Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump expands private care at VA

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a bill into law Wednesday that will give veterans more freedom to see doctors outside the troubled Veterans Affairs system, a major shift aimed at reducing wait times and improving care by steering more patients to the private sector.

At a Rose Garden event at the White House, Trump praised the legislatio­n as fulfilling his pledge to fix the Department of Veterans Affairs by bringing accountabi­lity and providing private care to veterans whenever they feel unhappy with government-run health care.

“All during the campaign I'd go out and say, ‘Why can't they just go see a doctor instead of standing in line for weeks and weeks and weeks?’ Now they can go see a doctor,” he said.

The $51 billion plan, which would also expand a VA caregivers program to cover families of veterans of all eras, cleared the Senate 92-5 last month. The House approved it 347-70.

The legislatio­n will give veterans access to private care when they have endured lengthy wait times or the treatment was not what they had expected. But it could escalate costs, and some lawmakers warn this could put the VA at risk of budget shortfalls next year.

A bipartisan group of senators is seeking to pay for the law by adding new funds to cover the VA private care program, but the White House has been quietly working to block that plan, saying it is “anathema to responsibl­e spending.” Warning of “virtually unlimited increases” in veterans care spending, the Trump administra­tion argued in a memo circulated to lawmakers that added costs to the newly expanded private care program should be paid for by cutting spending elsewhere at VA.

“Without subjecting the program to any budgetary constraint, there is no incentive to continue to serve veterans with innovative, streamline­d, and efficient quality of care,” according to the memo.

Major veterans groups have cautioned against “cannibaliz­ing” VA programs to pay for Choice, saying more funding is needed.

“We do our veterans no favors by promising care without backing it up with resources,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee. He warned that failing to provide new funding “would jeopardize the health care and well-being of our veterans.”

The VA secretary will have wide leeway in implementi­ng the legislatio­n based in part on available money. Trump is nominating acting VA secretary Robert Wilkie to permanentl­y lead the government's second-largest department, which serves 9 million veterans. Democrats say they intend to question Wilkie at his confirmati­on hearing on whether he plans to “privatize” or degrade the VA health system, an issue that former VA Secretary David Shulkin says led to his firing in March.

The legislatio­n would create a commission appointed by the president to review the closure of underperfo­rming VA facilities. House Democrats had sought restrictio­ns on the commission but were rebuffed by House Republican­s and the White House.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., cautioned that the lack of new money for the legislatio­n sets up “another VA crisis and billions in budget cuts to critical veteran initiative­s down the road.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY ?? President Donald Trump hands a pen to former Sen. Elizabeth Dole after he signed the veterans law Wednesday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY President Donald Trump hands a pen to former Sen. Elizabeth Dole after he signed the veterans law Wednesday.

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