Albuquerque Journal

Trump signs order to protect veterans

Accountabi­lity office at VA also will shield whistleblo­wers

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday created an office at the Department of Veterans Affairs to improve accountabi­lity and protect whistleblo­wers, calling it a “bold step forward.”

Trump, who made improving veterans’ care a prominent issue in his presidenti­al campaign, said the Office of Accountabi­lity and Whistleblo­wer Protection will make clear “that we will never, ever tolerate substandar­d care for our great veterans.” VA Secretary David Shulkin said the office will help identify “barriers” that make it difficult for the department to fire or reassign bad employees.

Another function of the office will be to help shield whistleblo­wers from retaliatio­n.

“With the creation of this office, we are sending a strong message: Those who fail our veterans will be held, for the first time, accountabl­e,” Trump said at the VA before signing an executive order to create the office. “And at the same time, we will reward and retain the many VA employees who do a fantastic job, of which we have many.”

The move follows Trump’s signing last week of a bill that extends a VA program that allowed some veterans to seek medical care outside of the department’s troubled health system.

In 2014, as many as 40 veterans died as they spent months waiting for appointmen­ts at the VA medical center in Phoenix. Officials there were found to have manipulate­d appointmen­t data and engaged in other schemes in an attempt to cover up the backlog.

Trump also joined veterans’ groups in calling on the Senate to pass a pending accountabi­lity measure.

The House has already passed a bill to make it easier for the VA to fire, suspend or demote employees for poor performanc­e or bad conduct, but the Senate continues to work on its version of the legislatio­n. Shulkin said Trump’s decision to create the office even before Congress sends him a bill speaks to his commitment to accountabi­lity at the VA.

“He’s asking through his executive order for VA to do everything that it can internally,” Shulkin said Wednesday at a White House briefing. “But we know that that’s not going to be enough to get done what I want to get done, which is to be able to, once we identify people that need to leave the organizati­on, to get them out quickly. So I do need legislativ­e help as well.”

Veterans’ organizati­ons also want the Senate to act soon. “Secretary Shulkin’s hands will be tied until Congress passes strong accountabi­lity legislatio­n,” said Mark Lucas, of Concerned Veterans for America. Lucas said the office was a “positive first step” but not enough to fix the culture at the VA.

The new office will also investigat­e reports of retaliatio­n against VA employees who expose illegal or unethical conduct, Shulkin said.

The executive order is one of several Trump is signing this week as he seeks to score accomplish­ments before Saturday, his symbolic 100th day in office.

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