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VA chief tells Congress: You can’t fire your way to excellence

4 min read
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WASHINGTON – Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert McDonald refuted claims by members of Congress Thursday that his scandal-plagued agency hasn’t dismissed enough employees, saying, “You can’t fire your way to excellence.”

McDonald told the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee that he and other top leaders are turning the VA around, “providing more and better care than ever before” and holding employees accountable, including firing about 2,600 workers since he took office 18 months ago.

The VA has struggled to respond in the nearly two years since a scandal emerged in Phoenix chronic delays for veterans seeking medical care, and falsified records covering up the long waits.

Similar problems were soon discovered at VA medical centers nationwide, affecting thousands of veterans and prompting an outcry in Congress.

The VA takes seriously its mission to fulfill the nation’s obligation to those who served in the military, McDonald said, adding his “vision for VA (is) to become the No. 1 customer-service agency in the government.”

The agency has “a lot of work to do to reach that goal, but we are making progress,” McDonald said, noting the VA increased the number of health care appointments by more 1.2 million last year, completing 96 percent of those within 30 days of clinically indicated dates or those preferred by veterans.

McDonald’s comments came as he outlined a 12-point plan he said would achieve “breakthrough outcomes” by the end of President Barack Obama’s term next January. The plan includes improving veterans’ access to health care, making it easier for veterans to navigate the complicated VA website, reducing chronic backlogs in disability claims and continuing to reduce veteran homelessness.

McDonald praised the passage of a 2014 law intended to make it easier for veterans to receive private care, noting the VA authorized 12 million private appointments last year alone. The move to private care was intended to alleviate chronic delays many veterans face in getting treatment at the VA’s nearly 1,000 hospitals and outpatient clinics, or to make it easier for veterans who live far away from a VA health site.

Bolstered by the new law, the VA hired more than 41,000 people last year, bringing the total of employees to more than 340,000, McDonald said. The new hires included 14,000 health care workers, including 1,300 doctors and 3,600 nurses.

Still, McDonald said the agency is plagued by “critical shortages” in health care, including 34 vacant positions directing VA Medical Centers nationwide.

“Negative news articles” published since the wait-time scandal broke out in Phoenix have hampered recruitment efforts and made it difficult for the VA to hire and retain qualified workers, McDonald said. Employment applications are down by about 75 percent compared to two years ago, he said.

Many Republican lawmakers have urged the VA to fire more workers to demonstrate what they say is sorely needed accountability at an agency hamstrung by career employees who face few consequences for wrongdoing. Lawmakers were flabbergasted last year after two high-ranking VA officials were demoted rather than fired amid allegations that they forced lower-ranking regional managers to accept job transfers against their will and then stepped into the vacant positions themselves.

Disappointment turned to anger after it was revealed that even the demotions were rescinded following a paperwork mix-up. “Frankly, this ineptness clearly illustrates that VA can’t even slap a wrist without missing the wrist,” said Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee.

Earlier this month, the VA said that the two senior executives, Diana Rubens and Kimberly Graves, were demoted to general workers within the Veterans Benefits Administration.

McDonald defended the treatment of Rubens and Graves, saying their high-profile demotions demonstrate that “we’re holding people accountable.”

Rubens, a former deputy undersecretary at the VA’s Washington headquarters, now serves as assistant director of the VBA’s Houston regional office. Graves, a former director of VBA’s 14-state North Atlantic Region, serves as assistant director of the Phoenix regional office. Both received unspecified pay cuts.

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