Chicago Sun-Times

VA shifts, shuffles managers, declares ‘ new leadership’

Some who got new jobs had problems at old ones

- Donovan Slack

Although Veterans Affairs Secretary Bob McDonald asserted that more than 90% of the VA’s medical centers have “new leadership” or “leadership teams” since he took over the troubled agency in 2014, a USA TODAY investigat­ion found the VA has hired just eight medical center directors from outside the agency during that time.

The rest of the “new leadership” McDonald cites is the result of moving managers between jobs and medical centers. Some managers were transferre­d to new jobs despite concerns about the care provided to veterans at the facilities they previously managed.

USA TODAY determined that of 140 medical center directors, 92 are new since McDonald took office in July 2014. That’s 66%. Of those, 69 are permanent placements; the rest are interim appointees. All but eight of these directors already worked at the VA.

VA officials said McDonald cited an erroneous statistic and the actual percentage of new medical center leaders is 84%. That figure includes new chiefs of staff, associate directors and other top executives, even where center directors remained the same. The agency considers a center as having new leadership if one member of its top management team has transferre­d from another center or job.

“I said very carefully, and I’ve always said ‘ leadership or leadership teams’ — both are important,” McDonald said in an interview. “In some cases, you’ve got directors who are doing a great job, but they’ve got a chief of staff who’s not, and you’ve got to change that person.”

McDonald said the number itself is “almost irrelevant” and what’s important is that he and other VA leaders are “trying to attract top talent, to get them in the right seats on the bus, in order to make outcome changes for veterans.”

VA Undersecre­tary for Health David Shulkin said salary constraint­s, a lengthy hiring process and other factors have limited the agency’s ability to attract non- VA applicants.

USA TODAY scoured hundreds of documents, news accounts and Web archives to build a database tracking VA personnel moves since the wait- time scandal broke in 2014, starting with a Phoenix VA facility where 40 veterans died awaiting care. That case revealed widespread mismanagem­ent of facilities and led to McDonald’s appointmen­t with a mandate to fix veterans’ care.

President Obama echoed McDonald’s pride in the VA’s transforma­tion, saying on a recent CNN forum that “we have, in fact, fired a whole bunch of people who are in charge of these facilities.” In fact, the VA moved to fire seven medical center directors. One of them quit, and another retired first.

Of the 69 permanent directors in- stalled since McDonald took over, 49 transferre­d from a different VA medical center, and 12 came from different jobs within the same hospital. The moves included promotions, such as from associate director to director of a medical center. In 22 cases, the VA moved directors from one center to another. In Ohio, directors in Chillicoth­e and Columbus simply switched places.

Some of the directors came from facilities where they faced issues ranging from low- ranking quality of care to waittime falsificat­ion to mismanagem­ent identified by outside investigat­ors.

Among them:

Kathleen Fogarty cut veterans’ access to outside care to help overcome a multimilli­on- dollar deficit as director of the Tampa VA in 2011 and repeatedly denied publicly that she was doing it, according to the Tampa Bay Times. In March 2015, the VA transferre­d her to the director’s post at the VA in Kansas

City, Mo.

Joe Battle, who had been the director of the Jackson, Miss., VA, replaced Fogarty in Tampa. The Office of Special Counsel, which investigat­es whistle- blower claims, concluded in 2013 that Battle downplayed serious problems with veterans’ care in Jackson, “calling into question the facility’s commitment to implementi­ng serious reforms.” During his tenure in Jackson, doctors prescribed narcotics to patients they hadn’t seen, schedulers slotted veterans into “ghost clinics” that didn’t exist, and the American Legion, two years after he took over, said it was “appalled” by conditions at the facility.

Robert Walton went from director of the Harlingen, Texas, VA to director of the San Antonio VA in November last year. During his tenure in Harlingen, the facility ranked among the lowest in the country in quality and efficiency by the VA’s own metrics, and investigat­ors found schedulers had routinely falsified veteran wait times under pressure from supervisor­s.

Deborah Amdur went from director in White River Junction, Vt., to director of the troubled Phoenix VA last December. In Vermont, the VA’s Office of Inspector General found routine scheduling manipulati­on directed by supervisor­s, and a doctor told investigat­ors that management pressure to increase productivi­ty led to missed cancer diagnoses. Amdur retired in August, citing “personal health reasons.” Several weeks later, the inspector general released the results of another investigat­ion at the Phoenix VA that found more scheduling impropriet­ies.

Shulkin said the Phoenix crisis and ensuing media scrutiny triggered an exodus of leaders at the VA, and the agency hasn’t been able to attract enough applicants to fill those slots. He said VA officials have filled as many as they could with a mix of inside and outside candidates. Shulkin said there are more than two dozen directors’ jobs open.

They are filled by acting or interim directors. St. Louis has had eight temporary directors since 2013. Los Angeles had four; Oklahoma City and Phoenix had five.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States