Quarterdeck |
About |
COs |
Ships Company |
Deceased |
Newsletter |
Association |
Reunion |
Vet Services |
Life Aboard |
Photos |
Links
|
From Chuck Weber, your Veteran Service Officer... |
Vet ID Program still problem ridden |
Some
veterans have been told their military service cannot be verified while
attempting to apply for the
Department of
Veterans Affairs' new ID card. But sources disagree on
what's causing the problem.
The
online application uses the ID.me authorization system, which is meant
to allow veterans to easily verify their identity and service before
uploading a photo and other details for the card.
But some
veterans complain that they receive an error message saying their
military service cannot be authenticated when they attempt to apply for
the card.
Officials with ID.me said the problem can be blamed on a glitch between
their system and the
Defense Enrollment
Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS), causing users
who created ID.me accounts in the past to receive an error message that
their records were not found, according to information provided to
veterans who contacted the ID.me help desk.
"This
issue is unfortunately not something that ID.me can address from our end
and will require that the VA addresses this communication problem
between the DoD's DEERS database and the VA application," the help desk
email response said.
The
ID.me system is used by hundreds of online businesses and many federal
websites to verify identity. Although exact data on how many users are
enrolled in ID.me was not immediately available, VA officials said last
year that the program was selected for the new ID card system in part
because it is already broadly used.
VA
officials, however, disagreed with ID.me's explanation of the cause of
the problem. They said the records failure is instead an issue created
by bad data.
"The
issue is not between ID.me and DEERS, but rather that VA and DoD systems
(including DEERS) have inaccurate data in some cases," Curt Cashour, a
VA spokesman, said in an email. "For example, if a Veteran's Social
Security number is inaccurate in DEERS or in a VA backend system, then
VA may not be able to automatically verify the Veteran's eligibility for
the ID card."
Cashour
said the VA's fix for this problem is to ask veterans to manually upload
their DD-214 forms, which show proof of service. Those who continue to
face problems can email VIC@va.gov for
help, he said.
But
veterans attempting to apply for the ID said the DD-214 upload system
has also given them problems.
"I tried
to apply for a Veteran ID Card in February. I got to a point where the
message said, 'We need more information to process your request,' "
another veteran wrote in an email to Military.com last month. "The VA
help line ... told me, after a 4-hour wait on hold, that there was a
glitch and that they would fix it soon. It is a month later and the
message is still there on my file."
About
74,500 veterans have successfully applied for the ID card, Cashour said.
Although cards can be printed at home from the VA website, hard
copies are scheduled to be mailed to veterans starting this month.
|
Source: Military Times, Amy Bushatz, April 2, 2018 |
©1997 - 2018 by USS RICH Association, Inc. - All Rights Reserved