge and the brave soldiers fighting to defend our nation
have paid the price. The personal toll this has had on these soldiers
and their families cannot be readily measured. But clearly, the
hardships they have endured are unacceptable given the substantial
sacrifices they have made and the injuries they have sustained. While
the Army's new streamlined medical retention application process has
improved the front-end approval process, it also has many of the same
limitations as ADME. To its credit, in response to the recommendations
included in our companion report, DOD has outlined some actions already
taken, others that are underway, and further planned actions to address
the weaknesses we identified.
Contacts and Acknowledgments:
For further information about this testimony please contact Gregory D.
Kutz at (202) 512-9095 or [Hyperlink, kutzd@gao.gov]. Individuals
making key contributions to this testimony were Gary Bianchi, Francine
DelVecchio, Carmen Harris, Diane Handley, Jamie Haynes, Kristen
Plungas, John Ryan, Maria Storts, and Truc Vo.
(192156):
FOOTNOTES
[1] GAO, Military Pay: Gaps in Pay and Benefits Create Financial
Hardships for Injured Army National Guard and Reserve Soldiers, GAO-05-
125 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 17, 2005).
[2] For the purpose of this testimony, the term mobilized includes all
Army reserve component soldiers called to perform active service.
[3] ADME will still exist for soldiers who are not mobilized as part of
the Global War on Terrorism--such as soldiers injured in Bosnia or
Kosovo or during annual training exercises.
[4] The Army maintained data on soldiers who were currently on ADME
orders but did not track soldiers who were applying for ADME or who had
been dropped from their active duty orders.
[5] Army Manpower is an organization within the Army Deputy Chief of
Staff, G-1, formerly the Army Deputy Chief of Staff for Personnel. G-1
is the Army's human resource provider, handling human resource
programs, policies, and systems. The Army Human Resources Command is a
field operating activity that reports directly to G-1.
[6] We did not audit these costs for the purpose of determining if the
Army properly recorded them against available funding sources. Instead,
we applied DOD's criteria for contingency operations cost accounting in
DOD's Financial Management Regulation, Vol. 12, Chapter 23 (February
2001).
[7] GAO, Military Personnel: DOD Actions Needed to Improve the
Efficiency of Mobilizations for Reserve Forces, GAO-03-921 (Washington,
D.C.: Aug. 21, 2003).
[8] There are over 800 DOD card issuance facilities located in the
United States, many of which are located on Army installations and with
Army National Guard and Reserve units.