Veterans Affairs
Implementation of Temporary Residence Adaptation Grants
Gao ID: GAO-09-637R June 15, 2009
As of May 2009, approximately 34,000 service members had been wounded in action as part of Operation Enduring Freedom or Operation Iraqi Freedom. In response to concerns about the assistance that service members injured in combat receive when they transition back into civilian life, Congress has enacted several laws to improve the benefits available to veterans and service members, including the Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits Improvement Act of 2006. This act authorized the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to expand its previously existing adaptive housing assistance grants to include eligible individuals temporarily living in a home owned by a family member, known as Temporary Residence Adaptation (TRA) grants. Section 101 of the Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits Improvement Act of 2006 mandated us to submit to Congress an interim report by June 15, 2009, and a final report by June 15, 2011, on VA's implementation of TRA. This interim report describes the number and characteristics of TRA grants and grant recipients and provides information on VA's policies and processes for providing the grants.
Utilization of TRA grants has been limited--VA had processed nine TRA grants from the date of the program's creation on June 15, 2006, through February 28, 2009. The dollar amount of the nine TRA grants VA has processed ranged from $3,575 to $14,000, and five of the nine grants were for the maximum amount of $14,000. All nine grants were for SAH-TRA, meaning that all nine grantees suffered from one of the more serious service-connected disabilities described earlier in this report. The nine grantees ranged in age from 26 to 93. VA staff and representatives of veterans service organizations with whom we spoke suggested several factors that may explain why so few veterans and service members have used the TRA grant program. First, some said that the number of veterans and service members who are eligible for TRA--as distinct from adaptive housing assistance in general--could be very small. According to VA, each year approximately 1,800 individuals become newly eligible for adaptive housing assistance, including SAH, SHA, and TRA. However, in order to be eligible specifically for TRA, individuals must also live or plan to live temporarily with a family member who owns a home. Thus, the population of individuals whose circumstances qualify them for the TRA benefit may be small. Second, TRA may not be a suitable option for some who are eligible for it. Some VA and veterans service organization staff with whom we spoke emphasized the difficulty of the transition period that severely wounded individuals experience when they return from combat. Third, TRA counts against the maximum amount of adaptive housing assistance available to eligible individuals--$60,000 in the case of SAH and $12,000 in the case of SHA. VA administers TRA as part of its overall adaptive housing assistance program. The agency bases veterans' and service members' initial eligibility for adaptive housing assistance (including SAH, SHA, and TRA) on a disability rating. The Compensation and Pension Service within VA is responsible for determining these disability ratings and for notifying VA's Veterans Benefits Administration Loan Guaranty Service of those who qualify for assistance. In general, VA contacts an individual who is rated eligible and who has submitted an application for adaptive housing assistance within 30 days of receipt of the application or the rating information to schedule an initial interview. During these face-to-face interviews, SAH agents--field-based VA staff--explain the adaptive housing assistance benefit and assess the individual's circumstances and adaptive housing assistance needs. If the individual wants to pursue the adaptive housing benefit at the time of the initial interview, the SAH agent guides him or her through the application, construction, and other related processes. If the individual chooses to delay use of the benefit, SAH agents told us that they regularly follow up by letter and phone to remind the individual about availability of the benefit. After a veteran or service member submits an application for adaptive housing assistance and decides to take advantage of the benefit, he or she must make a number of decisions related to the project--including arranging for mortgage and construction financing, hiring architects, working with VA to review and approve adaptation plans, and soliciting bids from and selecting contractors--before VA approves the grant. The length of time from submission of an application to VA approval varies. Among the TRA grants we reviewed, it ranged from 77 days to 293 days. Grantees have the freedom to make design decisions related to their projects, provided that the projects meet VA's suitability and feasibility requirements.
GAO-09-637R, Veterans Affairs: Implementation of Temporary Residence Adaptation Grants
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GAO-09-637R:
United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548:
June 15, 2009:
The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka:
Chairman:
The Honorable Richard Burr:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Veterans' Affairs:
United States Senate:
The Honorable Stephanie Herseth Sandlin:
Chairwoman:
The Honorable John Boozman:
Ranking Member:
Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity:
Committee on Veterans' Affairs:
House of Representatives:
Subject: Veterans Affairs: Implementation of Temporary Residence
Adaptation Grants:
As of May 2009, approximately 34,000 service members had been wounded
in action as part of Operation Enduring Freedom or Operation Iraqi
Freedom. In response to concerns about the assistance that service
members injured in combat receive when they transition back into
civilian life, Congress has enacted several laws to improve the
benefits available to veterans and service members, including the
Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits Improvement Act of 2006.
[Footnote 1] This act authorized the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) to expand its previously existing adaptive housing assistance
grants to include eligible individuals temporarily living in a home
owned by a family member, known as Temporary Residence Adaptation (TRA)
grants.
Section 101 of the Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits
Improvement Act of 2006 mandated us to submit to Congress an interim
report by June 15, 2009, and a final report by June 15, 2011, on VA's
implementation of TRA. This interim report describes the number and
characteristics of TRA grants and grant recipients and provides
information on VA's policies and processes for providing the grants.
To address the mandate, we collected and analyzed VA data on TRA
recipients; examined VA policies, procedures, and related documents;
and interviewed VA and Department of Defense staff and representatives
of selected veterans service organizations. For a detailed description
of our scope and methodology, see enclosure I. We conducted our work
between February 2009 and June 2009 in accordance with generally
accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence
to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on
our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit
objectives.
Background:
Since 1948, VA has provided adaptive housing assistance grants to
eligible individuals who have certain service-connected disabilities to
construct an adapted home or modify an existing home to accommodate
their disabilities.[Footnote 2] Today, VA provides adaptive housing
assistance primarily through two programs--Specially Adapted Housing
(SAH) and Special Housing Adaptation (SHA).[Footnote 3]
The SAH grant program provides financial assistance to veterans and
service members who are entitled to compensation for permanent and
total service-connected disability due to the loss or loss of use of
multiple limbs, blindness and limb loss, or a severe burn
injury.[Footnote 4] Eligible individuals may receive up to three SAH
grants totaling no more than 50 percent of the cost of a specially
adapted house, up to the aggregate maximum amount of $60,000, adjusted
annually based on a cost-of-construction index.[Footnote 5] Grants may
be used to construct a house or remodel an existing house, or they may
be applied against the unpaid principal mortgage balance of a specially
adapted house.[Footnote 6] The SHA grant program--which is similar to
SAH but is for individuals with slightly less serious disabilities--may
be used for slightly different purposes and cannot exceed $12,000.
[Footnote 7]
In 2006, Congress created the TRA benefit, allowing veterans to apply
for a grant to adapt the home of a family member with whom they are
temporarily residing.[Footnote 8] The benefit was further extended to
active-duty service members in 2008 with the passage of the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008.[Footnote 9] The TRA grant program
enables veterans and service members eligible under the SAH and SHA
programs to use up to $14,000 and $2,000, respectively, to modify a
family member's home. Each TRA grant counts as one of the three grants
allowed under either SAH or SHA. TRA grants also count toward the
maximum allowable amount, $60,000 under SAH and $12,000 under SHA. The
TRA grant program will expire on December 31, 2011, unless Congress
extends it before then.
VA Has Processed Nine TRA Grants:
Utilization of TRA grants has been limited--VA had processed nine TRA
grants from the date of the program's creation on June 15, 2006,
through February 28, 2009. (In contrast, VA processed 2,431 SAH and SHA
grants during the same period.) As shown in table 1, the dollar amount
of the nine TRA grants VA has processed ranged from $3,575 to $14,000,
and five of the nine grants were for the maximum amount of $14,000. All
nine grants were for SAH-TRA, meaning that all nine grantees suffered
from one of the more serious service-connected disabilities described
earlier in this report. The nine grantees ranged in age from 26 to 93.
We are unable to report how many of the TRA grantees were veterans and
how many were still on active duty, since the VA division that
administers adaptive housing assistance grants does not collect these
data.
Table 1: Characteristics of TRA grants and grantees, June 15, 2006,
through February 28, 2009:
Grant approval date: March 16, 2007;
Amount of grant: $14,000;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: New Jersey;
Age: 26;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: April 11, 2007;
Amount of grant: $14,000;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Texas;
Age: 28;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: May 22, 2007;
Amount of grant: $14,000;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Pennsylvania;
Age: 26;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: December 13, 2007[A];
Amount of grant: $11,690;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Wisconsin;
Age: 63;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: August 4, 2008;
Amount of grant: $3,575;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Minnesota;
Age: 48;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: September 16, 2008;
Amount of grant: $12,471;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Pennsylvania;
Age: 93;
Male.
Grant approval date: December 1, 2008;
Amount of grant: $14,000;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Georgia;
Age: 28;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: February 24, 2009;
Amount of grant: $14,000;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: Hawaii;
Age: 92;
Male/female: Male.
Grant approval date: Not available[B];
Amount of grant: $Not available;
Grant type: SAH;
State of residence: California;
Age: 29;
Male/female: Female.
Source: VA:
[A] This grantee received a prior SAH grant.
[B] This individual submitted an application for a TRA grant on
December 5, 2007. As of February 28, 2009, VA had processed but not yet
approved the grant application.
[End of table]
VA staff and representatives of veterans service organizations with
whom we spoke suggested several factors that may explain why so few
veterans and service members have used the TRA grant program. First,
some said that the number of veterans and service members who are
eligible for TRA--as distinct from adaptive housing assistance in
general--could be very small. According to VA, each year approximately
1,800 individuals become newly eligible for adaptive housing
assistance, including SAH, SHA, and TRA. However, in order to be
eligible specifically for TRA, individuals must also live or plan to
live temporarily with a family member who owns a home. For example, an
injured service member returning from Iraq could not use a TRA grant to
adapt a home owned by a friend or to adapt a parent's rental apartment.
Thus, the population of individuals whose circumstances qualify them
for the TRA benefit may be small.[Footnote 10]
Second, TRA may not be a suitable option for some who are eligible for
it. Some VA and veterans service organization staff with whom we spoke
emphasized the difficulty of the transition period that severely
wounded individuals experience when they return from combat. Many of
these individuals may not have definite plans for what they will do
when they leave the hospital, including where they will live, with
whom, and for how long. Such uncertainty may lead some individuals who
might be eligible for TRA to delay or opt out of using it.
Third, TRA counts against the maximum amount of adaptive housing
assistance available to eligible individuals--$60,000 in the case of
SAH and $12,000 in the case of SHA. For example, an individual who
receives a $14,000 TRA grant would have $46,000 available under SAH,
rather than $60,000, to adapt or build a permanent residence in the
future. Given the high cost of adapting a house, some VA officials and
veterans service organizations with whom we spoke said that some may
forego using TRA in order to preserve their full SAH or SHA benefit for
future use. They also said that they were aware of some veterans and
service members who, in lieu of using TRA to adapt a temporary
residence, received assistance from nonprofit organizations or from
other VA programs.[Footnote 11] Several representatives of veterans
service organizations said they believed that allowing TRA to become a
program of its own--so that TRA no longer counted against the maximum
funds available under SAH and SHA--or increasing the maximum available
benefit under SAH and SHA would increase use of TRA.[Footnote 12]
Finally, representatives from a few veterans service organizations told
us that some eligible individuals may not be aware of the availability
of TRA--in particular, active-duty service members, who were not
eligible for TRA until July 2008. They said that additional outreach to
service members and veterans about the TRA benefit could potentially
increase its use.
VA's Processes for Administering TRA Reflect Those of the Overall
Adaptive Housing Assistance Program:
VA administers TRA as part of its overall adaptive housing assistance
program.[Footnote 13] The agency bases veterans' and service members'
initial eligibility for adaptive housing assistance (including SAH,
SHA, and TRA) on a disability rating.[Footnote 14] The Compensation and
Pension Service within VA is responsible for determining these
disability ratings and for notifying VA's Veterans Benefits
Administration Loan Guaranty Service of those who qualify for
assistance. In general, VA contacts an individual who is rated eligible
and who has submitted an application for adaptive housing assistance
within 30 days of receipt of the application or the rating information
to schedule an initial interview.[Footnote 15] During these face-to-
face interviews, SAH agents--field-based VA staff--explain the adaptive
housing assistance benefit and assess the individual's circumstances
and adaptive housing assistance needs.[Footnote 16] If the individual
wants to pursue the adaptive housing benefit at the time of the initial
interview, the SAH agent guides him or her through the application,
construction, and other related processes. If the individual chooses to
delay use of the benefit, SAH agents told us that they regularly follow
up by letter and phone to remind the individual about availability of
the benefit.[Footnote 17]
After a veteran or service member submits an application for adaptive
housing assistance and decides to take advantage of the benefit, he or
she must make a number of decisions related to the project--including
arranging for mortgage and construction financing, hiring architects,
working with VA to review and approve adaptation plans, and soliciting
bids from and selecting contractors--before VA approves the grant. The
length of time from submission of an application to VA approval varies.
Among the TRA grants we reviewed, it ranged from 77 days to 293
days.[Footnote 18] Grantees have the freedom to make design decisions
related to their projects, provided that the projects meet VA's
suitability and feasibility requirements.[Footnote 19] VA staff told us
that the length of time from application to approval is often driven by
the amount of time needed by the grantee for project design.
After VA approves a veteran's or service member's grant, construction
begins on the project. Among the seven TRA grants that completed
construction as of February 28, 2009, the construction phase (which
generally refers to the period between the grant approval date and VA's
final payment for services) ranged from 20 days to 217 days, with an
average of 89 days and a median of 67 days.[Footnote 20]
Agency Comments:
We provided a draft of this report to VA and DOD for their review and
comment. VA provided technical comments, which we incorporated as
appropriate.
We are sending copies of this report to the Secretaries of Veterans
Affairs and Defense and interested congressional committees. In
addition, the report will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site
at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov].
If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please
contact me at (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. Contact points for our
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to
this report are listed in enclosure II.
Signed by:
Mathew J. Scirč:
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment:
Enclosures (2):
[End of section]
Enclosure I:
Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:
This report describes (1) the number and characteristics of Temporary
Residence Adaptation (TRA) grants and grant recipients and (2) the
Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) policies and processes for
providing the grants.
To address the first objective, we analyzed data we requested from VA
on the number and characteristics of TRA grants and grantees between
June 15, 2006, (the implementation date of TRA) and February 28, 2009.
To respond to our data request, VA headquarters staff gathered
information on approved TRA grants from the VA Regional Loan Centers.
[Footnote 21] VA headquarters staff verified the information it
received from the Regional Loan Centers against the information for
these grants in The Appraisal System to ensure the grants were in fact
approved and processed. In addition, we conducted interviews with staff
at six Regional Loan Centers (including four that had approved at least
one TRA grant) to verify that the data VA headquarters staff provided
in response to our request were complete and accurate. We determined
these data to be reliable for our purposes. For purposes of comparison,
we also obtained data on the number of Specially Adapted Housing and
Special Housing Adaptations grantees between June 15, 2006, and
February 28, 2009, and we found these data to be reliable for our
purposes.
To address the second objective, we reviewed VA policies and procedures
for administering the adaptive housing assistance program, as well as
other VA reports and documents on the program, and interviewed staff
from VA Headquarters and six VA Regional Loan Centers to obtain
information on how VA administers the TRA program.[Footnote 22] We also
interviewed staff at the Department of Defense, including the Army
Warrior Care and Transition Office, to obtain information on the
department's role in identifying individuals who may be eligible for
adaptive housing assistance and communicating this information to VA.
Finally, to address both objectives, we interviewed representatives of
selected veterans service organizations--including American Legion,
Blinded Veterans Association, Disabled American Veterans, Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America, Paralyzed Veterans of America, Wounded
Warrior Project, and United Spinal Association--to obtain information
on their and their members' experiences with TRA. We selected these
veterans service organizations based on their representation of
veterans and service members with disabilities that specifically
qualify them for adaptive housing assistance.[Footnote 23] We also
considered recommendations from VA and other stakeholders when
determining which organizations to interview.
We conducted our work between February 2009 and June 2009 in accordance
with generally accepted government auditing standards. The standards
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient,
appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence
obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions
based on our audit objectives.
[End of section]
Enclosure II:
GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:
GAO Contact:
Mathew J. Scirč, (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov.
Staff Acknowledgments:
In addition to the contact named above, Jason Bromberg (Assistant
Director), Farah Angersola, Rudy Chatlos, John McGrail, Cory Roman, and
Jennifer Schwartz made key contributions to this report.
[End of section]
Footnotes:
[1] P.L. 109-233 (June 15, 2006).
[2] P.L. 80-702 (June 19, 1948).
[3] 38 U.S.C. sec. 2101(a); 38 U.S.C. sec. 2101(b).
[4] Specifically, the veteran's or service member's disability must be
service connected and rated as permanent and 100 percent disabling due
to at least one of the following: the loss, or loss of use, of both
legs in a way that precludes locomotion without the aid of braces,
crutches, canes, or a wheelchair; blindness in both eyes and loss of
use of one leg; the loss, or loss of use, of one leg together with
residuals of organic disease or injury or the loss or loss of use of
one arm affecting the functions of balance or propulsion in a way that
precludes locomotion without the aid of braces, crutches, canes, or a
wheelchair; the loss or loss of use of both arms so as to preclude the
use of the arms at or above the elbows; or a severe burn injury (38
U.S.C. sec. 2101(a)(2)). The Veterans' Benefits Improvement Act of 2004
(P.L. 108-454) added the loss or loss of use of both arms so as to
preclude the use of the arms at or above the elbows to the list of
disability criteria for SAH, and the Housing and Economic Recovery Act
of 2008 (P.L. 110-289) added severe burn to the list of disability
criteria for SAH and SHA. Regulations on these new criteria have been
drafted but have not yet been issued, according to VA officials.
[5] The Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits Improvement Act of
2006 (P.L. 109-233) expanded the SAH and SHA benefits by increasing the
number of grants available to eligible individuals from one to three.
The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (P.L 110-289) increased
the maximum allowable SAH and SHA grants to $60,000 and $12,000,
respectively, adjusted annually based on a cost-of-construction index.
[6] 38 U.S.C. 2102(a)(1)-(4).
[7] Specifically, to qualify for an SHA grant, the veteran or service
member's disability must be service connected and rated as permanent
and 100 percent disabling due to at least one of the following:
blindness in both eyes with 5/200 visual acuity or less; the anatomical
loss, or loss of use, of both hands; or a severe burn injury (38 U.S.C.
sec. 2101(b)(2)). In addition, SHA grants may be used to adapt a house
that an eligible individual or a family member plans to purchase or
which the eligible individual or a family member already owns, provided
the house is one where the eligible individual intends to reside. SHA
grants may also be used to purchase a previously adapted house (38
U.S.C. 2101(b)(1), (3)).
[8] Veterans' Housing Opportunity and Benefits Improvement Act of 2006
(P.L. 109-233), June 15, 2006. A family member is a person related to
the grantee by blood, marriage, or adoption (38 C.F.R. sec 36.4401(h)).
There is no definition for temporary.
[9] P.L. 110-289 (July 30, 2008).
[10] VA does not collect data on the number of individuals whose living
arrangements might qualify them for a TRA grant.
[11] For example, disabled veterans may use VA Home Improvements and
Structural Alterations (HISA) grants to pay for any home improvement
necessary for continuing their treatment, allowing access to their
home, or modifying a bathroom. Veterans with service-connected
disabilities are eligible for $4,100; veterans with nonservice-
connected disabilities are eligible for $1,200.
[12] H.R. 1169 proposes to increase the maximum allowable SAH benefit
from $60,000 to $180,000 and the maximum allowable SHA benefit from
$12,000 to $36,000. The bill was introduced on February 25, 2009, and
was under consideration in the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity,
Committee on Veterans Affairs, U.S. House of Representatives, as of May
11, 2009.
[13] See VA M26-12, Revised, Specially Adapted Housing Grant Processing
Procedures, Loan Guaranty Operations for Regional Offices (July 19,
2007); VA Circular 26-06-7, Implementation of Public Law 109-233,
Section 101 - Specially Adapted Housing (November 8, 2006); and VA
Circular 26-08-12, Changes to the Specially Adapted Housing Program
Under H.R. 3221 (July 30, 2008).
[14] Disability ratings range from 0 percent to 100 percent and
determine an individual's eligibility for VA cash disability
compensation and certain ancillary benefits (38 C.F.R. 4, Schedule for
Rating Disabilities). The assignment of a disability rating generally
does not automatically result in the provision of benefits--individuals
must submit applications for the benefits they seek. Active-duty
service members can request a "memo rating"--a temporary disability
rating--from VA in order to qualify for and take advantage of adaptive
housing assistance while still on active duty. All veterans and service
members who qualify for adaptive housing assistance are 100 percent
disabled.
[15] An individual does not have to have a disability rating to submit
an application for adaptive housing assistance. However, VA will not
consider applications for assistance or schedule an interview until an
individual receives a qualifying rating, but advises individuals
without disability ratings who submit applications to seek their
disability ratings from the Compensation and Pension Service. According
to VA officials, the agency contacts eligible Operation Enduring
Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans and service members within
24 to 48 hours.
[16] SAH agents are field-based employees of VA's Veterans Benefits
Administration Loan Guaranty Service and are located at VA Regional
Loan Centers and out-based Regional Offices. SAH agents administer and
manage the SAH, SHA, and TRA grant processes.
[17] VA field staff with whom we spoke said that SAH agents send annual
letters to eligible individuals reminding them of the availability of
the benefit. Unless otherwise instructed, SAH agents contact eligible
Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans and
service members on a more regular basis, generally every 30 days.
[18] Among the nine TRA grantees, five submitted applications for
assistance before TRA went into effect on June 15, 2006; one had an
unknown application date; and one had not been approved as of February
28, 2009. As a result, we were only able to calculate the amount of
time from application to grant approval for two grants.
[19] Statute requires that SAH projects be medically feasible for the
individual, bear a proper relation to the individual's present and
anticipated income and expenses, and are suitable for the individual's
dwelling needs (38 U.S.C. 2101(a)(3)). Statute requires that SHA
projects be reasonably necessary because of an individual's disability
(38 U.S.C. 2101(b)). In cases where the project does not meet these
requirements, VA officials said that they work with the individual
seeking assistance to resolve the issue (for example, by helping the
individual select another plot of land or working with the contractor
to revise the renovation plans).
[20] Construction on two of the nine TRA grants was not complete as of
February 28, 2009.
[21] VA collects data on adaptive housing assistance grantees in The
Appraisal System. Because the system was developed prior to the passage
and implementation of TRA, VA Regional Loan Center staff entered data
on TRA grantees in a notes field in the system. As a result, VA
headquarters staff had to request information on TRA grantees directly
from the Regional Loan Centers that made the grants. On March 22, 2009,
VA launched a new system called SAHSHA to collect data on all adaptive
housing assistance grantees, including TRA grantees. VA is in the
process of migrating data from The Appraisal System to SAHSHA. VA staff
in headquarters oversee the adaptive housing assistance program. VA
staff within the Regional Loan Centers administer the program.
[22] For example, see VA M26-12, Revised, Specially Adapted Housing
Grant Processing Procedures, Loan Guaranty Operations for Regional
Offices (July 19, 2007); VA Circular 26-06-7, Implementation of Public
Law 109-233, Section 101-Specially Adapted Housing (November 8, 2006);
and VA Circular 26-08-12, Changes to the Specially Adapted Housing
Program Under H.R. 3221 (July 30, 2008).
[23] Chartered veterans service organizations are federally chartered
or recognized or approved by VA for purposes of preparation,
presentation, and prosecution of claims under laws administered by the
VA--see [hyperlink, http://www1.va.gov/VSO/index.cfm].
[End of section]
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