VA Adjudication Procedures Manual, M21-1; Rescission of Manual M21-1 Provisions Related to Exposure to Herbicides Based on Receipt of the Vietnam Service Medal, 20363-20365 [E8-7912]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 73 / Tuesday, April 15, 2008 / Notices
compliance with regulations. An
absence of the reporting and
recordkeeping requirements would not
allow for prudent internal controls or
for examiners to determine the accurate
performance and condition of savings
associations. Specifically, OTS
examiners use the reports and
recordkeeping requirements to
determine whether the savings
associations are being operated safely,
soundly, and in compliance with
regulations.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
834.
Estimated Number of Responses: 834.
Estimated Burden Hours per
Response: Range between 15 minutes to
100 hours, an average of 19 hours.
Estimated Frequency of Response: On
occasion.
Estimated Total Burden: 3,648,563.
Clearance Officer: Ira L. Mills, (202)
906–6531, Office of Thrift Supervision,
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552.
Dated: April 9, 2008.
Deborah Dakin,
Senior Deputy Chief Counsel, Regulations and
Legislation Division.
[FR Doc. E8–8014 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6720–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
Mutual to Stock Conversion
Application
Office of Thrift Supervision
(OTS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The proposed information
collection request (ICR) described below
has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. OTS
is soliciting public comments on the
proposal.
DATES: Submit written comments on or
before May 15, 2008. A copy of this ICR,
with applicable supporting
documentation, can be obtained from
RegInfo.gov at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain.
ADDRESSES: Send comments, referring to
the collection by title of the proposal or
by OMB approval number, to OMB and
OTS at these addresses: Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attention: Desk Officer for OTS, U.S.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:31 Apr 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
Office of Management and Budget, 725–
17th Street, NW., Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, or by fax to
(202) 395–6974; and Information
Collection Comments, Chief Counsel’s
Office, Office of Thrift Supervision,
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552, by fax to (202) 906–6518, or by
e-mail to
infocollection.comments@ots.treas.gov.
OTS will post comments and the related
index on the OTS Internet Site at
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interested persons may inspect
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make an appointment, call (202) 906–
5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a
facsimile transmission to (202) 906–
7755.
For
further information or to obtain a copy
of the submission to OMB, please
contact Ira L. Mills at,
ira.mills@ots.treas.gov (202) 906–6531,
or facsimile number (202) 906–6518,
Regulations and Litigation Division,
Chief Counsel’s Office, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: OTS may
not conduct or sponsor an information
collection, and respondents are not
required to respond to an information
collection, unless the information
collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number. As part of the
approval process, we invite comments
on the following information collection.
Title of Proposal: Mutual to Stock
Conversion Application.
OMB Number: 1550–0014.
Form Number: OTS Forms 1680,
1681, 1682, and 1683.
Description: The OTS staff makes an
in-depth study of all information
furnished in the application in order to
determine the safety and soundness of
the proposed stock conversion. The
purpose of the information collection is
to provide OTS with the information
necessary to determine if the proposed
transaction may be approved. If the
information required were not collected,
OTS would not be able to properly
evaluate whether the proposed
transaction was acceptable. The
information collection allows OTS to
evaluate the merits of the proposed
conversion plan and application in light
of applicable statutory and regulatory
criteria.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Fmt 4703
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20363
Estimated Number of Respondents:
14.
Estimated Number of Responses: 14.
Estimated Burden Hours per
Response: 510 hours.
Estimated Frequency of Response:
Other; Required once when converting
to stock form.
Estimated Total Burden: 7,140 hours.
Clearance Officer: Ira L. Mills, (202)
906–6531, Office of Thrift Supervision,
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552.
Dated: April 9, 2008.
Deborah Dakin,
Senior Deputy Chief Counsel, Regulations and
Legislation Division.
[FR Doc. E8–8015 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6720–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
VA Adjudication Procedures Manual,
M21–1; Rescission of Manual M21–1
Provisions Related to Exposure to
Herbicides Based on Receipt of the
Vietnam Service Medal
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) rescinds provisions of its
Adjudication Procedures Manual, M21–
1 (Manual M21–1) that were found by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans
Claims (Veterans Court) not to have
been properly rescinded.
DATES: This rescission is effective April
15, 2008.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
November 27, 2007, we proposed to
rescind certain provisions of our
Manual M21–1. 72 FR 66218. The notice
was necessitated by the opinion
rendered by the Veterans Court in Haas
v. Nicholson, 20 Vet. App. 257 (2006).
Although VA’s appeal of that decision
has been submitted to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Federal
Circuit), that court has not yet issued a
decision in the case. The comment
period has ended, and we now rescind
the provisions.
We received more than 75 comments,
most of which were very similar and
can be addressed in three categories: (1)
Citation to scientific evidence, in
particular a 2002 study performed for
Australia’s Queensland Health
Scientific Services by their National
Research Center for Environmental
Toxicology, titled, Examination of the
Potential Exposure of Royal Australian
Navy Personnel to Polychlorinated
Dibenzodioxins and Polychlorinated
E:\FR\FM\15APN1.SGM
15APN1
20364
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 73 / Tuesday, April 15, 2008 / Notices
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Dibenzofurans Via Drinking Water (the
Australian study); (2) personal stories
about the commenters’ experiences
during service and/or their current
illnesses; and, (3) arguments presented
in connection with the Haas litigation.
We will address these three categories of
comments, and then address a few
additional comments that do not fit
within these categories.
Comments Based on Scientific Articles
Several commenters suggested that
rescission of the Manual M21–1 is
inconsistent with scientific articles
purportedly showing that herbicide
exposure in offshore waters could have
occurred by virtue of wind drift or
consumption of drinking water distilled
from estuarine waters. We make no
change based on these comments for the
reasons explained below.
Several commenters cited the
Australian study as proof that American
military personnel on ships off the coast
of Vietnam were exposed to herbicides
in drinking water. The Australian study
assumed that ocean water near estuarine
sources could contain dioxin if dioxin
had been used over adjacent land. It
then noted that Australian Navy boats
distilled water, obtained primarily from
locations near such estuarine sources, to
use as drinking water. Based on these
factual predicates, the study found that
the distillation process used by those
boats did not remove dioxin when
dioxin was added to salt water and the
distillation process was performed in a
laboratory, but, instead, the distillation
concentrated the dioxin level in the
water. The study was not peer reviewed
or published and, to our knowledge, has
never been cited in any subsequent
reputable study concerning herbicide
exposure.
Even assuming that U.S. Navy ships
used a distillation process to obtain
drinking water from the ocean (VA has
been unable to obtain official
confirmation of this from the
Department of Defense), VA’s scientific
experts have noted many problems with
this study that caution against placing
significant reliance on the study. In
particular, the authors of the Australian
study themselves noted that there was
substantial uncertainty in their
assumptions regarding the
concentration of dioxin that may have
been present in estuarine waters during
the Vietnam War. Further, although
distillation concentrated the dioxin
level in the water, the concentrating
effect was shown to depend upon the
amount of sediment in the water, such
that a large sediment level, consistent
with estuarine waters, could
significantly reduce the concentrating
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:31 Apr 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
effect. Moreover, even with the
concentrating effect found in the
Australian study, the levels of exposure
estimated in this study are not at all
comparable to the exposures
experienced by veterans who served on
land where herbicides were applied.
This is true even if we were to assume
that a person drank only such distilled
water and did so for an extended tour.
A few commenters cited other studies
that discuss generally the nature of air
and water pollution, the manner in
which certain pesticides can be borne
by the wind, and the effect of waterborne pesticides on marine life. None of
these studies bears significantly on the
specific question whether herbicides
used, and as administered, by the U.S.
military during the Vietnam Era could
have been blown by the wind into the
ocean, or into inland waters that then
carried the chemical into the ocean, to
reach a boat offshore and result in any
significant risk of herbicide exposure.
Similarly, the studies do not suggest
that if those herbicides could have been
so transported, they could then be
transmitted through a distillation
process (assuming that one was used by
U.S. ships) into drinking water, and
then consumed by military personnel in
any measurable quantity. One study
merely indicated that Agent Orange is
carcinogenic, a fact that VA does not
dispute.
Further, even if the studies show that
herbicide exposure in offshore waters is
possible in some circumstances, they do
not provide a basis for maintaining a
provision construed by the Veterans
Court to impose a broad presumption of
herbicide exposure based on receipt of
the Vietnam Service Medal (VSM). The
purpose of the presumption of herbicide
exposure is to eliminate the need for
case-by-case showings of exposure
where there is a reasonable basis for
presuming the fact. The possibility of
exposure in certain circumstances of
offshore service does not, in our view,
establish a basis for presuming exposure
in all circumstances involving offshore
service or receipt of the VSM.
In our view, the cited studies are of
minimal relevance to the instant action
for the additional reason that the M21–
1 provisions were not intended to
establish a substantive rule, but to
implement the congressional intent
underlying the statutory presumption of
herbicide exposure in 38 U.S.C. 1116(f).
The commenters do not suggest that
Congress relied upon the cited studies
in enacting § 1116(f), but appear only to
argue that the cited studies would
independently support a presumption of
herbicide exposure for veterans who
served offshore. It is VA’s policy not to
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
issue substantive rules through its M21–
1 manual or other internal documents,
but through notice-and-comment rule
making and subsequent codification in
the Code of Federal Regulations.
Because the Veterans Court’s conclusion
that the M21–1 provisions established a
substantive rule is inconsistent with
VA’s intent in issuing the M21–1
provision, VA is rescinding the M21–1
provisions. As stated in the notice of
proposed rule making, VA will shortly
issue a proposed revision to its
governing regulation, 38 CFR
3.307(a)(6)(iii), to clarify our
interpretation of 38 U.S.C. 1116(f). The
issue of whether and to what extent the
cited studies bear upon the
congressional intent underlying
§ 1116(f) is most appropriately dealt
with in the context of that rulemaking.
Additionally, we note that many VSM
recipients did not even serve on ships
off the shore of Vietnam. The VSM was
awarded to all members of the Armed
Forces who served between July 3, 1965,
and March 28, 1973, either: (1) in
Vietnam and contiguous waters and
airspace thereover; or (2) in Thailand,
Laos, or Cambodia, or airspace
thereover, in direct support of
operations in Vietnam. See Army Reg.
600–8–22, para. 2–13.). Clearly, the
studies cited by commenters would not
affect our decision as to veterans who
served in Thailand, Laos, or Cambodia,
or in airspace far above the jungles of
Vietnam. If commenters relying on these
studies believe the studies are relevant
to the question whether Vietnam service
should be extended to the waters off the
shore of Vietnam, we direct readers to
the revision of 38 CFR 3.307(a)(6)(iii),
which we expect will be proposed
before May 2008, and which will
directly address the requirement of
service on land in Vietnam. For the
foregoing reasons, the Australian study
and the other studies cited by
commenters do not cause us to alter our
decision to rescind the Manual M21–1
provisions.
Similar to the above category of
comments, several commenters argued
that there is no scientific basis for VA
to take the position that veterans who
served on ships were not exposed to
herbicides during that service. These
comments misunderstand the nature of
VA’s action. This action would not
result in a finding or presumption that
veterans who served on ships were not
exposed to herbicides; it would merely
clarify that such veterans are not
automatically presumed to have been
exposed and that the issue of exposure
must be resolved on a case-by-case basis
to the same extent as most other factual
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15APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 73 / Tuesday, April 15, 2008 / Notices
issues involved in claims for VA
benefits.
Comments Based on Personal
Experience
The second group of comments
received related the personal
experiences of veterans who suffer from
cancer and other ailments that can be
caused by exposure to Agent Orange.
While we are sympathetic to the needs
of these veterans, Congress has been
quite clear that VA cannot presume
exposure to herbicides simply because a
veteran has a disease linked to exposure
to herbicides. Again, section 1116(f)
states that a veteran with such a disease
is presumed exposed only if he ‘‘served
in the Republic of Vietnam.’’ To the
extent that these commenters seek relief
in their own individual cases, these
comments are beyond the scope of this
notice. The issue presented here is
whether VA should rescind a Manual
M21–1 provision that the Veterans
Court misinterpreted as requiring VA to
presume exposure for any veteran who
received the VSM.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Comments Related to Haas Litigation
The third category of comments
received includes comments presenting
the same statutory-interpretation
arguments that have been presented to
the Federal Circuit in the Haas
litigation. These comments assert that
the language of 38 U.S.C. 1116 plainly
requires that offshore service be
considered service ‘‘in the Republic of
Vietnam’’ for purposes of that statute.
We do not agree. In its Haas opinion,
the Veterans Court held that neither the
language nor the legislative history of
§ 1116 reflects a clear intent to treat
offshore service as service ‘‘in the
Republic of Vietnam.’’ Haas, 20 Vet.
App. at 264–68. We therefore make no
change based on these comments, but
we note that this issue remains pending
before the Federal Circuit.
Additionally, some commenters
suggested that VA, by this action, was
usurping the power of the courts. We do
not agree. VA has the legal right to
engage in rulemaking and the legal
obligation to interpret title 38, United
States Code. As the Federal Circuit has
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:31 Apr 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
held, the fact that a court has
interpreted VA’s regulations does not
bar VA from later revising those
regulations. See National Organization
of Veterans’ Advocates v. Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, 260 F.3d 1365, 1373–
74 (Fed. Cir. 2001). This action in no
way usurps the court’s authority to
review our actions in this regard.
Other Comments
In addition to the categories of
comments addressed above, we received
the following specific comments. First,
one commenter asked why the proposed
rescission did not address ‘‘any action
[VA] may contemplate to sever service
connection’’ granted based upon the
Manual M21–1 provisions. We have no
plans to undertake such action. The
same commenter asked whether a
claimant who had been presumed
exposed to herbicides based on the
Manual M21–1 provision would now,
post-rescission, not be presumed
exposed if he filed a claim based on a
new disease. VA has never interpreted
the Manual M21–1 provision to require
a presumption of service connection for
every veteran who received the VSM.
(In fact, this is precisely why VA denied
Mr. Haas’ claim.) That interpretation
was made by the Veterans Court, not by
VA. Therefore, if a veteran had been
presumed exposed to herbicides before
this rescission, it is because the
evidence in his file, viewed as a whole,
supported applying the presumption in
the particular case.
The same commenter added that if
VA believes that other evidence besides
the award of the VSM is relevant to a
finding of service in Vietnam, then VA
should identify such evidence. This
comment is beyond the scope of this
rescission, which simply removes from
the Manual M21–1 a provision that
required VA to consider the VSM in
connection with a claim for a disability
allegedly caused by herbicide exposure.
In this regard, the commenter may wish
to review and comment on our revision
of 38 CFR 3.307(a)(6)(iii).
Another commenter stated that he
‘‘can understand why blue water sailors
[i.e., sailors who served off the coast of
Vietnam] would be more closely
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
20365
scrutinized, but not automatically
deemed ineligible.’’ Removal of the
Manual M21–1 provisions would not
render blue water sailors ineligible for
benefits based on herbicide exposure.
Such veterans could establish service
connection for herbicide-related
conditions by submission of evidence
establishing exposure to herbicides
during service, just as they always
could. If a veteran is eligible for that
presumption, then, as a result, VA will
not further scrutinize that veteran’s
claim on the issue of exposure. We are
rescinding this misinterpreted Manual
M21–1 provision precisely because, like
the commenter, VA believes that blue
water veterans’ claims must be
subjected to greater scrutiny than claims
by veterans who served on land. Blue
water veterans who received the VSM
can directly establish the fact of their
exposure with evidence of contact with
herbicides or evidence that they actually
served on land.
Several comments related to the
exposure of veterans who served in
Thailand, Cambodia and/or Laos.
Persons who received the VSM could
have served in these regions. However,
because we have no confirmed evidence
of the extent of the possible exposure of
such persons to herbicides, and no
statutory mandate to consider such
persons to have been exposed, we make
no change to our decision based on
these comments.
Based on the foregoing, VA rescinds
the following manual provisions
describing service in Vietnam for the
purposes of the presumption of
exposure to herbicides: M21–1, pt. III,
para. 4.08(k)(1)–(2) (November 8, 1991);
M21–1, pt. III, para. 4.24(g)(1)–(2),
change 23 (October 6, 1993); M21–1, pt.
III, para. 4.24(g)(1)–(2), change 41 (July
12, 1995); M21–1, pt. III, para.
4.24(g)(1)–(2), change 76 (June 1, 1999);
M21–1, pt. III, para. 4.24(e)(1)–(2),
change 88 (February 27, 2002).
Approved: April 8, 2008.
Gordon H. Mansfield,
Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. E8–7912 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
E:\FR\FM\15APN1.SGM
15APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 73 (Tuesday, April 15, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 20363-20365]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-7912]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
VA Adjudication Procedures Manual, M21-1; Rescission of Manual
M21-1 Provisions Related to Exposure to Herbicides Based on Receipt of
the Vietnam Service Medal
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) rescinds provisions of
its Adjudication Procedures Manual, M21-1 (Manual M21-1) that were
found by the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (Veterans Court)
not to have been properly rescinded.
DATES: This rescission is effective April 15, 2008.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On November 27, 2007, we proposed to rescind
certain provisions of our Manual M21-1. 72 FR 66218. The notice was
necessitated by the opinion rendered by the Veterans Court in Haas v.
Nicholson, 20 Vet. App. 257 (2006). Although VA's appeal of that
decision has been submitted to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit (Federal Circuit), that court has not yet issued a
decision in the case. The comment period has ended, and we now rescind
the provisions.
We received more than 75 comments, most of which were very similar
and can be addressed in three categories: (1) Citation to scientific
evidence, in particular a 2002 study performed for Australia's
Queensland Health Scientific Services by their National Research Center
for Environmental Toxicology, titled, Examination of the Potential
Exposure of Royal Australian Navy Personnel to Polychlorinated
Dibenzodioxins and Polychlorinated
[[Page 20364]]
Dibenzofurans Via Drinking Water (the Australian study); (2) personal
stories about the commenters' experiences during service and/or their
current illnesses; and, (3) arguments presented in connection with the
Haas litigation. We will address these three categories of comments,
and then address a few additional comments that do not fit within these
categories.
Comments Based on Scientific Articles
Several commenters suggested that rescission of the Manual M21-1 is
inconsistent with scientific articles purportedly showing that
herbicide exposure in offshore waters could have occurred by virtue of
wind drift or consumption of drinking water distilled from estuarine
waters. We make no change based on these comments for the reasons
explained below.
Several commenters cited the Australian study as proof that
American military personnel on ships off the coast of Vietnam were
exposed to herbicides in drinking water. The Australian study assumed
that ocean water near estuarine sources could contain dioxin if dioxin
had been used over adjacent land. It then noted that Australian Navy
boats distilled water, obtained primarily from locations near such
estuarine sources, to use as drinking water. Based on these factual
predicates, the study found that the distillation process used by those
boats did not remove dioxin when dioxin was added to salt water and the
distillation process was performed in a laboratory, but, instead, the
distillation concentrated the dioxin level in the water. The study was
not peer reviewed or published and, to our knowledge, has never been
cited in any subsequent reputable study concerning herbicide exposure.
Even assuming that U.S. Navy ships used a distillation process to
obtain drinking water from the ocean (VA has been unable to obtain
official confirmation of this from the Department of Defense), VA's
scientific experts have noted many problems with this study that
caution against placing significant reliance on the study. In
particular, the authors of the Australian study themselves noted that
there was substantial uncertainty in their assumptions regarding the
concentration of dioxin that may have been present in estuarine waters
during the Vietnam War. Further, although distillation concentrated the
dioxin level in the water, the concentrating effect was shown to depend
upon the amount of sediment in the water, such that a large sediment
level, consistent with estuarine waters, could significantly reduce the
concentrating effect. Moreover, even with the concentrating effect
found in the Australian study, the levels of exposure estimated in this
study are not at all comparable to the exposures experienced by
veterans who served on land where herbicides were applied. This is true
even if we were to assume that a person drank only such distilled water
and did so for an extended tour.
A few commenters cited other studies that discuss generally the
nature of air and water pollution, the manner in which certain
pesticides can be borne by the wind, and the effect of water-borne
pesticides on marine life. None of these studies bears significantly on
the specific question whether herbicides used, and as administered, by
the U.S. military during the Vietnam Era could have been blown by the
wind into the ocean, or into inland waters that then carried the
chemical into the ocean, to reach a boat offshore and result in any
significant risk of herbicide exposure. Similarly, the studies do not
suggest that if those herbicides could have been so transported, they
could then be transmitted through a distillation process (assuming that
one was used by U.S. ships) into drinking water, and then consumed by
military personnel in any measurable quantity. One study merely
indicated that Agent Orange is carcinogenic, a fact that VA does not
dispute.
Further, even if the studies show that herbicide exposure in
offshore waters is possible in some circumstances, they do not provide
a basis for maintaining a provision construed by the Veterans Court to
impose a broad presumption of herbicide exposure based on receipt of
the Vietnam Service Medal (VSM). The purpose of the presumption of
herbicide exposure is to eliminate the need for case-by-case showings
of exposure where there is a reasonable basis for presuming the fact.
The possibility of exposure in certain circumstances of offshore
service does not, in our view, establish a basis for presuming exposure
in all circumstances involving offshore service or receipt of the VSM.
In our view, the cited studies are of minimal relevance to the
instant action for the additional reason that the M21-1 provisions were
not intended to establish a substantive rule, but to implement the
congressional intent underlying the statutory presumption of herbicide
exposure in 38 U.S.C. 1116(f). The commenters do not suggest that
Congress relied upon the cited studies in enacting Sec. 1116(f), but
appear only to argue that the cited studies would independently support
a presumption of herbicide exposure for veterans who served offshore.
It is VA's policy not to issue substantive rules through its M21-1
manual or other internal documents, but through notice-and-comment rule
making and subsequent codification in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Because the Veterans Court's conclusion that the M21-1 provisions
established a substantive rule is inconsistent with VA's intent in
issuing the M21-1 provision, VA is rescinding the M21-1 provisions. As
stated in the notice of proposed rule making, VA will shortly issue a
proposed revision to its governing regulation, 38 CFR 3.307(a)(6)(iii),
to clarify our interpretation of 38 U.S.C. 1116(f). The issue of
whether and to what extent the cited studies bear upon the
congressional intent underlying Sec. 1116(f) is most appropriately
dealt with in the context of that rulemaking.
Additionally, we note that many VSM recipients did not even serve
on ships off the shore of Vietnam. The VSM was awarded to all members
of the Armed Forces who served between July 3, 1965, and March 28,
1973, either: (1) in Vietnam and contiguous waters and airspace
thereover; or (2) in Thailand, Laos, or Cambodia, or airspace
thereover, in direct support of operations in Vietnam. See Army Reg.
600-8-22, para. 2-13.). Clearly, the studies cited by commenters would
not affect our decision as to veterans who served in Thailand, Laos, or
Cambodia, or in airspace far above the jungles of Vietnam. If
commenters relying on these studies believe the studies are relevant to
the question whether Vietnam service should be extended to the waters
off the shore of Vietnam, we direct readers to the revision of 38 CFR
3.307(a)(6)(iii), which we expect will be proposed before May 2008, and
which will directly address the requirement of service on land in
Vietnam. For the foregoing reasons, the Australian study and the other
studies cited by commenters do not cause us to alter our decision to
rescind the Manual M21-1 provisions.
Similar to the above category of comments, several commenters
argued that there is no scientific basis for VA to take the position
that veterans who served on ships were not exposed to herbicides during
that service. These comments misunderstand the nature of VA's action.
This action would not result in a finding or presumption that veterans
who served on ships were not exposed to herbicides; it would merely
clarify that such veterans are not automatically presumed to have been
exposed and that the issue of exposure must be resolved on a case-by-
case basis to the same extent as most other factual
[[Page 20365]]
issues involved in claims for VA benefits.
Comments Based on Personal Experience
The second group of comments received related the personal
experiences of veterans who suffer from cancer and other ailments that
can be caused by exposure to Agent Orange. While we are sympathetic to
the needs of these veterans, Congress has been quite clear that VA
cannot presume exposure to herbicides simply because a veteran has a
disease linked to exposure to herbicides. Again, section 1116(f) states
that a veteran with such a disease is presumed exposed only if he
``served in the Republic of Vietnam.'' To the extent that these
commenters seek relief in their own individual cases, these comments
are beyond the scope of this notice. The issue presented here is
whether VA should rescind a Manual M21-1 provision that the Veterans
Court misinterpreted as requiring VA to presume exposure for any
veteran who received the VSM.
Comments Related to Haas Litigation
The third category of comments received includes comments
presenting the same statutory-interpretation arguments that have been
presented to the Federal Circuit in the Haas litigation. These comments
assert that the language of 38 U.S.C. 1116 plainly requires that
offshore service be considered service ``in the Republic of Vietnam''
for purposes of that statute. We do not agree. In its Haas opinion, the
Veterans Court held that neither the language nor the legislative
history of Sec. 1116 reflects a clear intent to treat offshore service
as service ``in the Republic of Vietnam.'' Haas, 20 Vet. App. at 264-
68. We therefore make no change based on these comments, but we note
that this issue remains pending before the Federal Circuit.
Additionally, some commenters suggested that VA, by this action,
was usurping the power of the courts. We do not agree. VA has the legal
right to engage in rulemaking and the legal obligation to interpret
title 38, United States Code. As the Federal Circuit has held, the fact
that a court has interpreted VA's regulations does not bar VA from
later revising those regulations. See National Organization of
Veterans' Advocates v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, 260 F.3d 1365,
1373-74 (Fed. Cir. 2001). This action in no way usurps the court's
authority to review our actions in this regard.
Other Comments
In addition to the categories of comments addressed above, we
received the following specific comments. First, one commenter asked
why the proposed rescission did not address ``any action [VA] may
contemplate to sever service connection'' granted based upon the Manual
M21-1 provisions. We have no plans to undertake such action. The same
commenter asked whether a claimant who had been presumed exposed to
herbicides based on the Manual M21-1 provision would now, post-
rescission, not be presumed exposed if he filed a claim based on a new
disease. VA has never interpreted the Manual M21-1 provision to require
a presumption of service connection for every veteran who received the
VSM. (In fact, this is precisely why VA denied Mr. Haas' claim.) That
interpretation was made by the Veterans Court, not by VA. Therefore, if
a veteran had been presumed exposed to herbicides before this
rescission, it is because the evidence in his file, viewed as a whole,
supported applying the presumption in the particular case.
The same commenter added that if VA believes that other evidence
besides the award of the VSM is relevant to a finding of service in
Vietnam, then VA should identify such evidence. This comment is beyond
the scope of this rescission, which simply removes from the Manual M21-
1 a provision that required VA to consider the VSM in connection with a
claim for a disability allegedly caused by herbicide exposure. In this
regard, the commenter may wish to review and comment on our revision of
38 CFR 3.307(a)(6)(iii).
Another commenter stated that he ``can understand why blue water
sailors [i.e., sailors who served off the coast of Vietnam] would be
more closely scrutinized, but not automatically deemed ineligible.''
Removal of the Manual M21-1 provisions would not render blue water
sailors ineligible for benefits based on herbicide exposure. Such
veterans could establish service connection for herbicide-related
conditions by submission of evidence establishing exposure to
herbicides during service, just as they always could. If a veteran is
eligible for that presumption, then, as a result, VA will not further
scrutinize that veteran's claim on the issue of exposure. We are
rescinding this misinterpreted Manual M21-1 provision precisely
because, like the commenter, VA believes that blue water veterans'
claims must be subjected to greater scrutiny than claims by veterans
who served on land. Blue water veterans who received the VSM can
directly establish the fact of their exposure with evidence of contact
with herbicides or evidence that they actually served on land.
Several comments related to the exposure of veterans who served in
Thailand, Cambodia and/or Laos. Persons who received the VSM could have
served in these regions. However, because we have no confirmed evidence
of the extent of the possible exposure of such persons to herbicides,
and no statutory mandate to consider such persons to have been exposed,
we make no change to our decision based on these comments.
Based on the foregoing, VA rescinds the following manual provisions
describing service in Vietnam for the purposes of the presumption of
exposure to herbicides: M21-1, pt. III, para. 4.08(k)(1)-(2) (November
8, 1991); M21-1, pt. III, para. 4.24(g)(1)-(2), change 23 (October 6,
1993); M21-1, pt. III, para. 4.24(g)(1)-(2), change 41 (July 12, 1995);
M21-1, pt. III, para. 4.24(g)(1)-(2), change 76 (June 1, 1999); M21-1,
pt. III, para. 4.24(e)(1)-(2), change 88 (February 27, 2002).
Approved: April 8, 2008.
Gordon H. Mansfield,
Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. E8-7912 Filed 4-14-08; 8:45 am]
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