Board executives The board is led by a chairman, a vice chairman, a senior deputy vice chairman, four deputy vice chairmen, an executive director for appellate support, and chief counsel. The chairman ranks equivalent to a department assistant secretary and is nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate for a term of six years. The vice chairman is a member of the Senior Executive Service, and is appointed by the secretary, with the approval of the president, and serves at the pleasure of the secretary and is the chief operating officer of the board. Deputy vice chairmen (or DVCs) are members of the board and of the
Senior Executive Service and are appointed by the secretary, by and with the approval of the president to serve as a member of the board's executive leadership team. Their primary role is to provide oversight, guidance and management of the work product of the Veterans Law Judges, helping identify, consider, and resolve motions and appeals. Each DVC manages a team of a number of decision-writing judges and their staff counsel, with the senior deputy vice chairman performing administrative leadership functions in assisting the vice chairman with the day-to-day operations. Other executive staff include chief counsel, who oversees the board's Quality Assurance and Improvement, CAVC Litigation Support, Customer Service and Records Management programs, and the executive director of Appellate Support, which is responsible for overseeing the non-decision-making support offices of the board, such as human resources, logistics and supplies, and IT.
Veterans Law Judges (VLJ) The secretary may appoint any number of members that he or she deems "necessary in order to conduct hearings and dispose of appeals properly before the Board in a timely manner". Those members are appointed by the secretary, based on recommendations by the Chairman, and with the approval of the President, and must be an attorney "in good standing" with any state bar. Members are commissioned and titled as Veterans Law Judges (VLJs), and have similar duties and responsibilities to executive branch
administrative law judges in the United States. , the Board consists of 110 VLJs, each of whom typically decide an appeal in a single-judge decision, although in certain cases, a panel decision of at least three VLJs may be formed. The Board also employs nearly 800 In practice, however, rarely do any of the senior executives write a Board decision (outside of ruling on certain motions). == Types of Appeals ==