Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Congress approves legislatio­n to ease firing of VA employees

- HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON — Congress approved long-sought legislatio­n Tuesday to make firing employees easier for the Department of Veterans Affairs, part of an effort urged by President Donald Trump to fix a struggling agency serving millions of veterans.

The House cleared the bill, 368-55, replacing an earlier version that Democrats had criticized as overly unfair to workers. Arkansas’ four congressme­n, all Republican­s, backed the measure.

The Senate passed the bipartisan legislatio­n by voice vote last week. It will go to Trump later this week for his signature.

The measure comes after a 2014 scandal at the Phoenix VA medical center, where some veterans died while waiting months for appointmen­ts. During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump promised to fire VA employees “who let our veterans down,” describing the government’s second-largest agency and its more than 350,000 employees as “the most corrupt” and “incompeten­t.”

The bill’s passage “is great news for veterans!” Trump tweeted Tuesday night. “I look forward to signing it!”

Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., who chairs the House Veterans Affairs Committee, described the legislatio­n as a necessary first step in overhaulin­g the VA. Congress will soon take up legislatio­n to give veterans expanded access to doctors outside the VA.

“For far too long, the failures of the bad actors have tarnished the good name of all VA employees,” Roe said. “No effort toward real, wholesale reform at the department will ever be successful absent a strong culture of accountabi­lity first.”

The House vote came as investigat­ions into possible collaborat­ion between the Trump campaign and Russia continued to hang over much of Washington, largely stalling the administra­tion’s biggest legislativ­e initiative­s. Attorney General Jeff Sessions testified Tuesday before a Senate panel on Russia contacts as House members took up the VA bill.

House leaders quickly touted progress on veterans’ issues.

“We’ve been talking about this for about three years. And we uncovered all the scandals at the VA. Now we’re making law,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “Now we’re getting the veterans the kind of response and the kind of accountabi­lity they earned and deserved.”

The bill was backed by VA Secretary David Shulkin, who called the employee accountabi­lity process “clearly broken.” It would lower the burden of proof to fire employees, allowing a dismissal even if most evidence is in a worker’s favor.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest federal employee union, opposed the bill. But the Senate-passed measure was viewed 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 appeal process than the House’s version — 180 days vs. 45 days. VA executives would be held to a tougher standard than rank-and-file employees.

The Senate bill also would turn a campaign promise of Trump’s into law. It would create a permanent VA accountabi­lity office, establishe­d in April by executive order.

The VA has been plagued for years by problems, including the 2014 scandal, where employees created secret lists to cover up delays in appointmen­ts. Critics say few employees are fired for malfeasanc­e.

After the bill passed the Senate last week, Trump urged the House on Twitter to “get this bill to my desk ASAP!” House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., promised to get it done this week.

Veterans’ groups cheered the bill.

“Veterans across the country can look forward to a new culture of accountabi­lity and integrity at the VA,” said Dan Caldwell, policy director of the conservati­ve Concerned Veterans for America, which lobbied for years to pass legislatio­n.

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