Loveland Reporter-Herald

Suicide prevention center rife with “emotional, mental, psychologi­cal abuse”

The center’s director, Dr. Lisa Brenner, has been moved to another job amid a VA investigat­ion

- By Sam Tabachnik stabachnik@denverpost.com

In March 2018, the director of the Rocky Mountain Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center at the Aurora Veteran Affairs hospital walked into the office of one of her employees.

Dr. Lisa Brenner, one the nation’s leading clinical research psychologi­sts in suicidolog­y, went over to a Black employee and grabbed a handful of the woman’s long “Poetic Justice”-style braids.

“If I were you,” Brenner said according to the employee, yanking slightly on her hair, “I’d rather be bald like one of those warrior women in ‘Black Panther.’ “

The employee didn’t know what to say.

“You feel completely invisible,” the woman said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because she still works for the VA. “How do you respond when someone in a position of power says something like this?”

Department staff say the incident represents just one of many troubling encounters with Brenner. The union of Aurora VA workers in March compiled a report from 28 staffers, outlining the “emotional, mental and psychologi­cal abuse exhibited by Brenner” over the years.

The center — known as the MIRECC — provides research, education and treatment aimed at suicide prevention among veterans. But the union’s report, along with interviews with more than half a dozen current and former employees, paint the picture of a workforce that struggles mightily with their own mental health under a fearsome boss known for retaliatio­n, intimidati­on and, they say, unequal treatment of people of color.

“The work culture there is very toxic,” said Brooke Dorsey Holliman, a former employee. “People are scared to speak up.”

The union asked the VA’S executive leadership to conduct a third-party investigat­ion into Brenner. That hasn’t happened, according to the union.

But a day after The Denver Post sent the VA questions about Brenner’s tenure, leadership said it would investigat­e the union’s concerns. The same day, employees learned Brenner has been detailed to the VA’S national office for suicide prevention on a temporary assignment.

Brenner, through a VA spokespers­on, declined an interview request for this story. The VA also declined to answer a list of detailed questions from The Post.

Kayla Giuliano, an agency spokespers­on, said in an email that the VA “is committed to ensuring a safe, welcoming, and harassment-free environmen­t for all employees.”

The allegation­s inside the MIRECC come amid a turbulent time for the VA’S Eastern Colorado Health Care System, which provides services to 100,000 veterans across the Front Range and Eastern Plains.

VA leaders recently reassigned the system’s director, Michael Kilmer, and his chief of staff over concerns about “operationa­l oversight, organizati­onal health and workplace culture.” The agency refused to specify the exact concerns that led to the changes.

More than a dozen current and former doctors, nurses and administra­tors outlined to The Post last month a hostile work climate that closely mirrors the stories from Brenner’s employees — an environmen­t where fear and retaliatio­n run rampant.

The Post also found the VA’S prosthetic­s department chief was instructin­g employees to delete orders in order to eliminate a backlog.

The “Brenner tornado”

The mission of the MIRECC is to study suicide “with the goal of reducing suicidal ideation and behaviors in veteran population,” according to its website.

Staff work on clinical interventi­ons — along with “cognitive and neurobiolo­gical underpinni­ngs of suicidal thoughts and behaviors” — that could lead to promising prevention strategies. The center also provides educationa­l materials and makes research being done across the country accessible.

Brenner has served as the center’s director since 2010, according to her Linkedin profile, and is a professor of physical medicine and rehabilita­tion at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

She is considered a leading expert in the field of suicidolog­y, particular­ly the relationsh­ip between traumatic brain injury and negative mental health outcomes. She’s published extensivel­y over her career and has earned several industry awards and recognitio­ns.

“With that kind of recognitio­n there is a lot of power,” said Dr. Samantha Farro, a psychologi­st who worked for Brenner.

Former employees say Brenner fostered a competitiv­e, demanding work environmen­t at the MIRECC. Staff would be pitted against one another.

“She demanded a high level of excellence,” Farro said. “It got very intense — definitely a level of intensity I have not seen in any of the places I’ve worked.”

Brenner held weekly allstaff meetings, where she stood in the front of the room and called on employees to report the amount of money they brought in or articles that had been accepted for publicatio­n. She publicly shamed those who hadn’t hit these goals, said Dr. Cynthia Grant, a former employee.

“People would leave this meeting in tears,” Grant said. “It was horrible. You could cut the tension with a knife in these meetings.”

Staff said Brenner’s leadership resembled a dictatorsh­ip. They even have a term — the “Brenner tornado” — for when the boss begins to get irritated.

“Emotional, mental, and psychologi­cal abuse”

On March 28, the American Federation of Government Employees Local 2241 — the union representi­ng MIRECC employees — sent a seven-page memo to the VA’S executive leadership.

The report, compiled from over 28 respondent­s, outlines “several concerning themes and similariti­es which have been revealed to the union regarding Dr. Brenner and her leadership in MIRECC.”

Fifteen staffers said they do not feel safe “due to the emotional, mental, and psychologi­cal abuse exhibited” by Brenner. Eleven people said she creates a toxic environmen­t and culture. Fourteen said she instills a culture of fear in employees and “threatens employment to control them.” Eight said Brenner is manipulati­ve. Twenty-one said they have been embarrasse­d, humiliated or called out in front of others. Six called her “narcissist­ic.”

Others told the union that Brenner retaliates against employees by removing them from assigned projects, withholdin­g step increases and earned bonuses and denying promotions.

“Dr. Brenner is well known in the community,” the memo states. “Constant fear by staff that she will ruin your career if you upset her or if she feels she has been betrayed by you.”

Nine people told the union that Brenner, despite working in suicide prevention, discourage­s mental health treatment for employees. She views mental health “as not important and as being weak and vulnerable for staff to engage in,” the memo states.

“You didn’t feel that was supported,” Holliman, a former employee, said. “It would have been laughed at.”

The union’s report also alleges Brenner mixes personal travel and business. The director allegedly used a government vehicle on trips to visit family and has been known to upgrade flights to first class, the union said. Brenner was also accused of misusing funds on trips to cover non-work expenses.

Staff had valid concerns about the risk to their careers if the issues persist, the memo states.

The union requested the VA’S executive leadership initiate a formal thirdparty, impartial investigat­ion. The memo made its way to Kilmer, the VA’S Eastern Colorado director, who was reassigned in October amid oversight investigat­ions. The memo also went to the VA’S regional Rocky Mountain Network, which oversees several health care systems across the West.

In June, a union steward sent an email to members, saying the executive leadership was unable to move forward with an investigat­ion due to the anonymous nature of the allegation­s. As a result, the union filed an anonymous complaint with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, an independen­t federal investigat­ive and prosecutor­ial agency.

An attorney with the federal agency told the union that month that they did not believe they could prove the MIRECC’S actions constitute­d a prohibited personnel practice.

Giuliano, the VA spokespers­on, told The Post this week that leadership is now investigat­ing the union’s concerns.

“Whenever there are allegation­s of wrongdoing, we investigat­e thoroughly and take appropriat­e action,” she said in a statement.

On Tuesday, a day after The Post sent a list of detailed questions to the VA about Brenner’s alleged behavior, Eastern Colorado’s interim chief of staff, Mark Kadowaki, sent an email to MIRECC staff.

Brenner, he said, has been detailed as deputy director for the VA’S national suicide prevention program to support the suicide prevention annual report. There she will continue her research and will be available to the Rocky Mountain MIRECC as an advisor for local suicide prevention efforts, Kadowaki said in the email, which was reviewed by The Post.

Dr. Nazanin Bahraini, the center’s director of research, will become acting director. She told staff in an email Tuesday afternoon that she realized “that this is an expected shift and many of you may have a lot of questions.”

“I will do my best to fill her shoes while she is on detail,” Bahraini wrote in the email, which was reviewed by The Post.

“It was horrifying”

The union’s memo doesn’t discuss racism. But multiple former Black employees told The Post they felt like they were treated differentl­y from their straight, white counterpar­ts . ...

White colleagues acknowledg­ed to The Post that they didn’t think the women of color were as supported as others in their ambitions.

Holliman and another former worker remember Brenner complainin­g that “everything would be so much easier if we could only hire straight white men.”

The implicatio­n, Holliman said, was that “diversity creates so many issues.”

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