The Palm Beach Post

VA secretary seeks to close more than 1,100 facilities

- By Hope Yen Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Veterans A f f a i r s S e c r e t a r y D a v i d Shulkin says his department is seeking to close perhaps more than 1,100 VA facilities nationwide as it develops plans to allow more veterans to receive medical care in the private sector.

A t a H o u s e h e a r i n g Wednesday, Shulkin said the VA had identified more than 430 vacant buildings and 735 that he described as underutili­zed, costing the federal government $25 million a year. He said the VA would work with Congress in prioritizi­ng buildings for closure and was considerin­g whether to follow a process the Pentagon had used in recent decades to decide which of its underused military bases to shutter, known as Base Realignmen­t and Closure, or BRAC.

“Whether BRAC is a model that we should take a look at, we’re beginning that discussion with members of Congress,” Shulkin told a House appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee. “We want to stop supporting our use of maintenanc­e of buildings we don’t need, and we want to reinvest that in buildings we know have capital needs.”

While President Donald Trump’s budget blueprint calls for a 6 percent increase in VA funding, Shulkin has made clear the government’s second-largest agency with nearly 370,000 employees will have to operate more e f f i c i e nt l y a nd t hat b udge t i nc re a s e s shoul d not be c onsi dered a g ive n i n future years. The department recently announced hiring restrictio­ns on roughly 4,000 positions despite the lifting of the federal hiring freeze and also left open the possibilit y of “near-term” and “long-term workforce reductions.” Shulkin is also putting together a broader proposal by fall to expand the VA’s Choice program of private-sector care.

The Pentagon’s BRAC process often stirred controvers­y in the past as members of Congress expressed concern about the negative economic impact of shuttering military bases and vigorously opposed closures in their districts.

Re p. J e f f Fo r t e n b e r r y, R-Neb., a vice chair of the appropriat­ions panel, told Shulkin that Congress was looking forward to working with the VA “constructi­vely” on the issue in part by determinin­g how excess VA buildings could be put to good community use, such as for firefighti­ng, security or landscape maintenanc­e.

 ??  ?? Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin
Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin

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