Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VA chief: Still work to do on care fixes

- HOPE YEN AND DARLENE SUPERVILLE

WASHINGTON — Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin warned Wednesday that the VA is “still in critical condition” despite efforts that predate his tenure to reduce veterans’ wait times for medical appointmen­ts and expand opportunit­ies to seek care in the private sector.

In a “State of the VA” report, Shulkin, a physician, issued a blunt diagnosis: “There is a lot of work to do.”

Veterans can get “sameday” services at medical centers but are still waiting too long — more than 60 days — for new appointmen­ts at about 30 locations nationwide. Many primary-care centers are understaff­ed or running out of space. Appeals of disability claims remain backed up

with years of wait. Inventory systems at several VA facilities are woefully out of date, and employee accountabi­lity is “clearly broken.”

Shulkin said the department had about 1,500 disciplina­ry actions against employees on hold, citing legal requiremen­ts that it must wait at least a month before taking action for misconduct. That means people are being paid “for violating our core values,” he said in a 17-page report.

“Our veterans and their families have benefited from our early success, but have suffered due to the failures of the past to effect real change,” Shulkin said.

Shulkin provided his “top to bottom review” at a critical time. His biggest proposals for revamping the VA — and fulfilling the campaign promises of President Donald Trump — will need to be acted on soon by an increasing­ly polarized Congress if measures are to be passed by this fall.

The wish list includes an accountabi­lity bill to make it easier to fire VA employees, expanding the Veterans Choice program of private-sector care and stemming veterans’ suicides. About 20 veterans take their lives each day. “That should be unacceptab­le to all of us,” Shulkin said at a White House briefing.

Other efforts include an overhaul of informatio­n technology systems; plans to reduce 400 vacant buildings and 735 underutili­zed facilities; consolidat­ion at VA headquarte­rs in Washington; and partnershi­ps with local government­s and the private sector.

Shulkin announced that a promised White House hotline for veterans’ complaints should be fully operationa­l by Aug. 15. Testing begins today. The telephone number is (855) 948-2311. During the campaign, Trump promised a 24-hour hotline so veterans’ complaints will not “fall through the cracks.”

Shulkin, who served in President Barack Obama’s administra­tion and was promoted by Trump, described the president as being “deeply engaged” on veteran issues, a subject Trump highlighte­d during the campaign. He pledged to make the department and its health care system work better for veterans.

“His commitment to being involved in veteran issues is one of his top domestic priorities,” Shulkin said at the briefing. “Anything that we need, the White House has been extremely responsive, and they are impatient and anxious for us to get on with this.”

Trump’s budget plan calls for a 3.7 percent increase in total VA funding, mostly to pay for rising costs of medical care. It specifical­ly calls for $29 billion over the next decade for Choice, which allows veterans to seek outside medical care from private doctors.

To cover rising costs, the VA would cap the amount of educationa­l benefits veterans could receive under the GI Bill and halt “individual unemployab­ility” benefit payments to out-of-work disabled veterans once they reach age 62. Major veterans organizati­ons oppose such cuts, with the American Legion describing the tradeoffs as “stealth privatizat­ion.” Veterans groups worry that the Trump administra­tion is seeking to expand Choice to the detriment of core VA programs.

Besides Choice, Shulkin said he was seeking to implement another campaign priority: a VA accountabi­lity office, establishe­d by executive order in April.

Shulkin said he still needs the Senate to pass accountabi­lity legislatio­n that would give him broader authority, such as lowering the evidentiar­y standard to fire employees. The Senate is scheduled to vote on the bill Tuesday.

 ?? AP/SUSAN WALSH ?? At the White House, Veterans Affair Secretary David Shulkin speaks Wednesday about his “top to bottom review” of the veterans agency and the need for employee accountabi­lity.
AP/SUSAN WALSH At the White House, Veterans Affair Secretary David Shulkin speaks Wednesday about his “top to bottom review” of the veterans agency and the need for employee accountabi­lity.

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