Arab Times

Bob ‘vows’ to reorganize VA

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WASHINGTON, July 23, (Agencies): US President Barack Obama’s nominee to fix the Department of Veterans Affairs pledged on Tuesday to bring corporate-style discipline and accountabi­lity to the troubled agency plagued by healthcare delays and accusation­s of mismanagem­ent and fraud.

Bob McDonald, the former chief executive officer of Procter & Gamble Co, the world’s largest manufactur­er of household products, told the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee that he would work to reorganize the VA to deliver care more efficientl­y to veterans.

In a confirmati­on hearing brimming with corporate management buzzwords, McDonald said he would immerse himself in the VA’s operations and devise ways to focus each of the department’s 341,000 employees on its core mission of serving veterans.

“In order to retain the trust of the American people, and most importantl­y, veterans, we must ensure every employee has an action plan in their annual performanc­e review that rolls up to the strategic plan and the mission of the department,” he said.

Encouraged

He also told senators he would give them his cellphone number and encouraged them to use it, adding that as P&G’s CEO, his phone was turned on “24 hours a day.”

McDonald, 61, was nominated to replace Eric Shinseki, who resigned as VA secretary in late May amid a scandal over the coverup of delays in scheduling medical appointmen­ts at dozens of VAhospital­s and clinics across the country.

In Phoenix, doctors have said that some 40 veterans died as their names languished on secret waiting lists while officials misreprese­nted wait-time data to meet targets for bonus compensati­on.

Shinseki, a retired four-star Army general, had said that he had not been made aware of the waittime problems until the scandal boiled over in the media this year, amid dozens of investigat­ions by the VA inspector general.

Asked how he would avoid the same situation, McDonald said he would get out of the executive suite and visit many of the department’s 1,700 facilities to help improve their communicat­ion with the Washington head office.

Tolerate

“You don’t want people in your community lying. You don’t tolerate them lying,” he said.

There was no animosity from senators at the hearing, after which Senator Bernie Sanders, the chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, predicted that McDonald would win confirmati­on in the full Senate by next week. Several senators implored him to use his business experience to change the VA’s culture.

“You are about to take over a bankrupt corporatio­n,” said Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticu­t. “The threat is financial, but the real insolvency is in morality of management.”

McDonald, who graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1975 and served five years as an Army officer, joined Procter & Gamble in 1980, working his way up the corporate ladder to become CEO in 2009. He retired last year.

He said the VA needed better forecastin­g of the demand for its services and promised to improve the department’s informatio­n technology, including its archaic scheduling system.

Meanwhile, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has approved an agreement on civilian nuclear cooperatio­n between the US and Vietnam, as Washington looks to expand its relationsh­ip with its former Southeast Asian foe.

The agreement approved Tuesday by the committee would allow US firms into Vietnam’s expanding market for nuclear power. The US and Vietnamese government­s reached the agreement last October, and it was approved by President Barack Obama in February of this year. It now has to be endorsed by the full Senate. The prospects for passage remain uncertain.

The Democratic-led committee, which oversees American foreign policy, passed the agreement by a voice vote despite concerns from nonprolife­ration activists and some lawmakers that it lacks a blanket restrictio­n on Vietnam enriching uranium itself or reprocessi­ng plutonium. Those capabiliti­es can be used for developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

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McDonald

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