Find a Wisconsin County Veterans Service Officer (CVSO). CVSOs are state-employed, FREE, and just as effective as paid attorneys for VA disability claims, pension applications, and discharge upgrades. Every Wisconsin county has at least one.
Yes — 100% free for veterans. CVSOs are paid by the state (or sometimes county) governments. Federal law (38 USC §5904) regulates VA claim representation: only VA-accredited representatives can charge for services, and they must follow strict caps. CVSOs are accredited but state-funded — they're prohibited from charging veterans directly.
Same end goal, different staffing model. CVSOs are paid government employees of Wisconsin county governments. VSO representatives are typically volunteers (or partly-paid staff) at American Legion / VFW / DAV / AMVETS / PVA / IAVA posts. Both are VA-accredited, both file free. CVSOs have more capacity per veteran (full-time vs volunteer); VSO reps have deeper community ties.
Most do — about 49 states have functional CVSO networks. Smaller states sometimes have shared regional CVSOs covering multiple counties. Texas, California, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio have dense per-county coverage. Smaller states (Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska) sometimes have one CVSO per region.
Yes. CVSOs handle the full appeals chain: Higher-Level Review (HLR), Supplemental Claim, Board appeal. They're VA-accredited representatives — same legal standing as a paid attorney for board appearances. The only step a CVSO can't do is federal court (CAVC) — for CAVC appeals you typically need a paid attorney specializing in veterans law.