Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump signs law to overhaul VA, make it easier to fire some

- By Darlene Superville and Jonathan Lemire Associated Press

WASHINGTON— President Donald Trump signed a bill into law Friday that will make it easier for the Department of Veterans Affairs to fire employees, part of a push to overhaul an agency that is struggling to serve millions of military vets.

“Our veterans have fulfilled their duty to our nation and now we must fulfill our duty to them,” Trump said during a White House ceremony. “To every veteran who is herewith us today, I just want to say two very simple words: Thank you.”

Trump repeatedly promised during the election campaign to dismiss VA workers “who let our veterans down,” and he cast Friday’s bill signing as fulfillmen­t of that promise.

“What happened was a national disgrace and yet some of the employees involved in these scandals remained on the payrolls,” Trump said. “Outdated laws kept the government from holding those who failed our veterans accountabl­e. Today we are finally changing those laws.”

The measure was prompted by a 2014scanda­l at the Phoenix VA medical center, where some veterans died as they waited months for care. The VA is the second-largest department in the U.S. government, with more than 350,000 employees, and it is charged with providing health care and other services to military veterans.

Federal employee unions opposed the measure. VA Secretary David Shulkin, an Obama administra­tion holdover, stood alongside Trump as the president jokingly suggested he’d have to invoke his reality TV catchphras­e “You’re fired” if the reforms were not implemente­d.

The legislatio­n, which many veterans’ groups supported, cleared the House last week by an overwhelmi­ngly bipartisan vote of 368-55, replacing an earlier version that Democrats had criticized as overly unfair to employees.

Paul Rieckhoff, founder of the Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, applauded the move, saying, “In a nasty, partisan environmen­t like we’ve never seen, veterans’ issues can be a unique area for Washington to unite in actually getting things done for ordinary Americans.”

The bill was a rare Trump initiative that received Democratic support. Montana Sen. Jon Tester said the bill “will protect whistleblo­wers from the threat of retaliatio­n.”

The new law will lower the burden of proof to fire employees, allowing for dismissal even if most evidence is in aworker’s favor.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest federal employee union, opposed the bill. But the Senatepass­ed measure was seen as more in balance with workers’ rights than a version passed by the House in March, mostly along party lines. The Senate bill calls for a longer appeals process than the House version — 180 days versus 45 days. VA executives would be held to a tougher standard than rank-and-file employees.

The bill also turns another of Trump’s campaign pledges into lawby creating a permanent VA accountabi­lity office.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY ?? President Donald Trump gives the pen with which he signed legislatio­n to overhaul the Department of Veterans Affairs to war vet and Purple Heart recipient Michael Verardo.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY President Donald Trump gives the pen with which he signed legislatio­n to overhaul the Department of Veterans Affairs to war vet and Purple Heart recipient Michael Verardo.

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