Showing posts sorted by relevance for query va budget. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query va budget. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2012

Overwhelmed VA didn't happen overnight

UPDATE
VA secretary vs. Obama and his lousy record on vets
By Jennifer Rubin
We noted yesterday that the president’s speech at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention was promptly undercut by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta. He wasn’t the only Cabinet member to contradict the president.
click link for more
Overwhelmed VA didn't happen overnight
by Chaplain Kathie
Wounded Times Blog
July 27, 2012

If you read this blog often you know I am far from happy with what has been going on with our veterans. I swear, if the general public knew half of what is really going on they would be screaming at every member of congress they elected since 2001!

The fact that two wars, Afghanistan and then Iraq, were never in the budget, or paid for until President Obama included them was a glaring indication of how little these wars mattered to the Congress. Everything was done with supplemental requests and we heard members of Congress tell the American public how important they were to be worth the risk to the men and women sent to fight in them and risk being killed or wounded for.

With all the talk about what a mess the VA is in, it is a good time to reflect on how it got as bad as it is. The bottom line is, it took Congress and two other Presidents to get things as bad as they are an another President trying to get something done with a Congress that won't do much at all. Not that President Obama is pushing as hard as he can to catch up but at least he's trying.

“The system is going to be overwhelmed,” Panetta said. “Let’s not kid ourselves. It’s already overwhelmed.”


Panetta, Shinseki acknowledge frustration in streamling military health care
Published: July 26

Secretary of Defense Leon E. Panetta and Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki acknowledged Wednesday that they have been frustrated by departmental bureaucracy in their attempts to streamline military health care for severely wounded service members.

At a rare joint appearance before the House Armed Services and House Veterans Affairs committees, the secretaries pointed to what they called unprecedented cooperation between their two departments in battling some of their most pressing problems, including the high rate of military suicide and the huge backlog of disability claims.

But they have been unable to consolidate separate VA and Department of Defense programs to coordinate the long-term recovery of seriously wounded service members, despite warnings from the Government Accountability Office that the proliferation of programs might increase red tape.

“Secretary Shinseki and I share the same frustration,” Panetta said in response to questioning from Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle (R-N.Y.) “We’ve been working on this, and frankly, we’ve been pushing, to try to say why can’t we get faster results, why can’t we get this done on a faster track.

“Bottom line is, frankly, we’re just going to have to kick ass and try to make it happen, and that’s what we’re going to do.”

Shinseki said the separate VA and defense programs “don’t quite harmonize” and that the issue remains under study, as it was last year. He said the departments hope to report back to Congress in several months on their efforts to eliminate duplication.

The Washington Post reported in November that despite the recommendations of the Dole-Shalala commission in 2007 to create a single point of contact to cut red tape for the most severely wounded service members, the Defense Department and the VA had created at least a dozen programs to coordinate care.
read more here



VA BUDGET FOR 2013
Major Appropriation Issues
Stewardship of Resources
 Supports management systems that ensure accountability, maximize efficiency and effectiveness, and eliminate waste while improving the delivery of high quality and timely benefits and services to Veterans.

Medical Care
 Secures timely, predictable funding for health care through 2014 with advance appropriations
 $1.352 billion (up $333 million) to further VA’s integrated plan to end Veteran homelessness, including $235 million for the Homeless Grants and Per Diem program to aid community organizations
 $6.2 billion (up $312 million) to expand inpatient, residential, and outpatient mental health programs
 $7.2 billion (up $550 million) to expand institutional and non- institutional long-term care services.
 $335 million (up $9 million) is for tele-home health to improve access to care
 $403 million (up $60 million) for the needs of women Veterans
 $3.3 billion (up $510 million) to meet the needs of over 610,000 Veterans returning from U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan

Veterans Job Corps
 A Presidential initiative of $1 billion over the next five years to establish a conservation program impacting up to 20,000 veterans to protect and rebuild America’s land and resources.

Benefits Claims Processing
$2.164 billion (up $145 million over 2012) to support improved benefits processing through increased staff, improved business processes, and information technology enhancements
Supports the completion of 1.4 million disability compensation and pension claims, a 36% increase over 2011
Provides funding to complete 4 million education claims, a 19% increase over 2011 National Cemetery Administration
 $258 million for operations and maintenance to ensure VA’s cemeteries are maintained as national shrines
 The budget provides funding to expand access to burial options for rural Veterans.

Information Technology
 80% of 2013 IT Budget supports direct delivery of medical care and benefits to Veterans
 Over $3.3 billion for a reliable and accessible IT infrastructure, a high-performing workforce, and modernized information systems for Veteran services and benefits
 $53 million for development and implementation of the Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record (VLER) initiative
 $169 million for integrated Electronic Healthcare Record (iEHR), a joint effort with DoD to share health information
 $128 million for paperless claims processing system VBMS Construction
 Supports four major medical facility projects already underway. Entitlement Benefits
 $76.3 billion for mandatory benefits, including compensation for Agent Orange presumptive conditions and Post-9/11 GI Bill education benefits

The really interesting thing is what happened for the 2003 budget when troops had been in Afghanistan for a year when the budget was being calculated. Remember, budgets are done a year before by whatever President/Congress is in office.

Administration Announces FY 2003 Budget
Taken from the Veterans Health Administration Highlights
dated February 8, 2002

VA Secretary Anthony J. Principi announced details of President Bush’s proposed $58 billion VA budget, which recommends $25.5 billion for the VA health care system.
Other features of the proposed budget include:
An almost $366 million increase for pharmaceuticals, that would bring the total to $2.9 billion in 2003
$409 million for medical and prosthetics research, a $38 million increase from this year’s spending level
$537 million for construction and grants

The FY 2003 budget proposes to establish a $1,500 yearly deductible for medical services for higher income, non-service-connected veterans. This would not be a standard deductible that must be paid upfront. The veteran would be charged 45 percent of VA’s "reasonable charges" each time care is provided until the $1,500 annual ceiling for deductible expenses is reached.

If the veteran has third-party health insurance, VA would bill the insurance company first, for the full cost of care. Payments from the insurance companies would be applied to the deductible amount owed by the veteran.

Medication copayments would not count toward the deductible amount, but would be charged at the existing rate of $7 for each 30-day prescription. Deductible charges would not be made for visits for preventive care only. After the $1,500 deductible limit is met, the veteran would then pay the normal copayments that are charged for outpatient and inpatient care.

"This initiative denies care to no one. It does ask those veterans who have the means and who incurred no disabilities on active duty, to pay a larger portion of their health care," Secretary Principi said. "That seems fair to me and allows VA to provide the best care possible to our higher priority veterans."


Listen to this hearing on the 2003 Budget
"208 days for claims to be processed." Senator Nelson Rockefeller.


By 2007 the VA was in such a mess that this happened.

U.S. Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson Quits
By Neil Roland
July 17, 2007
(Bloomberg)

Jim Nicholson, the U.S. secretary of veterans affairs, will resign by Oct. 1 after heading a health- care network that is sagging under the weight of returning combatants from Iraq and Afghanistan.

``I feel it is time for me to get back into business, while I still can,'' Nicholson, a member of President George W. Bush's cabinet, said in an e-mailed Veterans Affairs Department statement.

Nicholson, 69, who served in Vietnam, has headed the $77 billion Veterans Affairs Department since February 2005, a month after Bush's second term began. He was U.S. ambassador to the Vatican during Bush's first term, and before that was chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1997 to 2000. In the private sector, he had run a residential development and construction company.

The VA's network of 1,400 medical centers, clinics and nursing homes has been criticized by Democratic lawmakers who said last month it hasn't done enough to care for 263,000 returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

Had Congress actually kept up with funding for what was needed, the veterans would not be suffering the way they are now.
Senate Committee Veterans Affairs
Veterans' Hospitals Consolidation and Closure
September 11, 2003

Witnesses testified about a proposal to scale back, consolidate or close selected Veterans' Administration health care facilities.




The other issue here is that while the VA budget during the Bush Administration was increasing disabled veterans from 2001 when troops were sent into Afghanistan and 2003 when more were added from Iraq, the VA was never fully funded to be ahead of the influx of more wounded coming home.

President Bush's first budget was not for 2001 when he was inaugurated. His first budget took affect in 2002 after troops went into Afghanistan.

That is the biggest thing that keeps getting missed in all of this. President Obama has been slammed lately primarily by the people who caused the problem in the first place,,,,Congress.

As you can see with veterans from two wars getting wounded, surviving at a higher percentage than ever before, along with Vietnam Veterans finally having the ability to go to the VA with Agent Orange and PTSD claims, Congress didn't keep up with the money needed to do it.

Now think of this.
2001 President Clinton's Budget (Bush's First term)
VA's 2001 budget would provide $48 billion for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, 2000.

2002 President Bush's Budget
The 2002 budget provides $23,378 million in discretionary funding for veterans health, benefits, and other services, including $23,998 million in gross discretionary budget authority and $620 million in anticipated discretionary medical collections.
This funding level recognizes that an estimated $235 million of current medical care liabilities will shift to the Department of Defense due to new benefits available to military retirees over age 64.


Last year, VA treated 1.4 million more veterans with 20,000 fewer employees than in 1996," said Principi. January 17, 2003

2003 President Bush's Budget
2004 President Bush's Budget
2004 Budget includes a total of $63.6 billion for VA -- $30.2 billion in discretionary funding (mostly for health care) and $33.4 billion for VA-administered entitlement programs (mostly disability compensation and pensions). The budget includes $225 million in new construction funding for VA's nationwide infrastructure initiative (CARES) to ensure that VA can put services where veterans live.

2005 President Bush's Budget
2006 President Bush's Budget
2007 President Bush's Budget
2008 President Bush's Budget
2009 President Bush's Budget (Obama's first term)

2009: $97.7 billion (total including collections) -- $50.4 billion in discretionary funding (including collections, not including ARRA funds) and $47.3 billion in mandatory funding

2010 President Obama's Budget
2010 Budget: $112.8 billion (total including collections) – $55.9 billion in discretionary funding (including collections) and $56.9 billion in mandatory funding

2011 President Obama's Budget
Department of Veterans Affairs Budget Request for Fiscal Year 2011 and Fiscal Year 2012.
The President has requested a budget for VA of $125 billion, including a total discretionary resource request of $60.3 billion. VA medical care represents 86 percent of the total discretionary request. For fiscal year 2011, the Administration is requesting $51.5 billion in resources for VA medical care. Appropriated resources for medical care for fiscal year 2011 have already been provided in last year’s Consolidated Appropriations Act. This funding level is an increase of $4.1 billion, or 8.6 percent over fiscal year 2010 levels.

2012 President Obama's Budget


This gives you some idea of what the media consistently fails to do. Remind people that the problems with the VA didn't start this year. They start when there is a failure to plan ahead.

Friday, May 8, 2009

President Obama taking care of Florida's veterans and all veterans

President Obama’s 2010 Spending Plan Initiates Transformation for VA Services

May 7, 2009
Record Budget Enhances VA’s Ability to Become a 21st Century Organization

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced President Obama’s 2010 budget for VA. The budget emphasizes a Veteran-centric commitment to expanded services with a 15.5 percent increase over 2009, the largest percentage increase for VA requested by a president in more than 30 years.

“Our 2010 budget represents the President’s vision for how VA will transform into a 21st Century organization that is Veteran-centric, results-driven, and forward-looking,” Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki said. “This transformation is demanded by new times, new technologies, new demographic realities, and new commitments to today’s Veterans. It requires a comprehensive review of the fundamentals in every line of operation the Department performs. We must be sure that valuable taxpayer dollars are invested in programs that work for our Veterans.”

The centerpiece of the $112.8 billion VA budget proposal is a dramatic increase in Veteran health care funding, with an 11 percent increase over the current year's funding (excluding one-time Recovery Act funds).

“Organizational transformation requires changes in culture, systems, and training,” Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs W. Scott Gould said. “This will require resources, but it will also demand commitment and teamwork. The entire Department is dedicated to serving the needs of Veterans, and every VA employee has a stake in transformation to meet those needs.”

That transformation is already underway. For instance, the enhanced use of automated tools, coupled with more efficient processes, recent staffing increases, and improved training is expected to reduce the compensation and pension claims processing time to 150 days in 2010, or 16 percent faster compared to 2008, while reducing the pending inventory and improving accuracy. VA anticipates an 8 percent increase in education claims in 2010 compared to this year due largely to the improved education benefits of the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act. Nonetheless, VA's goal is to complete all education claims without any increase in average processing days.

“We are making the smart choices today to improve the services that our Veterans receive tomorrow,” Secretary Shinseki said.

VA’s budget request contains four major categories of activities. These activities include: creating a reliable management infrastructure, delivering ongoing services, making progress on Departmental priorities, and instituting new initiatives critical to meeting the needs of Veterans now and in the future.

Nearly two-thirds of the increase ($9.6 billion) would go to mandatory programs (up 20 percent); the remaining third ($5.6 billion) would be discretionary funding (up 11 percent). The total budget would be almost evenly split between mandatory funding ($56.9 billion) and discretionary funding ($55.9 billion).

VA's new budget request provides for an estimated 122,000 more patients to be treated over the current year. Many of these patients will have multiple visits in the course of the year. VA expects to end fiscal year 2010 with nearly 6.1 million individual patients having received care, including 419,000 Veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan war zones who separated from service.

“VA has too often in the past been seen as difficult and bureaucratic as it relates to its charge of providing for our Nation’s Veterans,” Secretary Shinseki said. “Changing that perception will require a significant transformation. We will not nibble at the edges of this change. We must be bold and demand that we begin immediately showing measurable returns on investment in a responsible, accountable and transparent manner.”

The budget supports the administration's goal to gradually expand health care eligibility to more than 500,000 new enrollees by 2013, while maintaining excellent care quality and timeliness. In 2010, the transformation of VA health care will support scheduling of 98 percent of primary care appointments within a month of the desired date.

The new budget proposal places a high priority on initiatives aimed at making servicemembers' transition to civilian life and VA benefits seamless. This includes the President's initiative for VA and the Department of Defense to collaboratively develop and implement a joint “Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record."

The new system supports the administration's initiative for a uniform registration of all servicemembers with VA, will improve delivery of benefits by assuring availability of medical and administrative data useful both in future medical care as well as in the determination of service-connection in disability ratings.

“The Department’s number one priority is providing for our Veterans,” Deputy Secretary Gould said. “We have an obligation to make sure that every dollar goes to delivering timely, high-quality benefits and services to our clients—the Veterans. A strong corporate model will enable decentralized provision of services at VA by professionals in the field while providing integrated policy and coordination through a central office.”

The fiscal year 2010 VA budget fosters strong support for Veteran-focused information technology, providing more than $3.3 billion to ensure reliable, accessible and secure computer systems. In addition to improvements in VA's electronic health records, this investment will support the President's goal of making claims decisions timely, fair, and consistent with the extension of a new paperless processing initiative expected to lead to an electronically based benefits system by 2012.

VA-managed national cemeteries will be preserved as shrines while maintaining the current high level of service. The National Cemetery Administration would receive $242 million in operations and maintenance funding in the fiscal year 2010 request. The budget provides for activation of three new national cemeteries, Bakersfield National Cemetery in California, Alabama National Cemetery near Birmingham, and Washington Crossing National Cemetery in southeastern Pennsylvania. VA expects to perform 111,500 interments in 2010, a four-percent increase from the estimate for the current year.

The President's budget for construction projects and other capital programs in VA is more than $1.9 billion. This continues work on five major medical projects already in progress, begins seven new ones, and provides resources to support the cemetery system's expansion needs, including resources for improvements at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood, Illinois, and Houston National Cemetery.

It also contains $600 million for minor construction projects, $85 million in grants for construction of state extended care facilities, and $42 million in grants for state Veterans cemeteries.

The seven new medical facility projects move VA towards new construction or renovations at VA medical facilities in Brockton, Massachusetts; Canandaigua, New York; Livermore, California; Long Beach, California; Perry Point, Maryland; San Diego, California; and St. Louis, Missouri.

Capital funds also will support ongoing improvements at medical centers in Bay Pines, Florida; Denver, Colorado; Orlando, Florida; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and St. Louis, Missouri.


People wishing to receive e-mail from VA with the latest news releases and updated fact sheets can subscribe to the VA Office of Public Affairs Distribution List.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Today's VA news reports tied to past sins

Reporters forget about how we got into this mess in the first place with VA claims. But that isn't anything new. I was going over my older blog looking for reports to counter another report that is wrong but no one is challenging when I came across this. It goes back to 2006 and has contributed to the suffering of too many veterans because sending men and women into combat never seems to include them getting wounded or becoming veterans in need of care.
VA Budget Request 2007: The 'Good, the Bad and the Foggy,' Says the American Legion
Ramona E. Joyce, Joe March
American Legion
U.S. Newswire (press release)
Feb 08, 2006

President Bush's VA budget request for 2007 has been hailed for adding nearly $3 billion in real appropriations for veterans health care, compared to 2006. "That," said American Legion National Commander Thomas L. Bock, "is the good."

However, he added, it's a budget request built on charging new annual enrollment fees for VA care, nearly doubling drug co- payments and driving 1.2 million veterans out of the system created specifically for them.

"That," Bock explained, "is the bad."

Bock added that the budget request still relies on $1.1 billion in cost-saving "efficiencies" -- the subject of a Government Accountability Office report released last week that criticized past VA health-care projections from the president's Office of Management and Budget -- and also how realistic it is for the president to expect dramatic improvements in VA's ability to collect payments from insurance companies, especially since VA is prohibited by Congress to bill Medicare.

"Those are some of the foggy parts," Bock said.

Overall, Bock said the 2007 budget request from the White House appears to be an improvement over previous years when VA health care suffered due to inaccurate patient-demand projections, faulty assumptions, budgets offset by nebulous "management efficiencies" and unattainable third-party collections.

"This budget request indeed has glitter," Bock said. "But I am not yet sure how much of it is gold. It is a budget request that appears to table long-needed construction dollars, particularly in the area of grants for state veterans homes and leaves CARES (Capital Asset Realignment for Enhanced Services) under-funded again. It takes a $13 million bite out of VA research. It also fails to provide sufficient funds for staffing and training in the Veterans Benefits Administration to address a claims backlog fast approaching one million."

Bock said he sees the estimate of 109,000 new VA patients in 2007 from operations in Iraq and Afghanistan as a step toward better forecasting. "The under-estimated number of VA patients from the ongoing war contributed mightily to the $1.5 billion budget shortfall for VA health care in 2005," Bock said. "This appears to address that." He also applauded a requested increase in mental-health-care funding, from $2.8 billion to $3.2 billion.

The commander reiterated that he cannot accept a budget that deliberately aims to send more than one million veterans out of the VA system in search of health care elsewhere. A chart in the president's budget request anticipates approximately 1.2 million fewer veterans in Priority Groups 7 and 8 in 2007. Those groups are forced in this budget request to pay new $250 enrollment fees and nearly double in pharmaceutical co-payments.

"I know many, many veterans in Groups 7 and 8 who have five, seven, 10 or more prescriptions," Bock said.

"Doubling their co-payments, while they are trying to get by on fixed incomes or small pensions, is enough to break them. I cannot abide by a policy that pits veterans against veterans where the government decides who shall have care and who shall be denied."

Bock said the 2.7 million-member American Legion stands firm in its position that the only way VA health care can avoid annual shortages and broken promises is by changing the funding formula. "Assured or mandatory funding would keep all the veterans who earned VA care in the system," Bock said. "VA health care must be funded on a dollars-per-veteran basis, indexed annually for inflation, with the ability to bill Medicare for reimbursement."

The president's request also weighs in with what Bock calls a "highly ambitious" increase in third-party collections from insurance companies. "VA's estimate for third-party collections in 2006 was ambitious at just over $2 billion," Bock said. "This budget request envisions almost $800 million more than that."

Even House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Steve Buyer, R- Ind., would consider the collection of nearly $3 billion from insurance companies an ambitious goal. Buyer noted in early 2005 that VA's collection assumptions were "proven to be in error. The VA has $3 billion in uncollected debts." "Veterans should not be targeted," Bock said. "I call on Chairman Buyer in this week's hearings to give VA health care a funding formula that cuts through the fog and assures veterans the health-care system they deserve."
As you can see we didn't get into this mess overnight and that is the biggest problem of all.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

President's 2010 Budget Request Strongly Supports VA Programs

Recent VA News Releases



To view and download VA news release, please visit the following
Internet address:

http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel






President's 2010 Budget Request Strongly Supports VA Programs

Funding Plan Improves Access, Modernizes Technology



WASHINGTON (Feb. 26, 2009) - President Obama's first proposed budget for
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) expands eligibility for health
care to an additional 500,000 deserving Veterans over the next five
years, meets the need for continued growth in programs for the combat
Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, and provides the resources to deliver
quality health care for the Nation's 5.5 million Veteran patients.



The 2010 budget request is a significant step toward realizing a vision
shared by the President and Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K.
Shinseki to transform VA into an organization that is people-centric,
results-driven and forward-looking.



"Our success must encompass cost-effectiveness," Shinseki said. "We are
stewards of taxpayer dollars, and we will include appropriate metrics to
accurately gauge the quality of our care and the effectiveness of our
management processes."



If accepted by Congress, the President's budget proposal would increase
VA's budget from $97.7 billion this fiscal year to $112.8 billion for
the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, 2009. This is in addition to the $1.4
billion provided for VA projects in the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009.



The 2010 budget represents the first step toward increasing
discretionary funding for VA efforts by $25 billion over the next five
years. The gradual expansion in health care enrollment that this would
support will open hospital and clinic doors to more than 500,000
Veterans by 2013 who have been regrettably excluded from VA medical care
benefits since 2003. The 2010 budget request provides the resources to
achieve this level of service while maintaining high quality and timely
care for lower-income and service-disabled Veterans who currently rely
on VA medical care.



The new budget provides greater benefits for Veterans who are medically
retired from active duty, allowing for the first time all military
retirees to keep their full VA disability compensation along with their
retired pay. The President's budget request also provides the resources
for effective implementation of the post-9/11 GI Bill -- providing
unprecedented levels of educational support to the men and women who
have served our country through active military duty.



The new budget will support additional specialty care in such areas as
prosthetics, vision and spinal cord injury, aging, and women's health.
New VA Centers of Excellence will focus on improving these critical
services.



The proposed fiscal year 2010 budget also addresses the tragic fact of
homelessness among Veterans. It expands VA's current services through a
collaborative pilot program with non-profit organizations that is aimed
at maintaining stable housing for vulnerable Veterans at risk of
homelessness, while providing them with supportive services to help them
get back on their feet through job training, preventive care, and other
critical services.



Finally, the President's budget request provides the necessary
investments to carry VA services to rural communities that are too often
unable to access VA care. The President's budget expands VA mental
health screening and treatment with a focus on reaching Veterans in
rural areas in part through an increase in Vet Centers and mobile health
clinics. New outreach funding will help rural Veterans and their
families stay informed of these resources and encourage them to pursue
needed care.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

VA Budget Short $3 Million or Billion?

The headline was $3 Million but as you read the article, you see it was more like $3 Billion,


Department of Veterans Affairs reveals last minute $3 million budget shortfall
by Continuous News Desk
Posted: 07.28.2015
"The VA's not managed well I think, because they should have asked for that a long time ago," he said.

Congressman Jeff Miller who chairs the House Veteran's Affairs committee agrees.

"Unfortunately, the VA waited to the last minute to inform us before the August recess that they now have a $2.6 billion budget shortfall," says Miller.

But that isn't anything new. The claim about "last minute" isn't true either.

This was posted back in April
Last week, the House Appropriations Subcommittee marked up the 2016 Veterans Affairs funding bill, and slashed more than $1.4 billion from the president’s requested budget for America’s Veterans. Today, VA Secretary Bob McDonald appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee to discuss that budget proposal.

This came out in June
Hearing on VA Budget Shortfall
June 26, 2015 - FRA
The House Veterans Affairs Committee (HVAC) held a hearing to review how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) could have a $2.6 billion budget shortfall for the current fiscal year (FY 2015). The VA claimed that the shortfall is mainly because of increased demand by veterans for health care, including new life-saving treatments for Hepatitis C.
Hmm,,,that was "last minute" before August recess?


VA Budget Shortfall Again No Big Shocker To Us takes a look at the shortfall going back to 1985. It is really odd how $3 billion number keeps popping up and heads of members of Congress claim to be so upset over it,,,,over and over again.

2008
Vietnam Veterans of America: President Bush's VA Budget is $3 Billion Short

February 13, 2008 - "The annual exercise of debating the merits of the President's proposed budget is flawed," said John Rowan, National President of Vietnam Veterans of America, before the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs. "Medical Center directors should not be held in limbo as Congress adjusts this budget and misses, yet again, the start of the fiscal year.

"These public servants can be more effective and efficient managers if they are able to properly plan for the funding needed to care for their patients. We ask that you consider an immediate alternative to the broken system we currently have," Rowan said.

Rowan characterized as "inadequate" the FY'09 request for $2.34 billion more than the FY'08 appropriation. This "barely keeps up with inflation" and "will not allow the Department of Veterans Affairs to continue enhancing its physical and mental health care services for returning veterans, restore needed long-term care programs for aging veterans, or allow working-class veterans to return to their health care system."

2009
$3.6 billion hike urged for VA health care
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Feb 6, 2009

Four leading veterans groups called Friday for a $4.5 billion increase in veterans programs, including $3.6 billion for health care.

This is an even bigger increase than the groups asked for a year ago, and puts added pressure on President Barack Obama to keep campaign promises for full funding of Veterans Affairs Department programs.

The increase, which would result in a $54.6 billion discretionary VA budget, comes in the so-called “independent budget” prepared each year by AmVets, Disabled American Veterans, Paralyzed Veterans of America and Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Veterans suffer when no one wants to pay the price for them

Too many years of hearing some people talk about "supporting the troops but they are just nowhere to be found when it really comes to doing it. The worst part is, the general public has just accepted words while demanding no proof.

"It's time to come together and support our great American men and women in uniform and their commander-in-chief," said Sen. Joseph Lieberman, a contender for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination. He has been among the most supportive in his party of a possible military strike against Iraq.
Tom Delay, in the same report said that "suggesting that lawmakers keep any thoughts of disagreement to themselves" in other words, the debate about sending men and women into another war was not worthy of debate. What did he think was worthy of debating if not the fact men and women sent would die?

It seems they didn't plan for the National Guards or Reservists.

Landrieu Amendment to Supplemental Appropriations Act to Support Department of Defense Operations in Iraq for Fiscal Year 2003
The amendment, proposed by Sen. Mary Landrieu, would have appropriated $1 billion to procurement for the National Guard and Reserves. The amendment was intended to fill a Guard and Reserve shortage of "helmets, tents, bullet-proof inserts, and tactical vests" and "chemical and biological protective gear". Landrieu based the $1 billion on National Guard and Reserve Unfunded Requirement lists. The amendment would offset the $1 billion appropriation with a $1 billion reduction in President Bush's tax cuts

Supplemental Appropriations Act to Support Department of Defense Operations in Iraq for Fiscal Year 2003
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Ted Stevens, includes an appropriation of $603 million for "force protection gear and combat clothing"

Dodd Amendment to Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan Security and Reconstruction Act, 2004
The amendment, offered by Sen. Chris Dodd, would have added $322 million to the $300 million already appropriated towards the purchase of "high-tech body armor, bullet-proof helmets, special water packs to keep soldiers hydrated, and other survival gear.

Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan Security and Reconstruction Act, 2004
The bill, proposed by Sen. Ted Stevens, includes $300 million in appropriations for the purchase of body armor for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005
The bill, sponsored by Sen. John Warner, reported out of conference committee with $435 million in appropriations for individual body armor.
While congress approved of making more disabled veterans in 2001 with troops sent into Afghanistan, they were not even willing to pay for the veterans we already had.
Budget Proposed for Fiscal Year 2003
The latest projection from the Department of Veterans Affairs is that almost 700,000 more veterans will receive VA care in 2003 than had been projected last year for 2002. The hundreds of VA community outpatient clinics opened over the last six years, as well as the prescription drug benefit that provides a 30-day supply of medication for a modest $7 copayment, have produced an unprecedented increase in veterans using the VA health care system. The nation’s 25 million veterans, particularly its elderly veterans who saw service during World War II and the Korean War, are voting with their feet for VA health care, and the VA system is being overwhelmed.

Last November, the Administration was considering whether to deny health care to Priority 7 veterans in response to a funding shortfall caused by errors in estimating the number of veterans who would seek VA health care. Fortunately, the Administration decided to seek the necessary funds in a supplemental appropriation, however Congress has not yet received their request. As a result, the Department of Veterans Affairs is short at least $300 million in the current fiscal year, and this demand-based shortfall must also be covered in the FY 2003 budget by adding an additional $300 million.

President Bush's request was too low for the veterans we already had and not many were talking about the new ones being created at the same time they were talking about budget shortfalls and not talking about it half as much as others in congress were talking tax cuts for the wealthy.




VA Announces Record Budget, Health Care Changes
January 17, 2003


WASHINGTON – Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony J. Principi today announced a record increase in the budget for Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical care, the annual decision required by law (PL 104-262) on health care enrollment and a new plan between VA and the Department of Health and Human Services for a program that will allow eligible veterans to use their Medicare benefits for VA care.

The President's FY 2004 Budget includes a total of $63.6 billion for VA -- $30.2 billion in discretionary funding (mostly for health care) and $33.4 billion for VA-administered entitlement programs (mostly disability compensation and pensions). The budget includes $225 million in new construction funding for VA's nationwide infrastructure initiative (CARES) to ensure that VA can put services where veterans live.

"VA is maintaining its focus on the health care needs of its core group of veterans – those with service-connected disabilities, the indigent and those with special health care needs," Principi said.

"We're able to do so because of the generous budget proposed by President Bush for fiscal year 2004, beginning Oct. 1, 2003. It will be 7.7 percent more for health care than the expected FY 2003 budget. This would be the largest requested increase in VA history,' he said.

In order to ensure VA has capacity to care for veterans for whom our Nation has the greatest obligation – military-related disabilities, lower-income veterans or those needing specialized care like veterans who are blind or have spinal cord injuries -- Principi has suspended additional enrollments for veterans with the lowest statutory priority. This category includes veterans who are not being compensated for a military-related disability and who have higher incomes.

The suspension of enrollment affects only veterans in Priority Group 8, the lowest group in VA's eight-level system for setting health care priorities, who have not enrolled in VA's health care system by January 17. Priority Group 8 veterans already enrolled will be "grandfathered" and allowed to continue in VA's health care system.

Work is underway with the Department of Health and Human Services to determine how to give Priority Group 8 veterans aged 65 or older who cannot enroll in VA's health care system access to the "VA+Choice Medicare" plan. The plan calls for VA to participate as a Medicare+Choice provider. Eligible veterans would be able to use their Medicare benefits to obtain care from VA.

In return, VA would receive payments from a private health plan contracting with Medicare that would cover costs. The "VA+Choice Medicare" plan would become effective later this year as details are finalized between VA and the Department of Health and Human Services.

"HHS is happy to join the Department of Veterans Affairs in developing this new option for veterans who might otherwise be unable to obtain health care through the VA," said HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson. "This is a creative marriage of our federal health programs to serve our veterans efficiently and effectively."

VA has been unable to provide all enrolled veterans with timely access to health care services because of the tremendous growth in the number of veterans seeking VA health care. More than half of all new enrollees have been in Priority Group 8. This demand for VA health care is expected to continue in the future.

Between October 2001 and September 2002, VA enrolled 830,000 additional veterans. Since 1996, VA enrollment has increased from 2.9 million to 6.8 million today. Non-service disabled, higher income veterans accounted for the majority of the rapid enrollment growth, hindering the ability of VA to care for the service-disabled, the indigent and those with special needs. Even with the suspension of new enrollments for Priority Group 8 veterans, another 380,000 veterans in Priority Groups 1 through 7 are projected to enroll by the end of FY 2003.

"Last year, VA treated 1.4 million more veterans with 20,000 fewer employees than in 1996," said Principi. "Nonetheless, VA leads the nation in many important areas like patient safety, computerized patient records, telemedicine, rehabilitation and research. I not only want to see this standard continue, I intend to see it get even better."

Congress mandated in 1996 that VA establish an enrollment system to manage hospital and outpatient care within budgetary limits and to provide quality care to those enrolled. By law, the VA secretary must decide annually whether to maintain enrollment for all veterans.

"With this record budget increase, I expect access to medical facilities for severely disabled veterans to improve, along with a reduction in waiting times for all veterans,' Principi said.
But then there was a lot of talk about how Bush cut the VA Budget. Some said he didn't but when you factor in the rise of healthcare costs, the increased number of veterans along with everything else, this is how they hid the fact the budget was equal to an actual cut.
This is from Factcheck.org
In Bush’s first three years funding for the Veterans Administration increased 27%. And if Bush's 2005 budget is approved, funding for his full four-year term will amount to an increase of 37.6%.

In the eight years of the Clinton administration the increase was 31.7%

Those figures include mandatory spending for such things as payments to veterans for service-connected disabilities, over which Congress and presidents have little control. But Bush has increased the discretionary portion of veterans funding even more than the mandatory portion has increased. Discretionary funding under Bush is up 30.2%.
Clinton didn't have two wars going on creating more veterans needing to be taken care of.


Closing the "Shortfall" in
President Bush's 2009 VA Budget Report
AMVETS IS URGING CONGRESS TO CLOSE A THREE-BILLION-DOLLAR SHORTFALL IN PRESIDENT BUSH'S 2009 V-A BUDGET. ACCORDING TO "THE INDEPENDENT BUDGET"-
AMVETS IS URGING CONGRESS TO CLOSE A THREE-BILLION-DOLLAR SHORTFALL IN PRESIDENT BUSH'S 2009 V-A BUDGET. ACCORDING TO "THE INDEPENDENT BUDGET"--WHICH IS CO-AUTHORED BY AMVETS, DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS, PARALYZED VETERANS OF AMERICA, AND VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS--THE ADMINISTRATION'S FUNDING RECOMMENDATIONS FALL SHORT IN FOUR VITAL AREAS: HEALTH CARE, MEDICAL AND PROSTHETICS RESEARCH, VETERANS BENEFITS, AND CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMS. AMVETS NATIONAL COMMANDER, J-P BROWN, THE THIRD, DISCUSSES THE IMPACT OF THE BUDGET SHORTFALL...

(BROWN):
"AS YOU KNOW, NOT ENOUGH MONEY FOR HEALTH-CARE SERVICES MEANS THAT FEWER SERVICES WILL BE AVAILABLE TO DEAL WITH TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY, POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER, VISUAL AND HEARING IMPAIRMENT, AND SPINAL-CORD INJURY. INADEQUATE FUNDING FOR RESEARCH MEANS THAT VETERANS WITH EITHER LOSS OF LIMBS OR SPINAL-CORD INJURIES MAY NOT REALIZE THE PROMISE OF MOBILITY, INDEPENDENCE, AND A BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE. A LACK OF INVESTMENT IN A BETTER AND FASTER CLAIMS SYSTEM MEANS THAT THE CURRENT BACKLOG OF 870-THOUSAND CLAIMS AND APPEALS WILL GROW EVEN BIGGER, AS OUR BRAVE HEROES RETURN FROM WAR. AND THE HUGE GAP IN CONSTRUCTION FUNDING MEANS THAT, FOR MANY VETERANS, SERVICES COULD BE OUT OF REACH. CONGRESS CANNOT FUND A WAR, WITHOUT ALSO PROVIDING FOR THE NEEDS OF THE WAR-FIGHTER; TELL YOUR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS TO FULLY IMPLEMENT 'THE INDEPENDENT BUDGET'."

No one wanted to pay for the veterans back then and they ended up paying the price for a lot of talk about "supporting the troops" and caring about our veterans. So now we have more waiting for the care they were promised, more ending up giving up hope of that help and more ending up homeless.
Orlando VA struggles to meet needs of rising tide of homeless vets
Pastor Scott Billue, who runs Matthew's Hope for the homeless in Winter Garden, applauds the effort. Since opening his ministry a year ago, he has helped some veterans reach out for help, including one who finally sought treatment for alcoholism after decades of drinking. But he also has buried a 50-year-old homeless Marine who lapsed into depression and hanged himself.

"Part of the problem is that the system is just overwhelmed," he said. "I realize our country's broke. But if you're going to send them over into harm's way, you'd better be prepared to take care of them when they come home."

By Kate Santich, Orlando Sentinel
March 13, 2011
Christopher O'Connor looks as if he just stepped out of a Marine Corps recruiting poster — the classic crew cut, the thickly muscled torso, the angular jaw — until the Orlando veteran rolls up his pants leg.

On his flesh are the distinctive circular scars of shrapnel wounds, welling up in spots where the metal is still lodged. On the eve of his 20th birthday, O'Connor was patrolling the streets of Fallujah, Iraq, when a remote-detonated IED exploded a few feet away. The blast left him with traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder and a left leg damaged so badly it was nearly amputated.

By age 21, he was retired from the Marines, working as a car salesman and buying a town house in Kissimmee.

A year later, he was unemployed, drinking too much and homeless — part of a growing population of Central Florida veterans who drift from sofa to sofa or wind up in homeless shelters, on the streets or pitching a tent in the woods.

"When I got out, they gave me a retired ID, and they pretty much just said, 'Thanks for your service,' " O'Connor said recently. "And, actually, I don't know if they really said 'thanks.' I had no idea how seriously injured I was."

Florida has the second-largest population of homeless veterans in the nation, behind California. And though some areas of the country have been working on the issue for more than 20 years, in Orlando the Department of Veterans Affairs didn't begin addressing the problem until 2007. It's now trying to play catch-up.

As a consequence, from 2008 to 2010, the population of homeless veterans in Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties nearly doubled — to 1,250. Most live completely outside the system that might help them, avoiding shelters and unaided by housing programs or counseling from the VA. Three-quarters live on the streets, in abandoned buildings or cars or in camps.

More troublesome, some homeless advocates argue, is that they may be only the first wave of a flood of homeless veterans to come: soldiers from the War on Terror.

"It's going to get worse before it gets better," said Cathy Jackson, executive director of the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida. "The period from military discharge to homelessness has accelerated dramatically. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that in the next three years there's going to be a surge in our numbers."
read more here
Orlando VA struggles to meet needs of rising tide of homeless vets

You can wish to think this nation cares about our troops and our veterans, but that care is limited to how much we demand the elected pay them back for putting their lives on the line instead of finding excuses for not doing it.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

VA Budget Shortfall Again No Big Shocker To Us

VA: Two agency officials retired ahead of in-house reprimand
VA also embarrassed by $2.5 billion cq budget shortfall as it tries to deliver healthcare to veterans
The Denver Post
By Mark K. Matthews
POSTED: 06/25/2015

WASHINGTON — Two top Veterans Affairs officials retired from the department this spring just as an investigative board was preparing to lambaste them for their role in the disastrous effort to build a VA hospital in Aurora, Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson said Thursday at a U.S. House hearing.

But now that attorney Phillipa Anderson and construction chief Glenn Haggstrom have left the Department of Veterans Affairs, it is unlikely they will face any punishment for their part in developing the over-budget medical complex. It's now estimated to cost $1.73 billion.

Gibson said the wrongdoing was not criminal in nature and that it's impossible to take administrative action — such as demotion or suspension — against people who no longer work at the VA.

"Once a person is resigned or retired, they are no longer an employee and we have no basis for taking any disciplinary action," Gibson said in an interview.

The admission did not sit well with members of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, which organized the hearing to examine budget problems at the sprawling government agency.

"Years-late, bureaucratic knuckle-rapping will not suffice for accountability, especially when the two officials retired unscathed with their full pensions and bonuses," U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Aurora, said in a statement.
read more here

Sorry but I can't stop laughing at this part.
"Lawmakers were incredulous at both the size and the late notice of the shortfall — the federal fiscal year ends Sept. 30 — and they took the VA to task for its budget management."

1985
President Reagan's draft budget for the fiscal year 1987 would cut spending on veterans' health care benefits by reducing the number of people treated and, for the first time, by requiring insurance companies to help pay the costs.

Harry N. Walters, the Administrator of Veterans Affairs, warned that cutbacks in spending and staff could ''ultimately result in a reduced quality of medical care'' for veterans. He made the comment in a letter to the Office of Management and Budget, which wrote the proposals.

The draft 1987 budget, to be submitted to Congress in early February, would require many veterans to show financial need to receive care. It would also provide no money for new nursing homes for veterans even as the number of older veterans is rising rapidly because of the large number of men who served in World War II.
U.S. HEALTH CARE FOR VETERANS CUT IN BUDGET DRAFT, New York Times

1995
Veterans. The panel included $38.1 billion in budget authority for the VA, including $19.5 billion in mandatory spending, mainly for VA compensation and pension programs.

The biggest boost in the agency's discretionary spending was in the VA medical care account, which was to get $17 billion, an increase of $747 million. Veterans groups lobbied hard for the additional medical care appropriation, as did Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Stump, R-Ariz., and Gerald B. H. Solomon, R-N.Y., chairman of the Rules Committee and a former Marine.

But the subcommittee proposed deep cuts in funding for VA construction projects, recommending $183.5 million — about one-half the existing appropriation and slightly more than one-third of what the Clinton administration sought. It eliminated funding for planned hospitals in Travis, Calif., and Brevard County, Fla., and recommended building no new VA hospitals, preferring that the VA focus on outpatient clinics.

Funding Cuts Prompt Veto of Bill for Veterans Affairs (VA) and Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Library of Congress
1999
With the Veterans Affairs Department getting no budget increase this year, Gutierrez said that in effect amounts to a $1.4 billion cutback because the agency's costs continue to rise. The savings, he said, would come from "unspecified management efficiency and savings" and a reduction of 6,900 employees. Chicago Tribune
2001
The restriction, which would have kept 320,000 veterans out of the health care system, was scheduled to take effect Saturday.

Principi had proposed the limitation to close part of a $400 million budget shortfall in the VA's health care system. Card told Principi the administration would find the money to cover the shortfall.

Principi then walked into the meeting with leaders of veterans organizations and delivered the good, rather than the bad, news. Those in the room, he recalled later, burst into applause. "It made my day," Principi said.
Veterans Get Reprieve on Health Care, Washington Post
2005
Just last week, the VA revealed that the rise in demand for VA health facilities had caused a $1 billion shortfall in operating funds for the current year. That would more than double in the coming year without congressional intervention.

Senate Republicans, embarrassed and angered over the revelations, yesterday announced plans to pass emergency legislation this morning to add $1.5 billion to the fiscal 2005 appropriation. The move is designed to appease angry veterans groups and preempt a Democratic proposal calling for $1.42 billion in increased VA spending.
VA Faces $2.6 Billion Shortfall in Medical Care, Washington Post
2007 Nicholson resigned
The agency has faced considerable criticism for its treatment of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans as they move from the military health-care system to VA's, and for its chronically slow processing of disability claims by injured or sick veterans from all eras. Critics complain about lost paperwork, a shortage of VA caseworkers, a caseload of 400,000 pending disability claims and long waits for initial appointments in the VA health-care system. VA Secretary Is Ending a Trying Tenure, Washington Post
Also in 2007
Veterans Affairs
By Joseph Shapiro
The president's budget requests nearly $87 billion in fiscal year 2008 for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Most of the money would go to health care and disability compensation. The White House said that represents an increase of 77 percent over the VA's budget when Bush took office.

But some veterans groups said the increase is not as big as it looks — and not enough to care for troops returning from Iraq. The president asked for almost $3 billion more than last year to fund medical care for veterans. The White House proposes increasing the co-payment for medications from $8 to $15 per monthly prescription.

And there would be a new enrollment fee: It would cost $250-$750 a year to get care in the VA system. That enrollment fee would apply only to those whose disability is not a result of military service.

It's not the first time the Bush administration has proposed such a fee, which is unpopular with veterans. Such fees have been rejected in the past by Republican-controlled Congresses, and the Democratic Congress is expected to do the same.

Veterans groups say that even with the fees, the VA would be about $2 billion short of what it needs to provide current levels of health care to veterans.
Bush Budget Calls for Big Boost in Defense Spending, NPR

Do politicians think we're dumb enough to forget how long all of this has been going on or are they too dumb to remember?

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Tax Dollars Paid $68 Million for Independent VA Audit Instead of on Veterans?

McDonald rejects VA’s failing grade audit
Agency head requests bigger budget, says problems largely fixed
The Washington Times
By Anjali Shastry
Wednesday, October 7, 2015

VA Secretary Robert McDonald disputed an audit’s conclusions that his department needs a “systemwide reworking,” saying Wednesday that he’s already fixed many of the problems and what he really needs is a bigger budget and more flexibility to move that money around.

The $68 million independent audit, released last month, said the Department of Veterans Affairs could become a world-class health system if it had better leadership, cut through a bloated bureaucracy and figured out its facilities budget.

But Mr. McDonald, who took over as top leader last year after his predecessor was ousted, said more money would help solve most of the remaining issues.

“The only way forward, if we really want to serve veterans, is for Congress to provide VA with sufficient resources to meet the requirements Congress has set,” Mr. McDonald told the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
read more here

Veterans don't blame the VA, they blame Congress and their history of underfunding the VA as more veterans waited.


As promised, here are a few things left out of the report,

2001
VA said that limiting new enrollments would save the system $142 million this fiscal year. The department said the remainder of the $400 million budget shortfall would be covered by unspecified "management efficiencies."

2002
On Monday, Principi visited the Topeka and Leavenworth VA hospitals, which together make up the consolidated VA Eastern Kansas Health Care System. Members of the Kansas congressional delegation have put increasing pressure on Principi since a budget shortfall of about $9 million was announced. The shortfall is expected to result in job cuts and the loss of some services in Topeka.
The GAO said that VA officials knew in October 2004 that there would be a major shortage.
In all, the bungling by the VA's budget office led to a shortfall of more than $3 billion since 2005, the General Accountability Office found in a report released Wednesday, and those mistakes disrupted health care to 700,000 veterans in Washington state and more than 5 million nationwide. "Unrealistic assumptions, errors in estimation, and insufficient data were key factors in VA's budget formulation process that contributed to the requests for additional funding," the GAO said in its report.
2005
VA Announces $1 Billion Shortfall; Senator Murray Demands Immediate Action
Jun 23 2005
(WASHINGTON, DC) -- In the wake of a Bush Administration announcement that the Veterans Administration has a $1 billion shortfall, Senator Patty Murray today expressed her disappointment and swiftly moved to introduce emergency legislation to fix the problem.

Murray, who has attempted to add funding for veterans care to the budget process three times this year, today once again introduced an emergency supplemental appropriations bill that would allow the VA to meet its obligations to veterans.

The administration announcement comes after repeated assurances that the VA had more than enough money to make it through the fiscal year. During the debate on the FY2006 Budget and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill, Nicholson and other Republican leaders claimed that the VA did not face a crisis.

In April, VA Secretary Jim Nicholson wrote a letter in which he declared, "I can assure you that VA does not need emergency supplemental funds in FY 2005 to continue to provide the timely, quality service that is always our goal." Under question by Senator Murray two weeks ago in the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, Nicholson once again repeated his claim that the VA had the money it needs.
2007
Minneapolis VA Clinics were shut down in 2007 soon after they were opened. They were contracted out.
Two recently opened Minneapolis VA clinics in western Wisconsin were abruptly shut down this week by the company under contract to run them. Kentucky-based Corporate Health and Wellness says it lost hundreds of thousands of dollars opening the clinics. It blames the closings on a lack of additional funding from the VA.
2008

St. Louis, reported in 2008 29 Patients at Marion VA died because of substandard and questionable care
The VA investigation found that at least nine deaths between October 2006 and March last year were "directly attributable" to substandard care at the Marion hospital, which serves veterans from southern Illinois, southwestern Indiana and western Kentucky.

Kussman declined to identify those cases by patient or doctor, though Rep. Jerry Costello, an Illinois Democrat, said those nine deaths were linked to two surgeons he did not name.

Of an additional 34 cases the VA investigated, 10 patients who died received questionable care that complicated their health, Kussman said. Investigators could not determine whether the care actually caused the deaths.

Vietnam Veterans of America: President Bush's VA Budget is $3 Billion Short

Shalala: Veterans benefits system is broken
This is the conclusion of Donna Shalala, former secretary of the U.S. Department Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration. President George W. Bush commissioned Shalala, Bob Dole and several other experts to evaluate the care of wounded veterans after the Washington Post exposed dire conditions at Walter Reed Hospital: deteriorating, rat- and roach-infested housing for family members, neglectful staff, and a mind-numbing bureaucracy.
Alabama State Veterans Director Says Veterans Wait 4 Years for VA Claim Appeal
“Since 2006, the number of claims has grown 15 percent. The amount of time it takes to make decisions on disability claims is two to three year. On an average, it takes four years to get an appeals decision.”


VA: $94 billion for 2009 and still $3.3 billion short
“While we are spending more than in previous years, we are still not meeting many of the health care and benefits needs of our veterans,” Murray said.

Last month’s passage of a new GI Bill will add $100 billion in education benefits for veterans over the next 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office said.

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain and his Democratic opponent Sen. Barack Obama clashed over the bill last month. McCain opposed it, saying its increased education benefits might encourage troops to leave the military.

Veterans Groups Appalled at White House Veto Threats
A coalition representing millions of America's veterans today expressed outrage at a White House claim that Congress is overspending on veterans programs and has threatened to veto any of the remaining 11 spending bills that exceed the President's request unless Congress finds $2.9 billion in offsets elsewhere in the federal budget.

Under the fiscal year 2009 Military Construction-VA Appropriations bill, the Department of Veterans Affairs would receive $47.7 billion, which is $4.6 billion above the 2008 funding level and $2.9 billion more than the President requested.
In each and every case, Congress held hearings and made promises only to have them repeat over and over again. Just think that those reports are only a few of the ones available online if reporters bothered to look. Do you think that $68 million audit was worth the money spent?

Monday, February 14, 2011

Will GOP Congress honor VA funding?

We saw veterans suffering and ignored while the GOP held the most seats in congress before but now there are more Tea Party folks like Bachmann not caring about what veterans need. We all know about the backlog of claims and the need to take care of veterans with the usual wounds along with illnesses, the aging population, increase of Agent Orange illnesses topped of with PTSD and TBI. With all of this, when the need is so great, will they honor veterans with their votes or will they betray them with their lip service?

VA Announces Budget Request for 2012

Shinseki Pledges to Continue to be "Good Steward" of Resources

WASHINGTON (Feb. 14, 2011) - In announcing the proposed budget for the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) during the next fiscal year,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki emphasized "making every
dollar" count in the $132 billion budget proposal for VA.

"We will continue to wisely use the funds that Congress appropriates for
us to further improve the quality of life for Veterans and their
families through the efficiency of our operations," said Secretary of
Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki

"In the current constrained fiscal environment, every dollar counts,"
Shinseki added. "We have put into place management systems and
initiatives to maximize efficiency and effectiveness, and to eliminate
waste."

The budget request for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 must be
approved by Congress before taking effect.



Health Care

The budget request seeks nearly $51 billion for medical care. It would
provide care to more than 6.2 million patients, including nearly 540,000
Veterans of military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The budget request also includes almost $1 billion for a contingency
fund and $1.2 billion of operational improvements to manage the
appropriated funds in a fiscally responsible manner.

Major health care provisions include:

* $6.2 billion for mental health programs, including $68
million directly for suicide prevention;

* $344 million to activate newly constructed medical
facilities;

* $208 million to implement new benefits for Veterans'
caregivers;

* Nearly $509 million for research; and

Shinseki noted the department has created "a portfolio of initiatives"
to improve the quality of VA care while making it easier for patients to
access services. Primary care providers will put more emphasis upon
disease prevention and healthy living. New technology - securing
e-mails, social networking and telehealth - will be harnessed to meet
the evolving needs of patients.

For example, in 2010, a daily average of more than 31,000 patients took
advantage of VA's telehome health care. The budget proposal will allow
more than 50,000 people daily to use this innovative, at-home care.

Among the department's operational improvements is a provision that
calls for VA to implement Medicare's standard payment rates, a measure
that will free $315 million for other health care needs.



Benefits

The proposed budget for the new fiscal year includes more than $70
billion in "mandatory" benefits programs, a category consisting mostly
of VA disability compensation and pension payments.

Shinseki reaffirmed his commitment to "break the back of the backlog" of
claims from Veterans for disability compensation and pensions. VA's
goal is to provide Veterans with decisions on their claims within 125
days at a 98 percent accuracy rate by 2015.

Various initiatives support continued redesign of VA's business
processes and development of a paperless claims system to improve the
efficiency of VA's handling of applications for compensation and
pensions. Among the major projects is one to provide Veterans with
streamlined forms to present to non-VA physicians who are evaluating
Veterans for disability benefits, while another new program allows
online application for claims related to exposure to Agent Orange.



Homelessness Prevention

The funding request includes nearly $940 million for specific programs
to prevent and reduce homelessness among Veterans and their families.
This funding is a 17 percent increase over the current budget of nearly
$800 million.

"Homelessness is both a housing and a health care issue," Shinseki said.
"Our 2012 budget plan supports a comprehensive approach to eliminating
Veterans' homelessness by making key investments in homeless and mental
health programs."



Education and Training

The requested budget for "mandatory" benefits programs includes nearly
$11.5 billion for VA education, training, vocational rehabilitation and
employment programs, including educational benefit programs VA
administers for the Department of Defense. Approximately 925,000 people
will receive benefits under these programs. Nearly three-quarters of
the funds will go to recipients of the new Post-9/11 GI Bill.

The budget proposal continues development of an automated Post-9/11 GI
Bill claims processing system that will speed tuition and housing
payments to eligible Veterans.



Information Technology

VA will seek nearly $3.2 billion for the new fiscal year to operate and
maintain its information technology (IT).

"IT is the key to bringing VA into the 21st century," Shinseki said. "It
allows for the efficient delivery of health care and benefits."

A recent independent study found that VA invested $4 billion in medical
IT from 1997 to 2007, which generated $7 billion in savings, mostly from
the elimination of duplicate medical tests and the reduction of medical
errors.

VA has a major role in the development of the "virtual lifetime
electronic record" as part of an inter-agency federal initiative to
provide complete and portable electronic health records for service
members, Veterans, other family members and, eventually, all Americans.


Through a disciplined approach to IT projects, VA transformed its
software development processes, meeting product delivery schedules over
80 percent of the time.

VA is consolidating its IT requirements into 15 major contracts, which
will lower costs and increase oversight and accountability. Seven of
the 15 contracts are set-aside for Veteran-owned businesses, and four of
those seven are reserved for small businesses owned by service-disabled
Veterans.



Construction

Nearly $590 million in major construction is included within next year's
budget request.

"This reflects the department's continued commitment to provide quality
health care and benefits through improving its facilities to be modern,
safe and secure for Veterans," Shinseki said.

The funding proposal provides for the continuation of seven ongoing
construction projects at health care facilities - New Orleans; Denver;
San Juan, Puerto Rico; St. Louis; Palo Alto, Calif.; Bay Pines, Fla.,
and Seattle - plus new projects in Reno, Nev.; Los Angeles and San
Francisco.

Also in the budget request is $550 million for minor construction for
such purposes as seismic corrections, improvements for patient safety,
and enhancements for access and patient privacy.

Additionally, the spending proposal includes funds for a gravesite
expansion project at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in
Hawaii.



National Cemeteries

VA is seeking more than $250 million next year for the operation and
maintenance of its 131 national cemeteries.

The department expects to inter about 115,000 people next year at its
national cemeteries. Nearly 90 percent of the U.S. population is within
75 miles of a VA-run national cemetery or a state-run Veterans cemetery.

For the fourth consecutive time in 10 years, VA's system of national
cemeteries has bested the nation's top corporations and other federal
agencies in a prestigious, independent survey of customer satisfaction.

The fiscal year 2012 budget plan includes $46 million to fund creation
and improvement of state Veterans cemeteries and tribal government
Veterans cemeteries.

Further information about VA's budget proposal for fiscal year 2012 is
available on the Internet at www.va.gov/budget/products.asp.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Republican blank checks and crisis after crisis

As news of the $700 billion bailout requested by the Bush administration is consuming the news, pundits take over the topic pushing for their candidate in the presidential election, we need to take a look at what's missing from all of these discussions.

For the last 7 years, Bush has demanded blank checks for Iraq and Afghanistan. When he didn't get it, he made sure the American people didn't hear how essential it was to have oversight of tax payer funding, opting to say it was unpatriotic and against the troops to even ask for accountability. While the Democrats fought, albeit timidly, the Republicans demanded affording Bush anything he wanted with no strings attached.

This mess is not just about the lack of oversight on financial institutions, but on every part of the way government has been operating for the last seven years.

Now we know there was another $13 billion that was either stolen or wasted in Iraq.



$13 Billion in Iraq Aid Wasted Or Stolen, Ex-Investigator Says
By Dana Hedgpeth
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 23, 2008; Page A19

A former Iraqi official estimated yesterday that more than $13 billion meant for reconstruction projects in Iraq was wasted or stolen through elaborate fraud schemes.

Salam Adhoob, a former chief investigator for Iraq's Commission on Public Integrity, told the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, an arm of the Democratic caucus, that an Iraqi auditing bureau "could not properly account for" the money.

While many of the projects audited "were not needed -- and many were never built," he said, "this very real fact remains: Billions of American dollars that paid for these projects are now gone."

He said a report that went to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and other top Iraqi officials was never published because "nobody cares" about investigating such cases. Many investigators, he said, feared for their safety because 32 of his co-workers have been murdered.

Adhoob said he reported the abuses to the U.S. Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, an agency charged by Congress with helping to root out cases of waste, fraud and abuse in the nearly $50 billion U.S. reconstruction effort. SIGIR spokeswoman Kristine Belisle said her agency continues to "actively follow up" on Adhoob's information, but she would not discuss ongoing investigations.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/
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$13 Billion? Ever think of what that money could have paid for if anyone was watching out for it? We've all heard the horror stories about troops coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan wounded but not being treated by the VA, turned away, provided with limited access to appointments along with having their claims tied up for years. We've all heard how the VA had been trying to reduce the payments to PTSD veterans. We also heard how Dr. Katz and Norma Perez had the attitude that if they ignore the problem, deny the problem, alter the diagnosis they could save a lot of money.

While CSPAN was covering what was going on in Washington, the media was ignoring it. Nicholson was not only operating in a budget that had produced shortfalls, he returned funds. This produced this outcome.

Snapshot of How VA Budget Shortfall is Hurting Veterans’

Access to Safe and Timely Care across the Nation



The VA claims that by shifting funds dedicated to replace old equipment and conduct maintenance the department can address its budget shortfall and meet veterans’ demand for timely, high–quality health care. The following snapshots from across the nation reflect the stark reality of the budget shortfall on veterans’ access to safe, high quality care.



The 3 surgical operating rooms at the White River Junction VAMC in Vermont had to be closed on June 27 because the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system was broken and had not been repaired due to the siphoning of maintenance funds to cover the budget shortfall.


The VAMC in San Antonio could not provide a paraplegic veteran with a special machine to help clean a chronic wound because the facility did not have the equipment dollars.


The VAMC in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, closed its Geriatric Evaluation and Management Unit which does extensive case management to help elderly veterans increase their functioning and remain at home.


The Community Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs) needed to meet veterans’ increased demand for care in the North Florida/South Georgia VA Healthcare System have been delayed due to fiscal constraints. The Gainesville facility has made progress in reducing its wait lists, but as of April there were nearly 700 service-connected veterans waiting for more than 30 days for an appointment.


VA Medical Centers in VISN 16, which includes Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi and Louisiana and part of Texas, have stopped scheduling appointments for many veterans who are eligible for care, pending available resources.


Even though the VA Palo Alto, California, Health Care System has used $3 million in capital funds for operating needs, as of March 1 more than 1,000 new patients had to wait more than 30 days for a primary care appointment. A third of these new patients had to wait more than 3 months. More than 5,000 patients had to wait more than 30 days for a specialty care appointment. Roughly 1,400 had to wait more than 3 months.


The replacement of the fire alarm system at the Loma Linda VAMC in California won’t be done this year because the facility is using most of its capital funds to cover operating expenses.


The White River Junction VAMC in Vermont struggling with a $525,000 shortfall in its prosthetics budget.


Because the FY 2005 budget is inadequate, the facility has not been allowed to hire 3 additional mental health care staff and 3 additional Registered Nurses for the ICU. Nurses in the ICU have been forced to work double shifts, which this Committee has found to be an unsafe patient practice.



Even though the San Diego VAMC expects to exceed its goal in medical care cost collections, it will divert $3.5 million of non-recurring maintenance funds to partially cover operating expenses, and has delayed filling 131 vacant positions for 3 months. The facility has a waiting list for patients of 750 veterans.


Because the Iowa City VAMC had to shift maintenance funds and equipment funds to cover a FY 2004 million shortfall of $3.2 million in medical care expenses in FY 2004, the facility is facing severe infrastructure problems and a larger shortfall of $6.8 million in FY 2005 that puts patient care and safety at risk. The facility wanted to spend $950,000 in non-recurring maintenance funds last year to prevent a mechanical failure of the electrical switcher, which would close the facility, but was required to use those funds to cover a budget shortfall in medical care last year. As a result in FY 2005, the VA must divert $1.5 million of medical care funds to maintain the key electrical switchgear for the hospital.


Recently, a motor failed on a hospital bed, which the VA planned to replace but couldn’t because of the shortfall, causing a fire with the patient on the bed. Fortunately the patient was able to get out of the bed safely, but the facility was forced to expend $700,000 of medical care dollars to replace all the beds, which thanks to the diligence of VA staff lasted 7 years beyond their life expectancy. The facility could not use capital funds to replace the very old beds because the money had already been siphoned off to cover medical care.



To bring the shortfall down to $6.2 million the facility has delayed hiring staff for 4 months. The deliberate short staffing of nurses on the psychiatric ward – as a means to correct the budget shortfall -- has forced the VA to cut the beds available for treatment in half.



As a result of cost cutting measures to make up for the shortfall in FY 2005, the Portland, Oregon, VAMC is delaying all non-emergent surgery by at least six months. For example, veterans in need of knee replacement surgery won’t be treated because of the budget shortfall.


Since FY 2002, the Portland VAMC has had to use its equipment and non-recurring maintenance funds to cover medical care expenses. For FY 2005 the facility needed $13 million for medical and clinical equipment but only received $2 million.



The facility is reducing staff as a cost-cutting measure and is now short at least 150 hospital staff, including nurses, physicians, and social workers. As a result of budget cuts for staffing, the VA has cut the number of medical beds available to care for veterans.



Veterans in need of outpatient psychiatric treatment at the Portland facility are on a waiting list because of the budget shortfall.



The Biloxi, Mississippi, VAMC has diverted maintenance dollars to meet operating expenses for the past two years but the facility will not be able to balance its budget without reducing staffing levels at a time when the Gulf Coast Veterans Health Care System has approximately 100 new veterans seeking enrollment each week.


Fifty percent of all the veterans receiving home health care through the San Antonio VAMC will now have to fend for themselves. This cost-cutting measure means that some 250 veterans, including those with spinal cord injuries, will no longer be provided this care.


The VA Connecticut Healthcare System is facing a major budgetary challenge of sending veterans to non-VA facilities for hospitalizations because the VA has a shortage of beds to care for veterans and staff.


Due to the budget shortfall, the VA facility in Bay Pines, Florida, has been forced to put veterans who have a service-connected illness or disability rating of less than 50% on a waiting list for primary care appointments. As of late April, some 7,000 veterans will be waiting longer than 30 days for a primary care appointment.




Prepared by the Democratic staff of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee

http://veterans.house.gov/democratic/budget/snapshot6-29-05.htm





This was almost 4 years into the occupation of Afghanistan and over two years of the occupation of Iraq. Two combat operations ongoing, producing more wounded only added to the burden of the ageing population of veterans just as outreach work regarding PTSD was penetrating the veterans minds supporting them in seeking help for what they had been carrying inside of them since they came home from wars.

It got worse.



Budget Shortfalls and Outsourcing Remain Serious Threats to VA Employees and Veterans
Friday September 29, 2006




DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS

Introduction

Budget shortfalls and outsourcing remain serious threats to VA employees and veterans.

AFGE’s 150,000 members who work at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) are deeply committed to providing veterans with the health care, benefits and other services they need. They are honored to contribute to a health care system that is recognized as “the true future in American health care” (New York Times) and to work in hospitals viewed as “models of top-notch care” (U.S. News and World Report). They took great pride when Secretary R. James Nicholson praised VA’s “heroic staff” for their role in Hurricane Katrina and Rita rescues. Many AFGE members at the VA are veterans themselves, and they work closely with veterans groups at the national and local levels to ensure veteran access to quality health care and benefits.

So why are VA employees and veterans getting mixed signals? Year after year, the Administration proposes inadequate funding for health care in the face of growing demand. The Administration keeps trying to balance the VA budget on the backs of veterans through co-pays and enrollment fees. The Administration pressures the VA to outsource jobs to private contractors even though contracting out wastes taxpayer dollars and diminishes health care.

The twin threats of underfunding and wasteful outsourcing result in a vicious cycle: Staffing shortages cause burnout among overworked employees who end up leaving, hiring freezes lead to costly contracting out, failure to repair and upgrade VA laundry facilities leads to contracting out of laundry services, and long waiting lists lead to delayed care that worsens health problems, so that treatment becomes more costly.

Congress should enact an assured funding formula for VHA’s budget.
The Flawed Fiscal Year 2006 budget process
In 2005, the problems with the current VA budget process made national headlines. Mid-year, the VA acknowledged a billion dollar shortfall in health care funding, caused in part by the use of outdated projections of the number of soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Throughout the summer of 2005, the House and Senate debated how much supplemental Fiscal Year (FY) 2006 funding was needed to close the shortfall before reaching an agreement in late August.
While the FY 2006 appropriations approved by Congress in November increased VA medical dollars above the President’s request, the increase was more than a million dollars short of the amount veterans groups projected was needed.
President’s FY 2007 Budget Request – Not much, not much new

Under the new proposed budget, VA funding would increase by $2.6 billion up front. However, over five years, funding would steadily decline and reduce purchasing power by over $10 billion below the 2006 funding level. The White House proposes to double drug co-pays and institute annual enrollment fees for Priority 7 and 8 veterans – a budget gimmick rejected by Congress for the past three years. There are no additional funds for state nursing homes and the major construction budget would be cut significantly by one-third. Other recycled gimmicks include claims of management efficiencies that cannot be proven and overly optimistic assumptions about third party insurance collections.

On the front lines, budget shortfalls harm patients and worker morale

Across the country, VISNs and hospitals are experiencing significant shortfalls. Their funding is both inadequate and unreliable. This flawed funding process produces many harmful effects:


Denial of care to over 260,000 Priority 7 and 8 Veterans
Growing waiting lists, e.g. over 12,000 veterans were on VISN 16’s electronic waiting list (EWL) for over 30 days in fall 2005
Hiring freezes when facilities are facing hundreds of vacancies
Pressure and/or requirement to work prolonged overtime
Delayed facility construction and repairs, causing veterans to travel longer distances to get care
Delays in equipment repair, requiring costly contracted services
Closing of nursing units and other inpatient units
Delayed CAT scans and MRIs, requiring costly outsourcing of tests
Inability to staff new medical units
Delays in surgery


AFGE supports the Assured Funding for Veterans Health Care Act of 2005 (H.R. 515), sponsored by Representative Lane Evans (D-IL). H.R. 515 would require that annual VA health care funding be based on the number of enrollees and medical and hospital inflation.

Congress should retain the statutory ban on spending VA medical dollars for outsourcing studies.


The current spending ban protects VA medical dollars from privatization reviews that take jobs away from veterans, hurt health care quality and waste taxpayer dollars.

38 USC 8110(a)(5), the federal law that prohibits the use of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) funds for outsourcing studies, was enacted in 1982 with bipartisan support. The ban applies to OMB A-76 studies and other cost comparisons. Proponents were concerned that outsourcing would hurt health care and would not end up being cost effective. Bipartisan concerns remain today. The VA’s track record in contracting out laundries over the past few years is poor; contracted laundries fail to produce savings and in some cases, cost more than VA laundries. In addition, the VA does not adequately track dollars spent on outsourcing studies.

Not a complete ban: Outsourcing with VHA funds is still permitted on a case-by-case basis where the VA is unable to provide needed specialized services or where veterans would have to travel too far to get services. The spending ban only covers VHA funds: The VA may use Veterans Benefit Administration (VBA), National Cemetery Administration (NCA) and departmental-wide construction and administration funds. In addition, Congress can make separate appropriations for these studies, apart from the VHA budget.

Cost of contracted out medical care: Unfortunately, years of budget shortfalls have accelerated this type of outsourcing as a stopgap solution to hiring freezes and growing waiting lists. Contracted out medical care is expensive, e.g. contract nurses can cost more than twice as much as in-house nurses. Contracted care often lacks the consistent level of quality and patient safety provided by VA-trained health professionals. In September 2005, Senators Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI) and Ken Salazar (D-CO) asked GAO to investigate the VA’s growing practice of contracting out registered nurses.

True cost of contracting out: In 2002, OMB compiled a list of VHA jobs for cost comparison studies, should appropriations become available. Laundry and food service jobs are at the top of the list. Veterans hold the majority of these low-wage jobs. These jobs are used to help disabled veterans learn new jobs skills and return to employment and self-sufficiency, thus reducing their dependency on VA benefits. Minorities and women are disproportionately hurt when the VA contracts out these jobs. In addition, contracted and consolidated laundries require additional transportation costs, are not as reliable as services provided on-site and may increase hospital infection rates. Consolidated and contract food services incur similar hidden dollar and quality costs.

Congress should ensure that any cost comparisons are conducted through a fair competitive process and with strict financial oversight.


In 2005, Senate VA Committee Chairman Larry E. Craig proposed to repeal the current spending ban. An amendment to strike the proposal (and keep the spending ban in place) received bipartisan support and lost by only one vote. Later in the year, Senators Craig and Akaka reached an agreement to keep the spending ban in place and instead, conduct a two-year pilot project to study contracting out (moving VA jobs to the private sector), contracting in (moving contractor work back to the VA) and VA’s Business Process Reengineering (BPR) initiative (discussed below). This compromise awaits House action.

If this pilot project is enacted, or if outsourcing studies are conducted with other permissible funds, the cost comparisons should be truly competitive and comply with existing requirements under A-76 and the government-wide “right-to-compete” provisions in the Transportation-Treasury bill. In addition, as the pilot project would require, contractors should not get a competitive advantage if they fail to provide the equivalent level of health coverage as the federal government.

According to a recent GAO report, VA lacks the accounting structure to adequately track funds and labor used to conduct cost comparison studies. Appropriators should require regular reporting and vigilant oversight to ensure that funds are properly tracked.

Business Process Reengineering: Congress should increase oversight of the BPR process to ensure that employees are afforded a meaningful role and to evaluate claims of management efficiency savings.


Background: Management Analysis/Business Process Reengineering, a VA initiative launched in August 2005, (MA/BPR or BPR) is an approach that the VA has adopted to improve the efficiency of support functions such as laundries and food service. DVA has stated that unlike A-76 cost comparisons, BPR “cannot result in competition with the private sector.”

Management has stated that employees from the function to be studied will play a key role in the process. However, the AFGE VA Council’s July 2005 request to be involved in the BPR implementation was denied. The Council was not included in the recently formed BPR Steering Committees for food service and laundries. To date, we have not heard of any participation in BPR by laundry or food service employees.

Even though BPR does not involve public-private cost comparisons, AFGE is concerned that BPR will encourage reorganizations and consolidations that threaten VA services and jobs. Over the years, the VA has consolidated and closed numerous laundries and food service facilities in the name of efficiency, and too often, subsequently hired contractors to perform these services.

Congress should require more transparency in the BPR process so that claims of management efficiency savings can be evaluated. Despite repeated claims that laundry outsourcing is cost effective, VA’s own report revealed that laundries privatized several years ago produced no savings or actually cost more than in-house laundries. The need for verification of these claims was highlighted by a recent critical GAO report that found that VA lacked adequate support for its recent claims of management efficiency savings, and furthermore, lacked a methodology for even making savings assumptions or developing savings goals.


Physicians Pay: AFGE and rank-and-file providers should be included in compensation panels and key groups implementing the new pay law.
The Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care Personnel Enhancement Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-445) was signed into law in December 2004 and took effect on January 8, 2006. The law establishes a new pay system for physicians and dentists, and authorizes alternative work schedules for nurses.

AFGE played an active role in the legislative process, but was excluded from the steering committee and other bodies that addressed critical issues such as pay ranges. Since the effective date, union representatives and rank-and-file physicians and dentists have not been adequately included in compensation panels (despite requirements in the statute), trainings or policy-setting meetings. We also have concerns about the availability of funds for pay raises, management’s willingness to provide appropriate pay increases, the impact on part-time providers and the choice of surveys used to set local pay.

The VA should address AFGE’s concerns about the new leave rule.


Effective January 6, 2006, the VA revised the handbook rule that required physicians, dentists, podiatrists and optometrists to take leave on weekends, while reducing leave accrual by 4 days. In addition, it capped carryover leave to 86 days and froze excess leave until termination of employment. Providers were not given any advance notice of the new carryover rule so that they could use their excess leave instead. Providers with excess leave should be grandfathered in under the new rule and/or be allowed to use their leave within a reasonable period of time. The VA should maintain a dialogue with AFGE over other concerns that may arise over the leave rule in the future.

AFGE urges Congress to address health care work staffing shortages.


Budget shortfalls have exacerbated understaffing of nurses, other health care workers and support employees such as housekeeping and maintenance workers. There is growing evidence of a link between staffing, quality of patient care and patient outcomes. In addition, poor working conditions increase turnover, in turn worsening the shortage.

VA health care workers and VA management should have the right to negotiate safer staffing levels.


Currently, staffing levels in hospitals are driven by budgets, not by health care policy. Under current law, VA management and representatives of front-line health care workers are prohibited from bargaining over staffing levels, staff-to-patient ratios, patient panel size or ways to improve direct patient care.

All VA health care employees who are required to work a Saturday shift should receive Saturday premium pay.


Congress passed a law in 2003 that expanded the eligibility of VA employees for Saturday premium pay. To date, VA has not finalized the list of employees who will be eligible for premium pay on the basis of providing direct patient care. The VA should not arbitrarily exclude certain groups of workers.

AFGE urges Congress to pass mandatory overtime legislation.


Budget shortfalls have exacerbated the use of mandatory overtime. When nurses are pressured or required to work double shifts, patients are placed at risk. Burnout and greater staffing shortages are likely to occur. The Safe Nursing and Patient Care Act of 2005 [H.R. 791, introduced by Representatives Pete Stark (D-CA) and Steve LaTourette (R-OH) / S. 351 introduced by Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA)], would prohibit mandatory overtime in hospitals, except in cases of formally declared emergencies or where nurses felt it was safe to do so.

The Veterans Benefits Administration needs additional staff and training to meet a growing and more complex caseload.


Between 2002 and 2005, the number of new compensation claims filed increased by 50,000. At the same time, staff levels dropped slightly. The number of multiple and complex claims is rising.

To better handle growing caseloads, DVA should:

Develop more accurate projections of future demand for claims processing that take into consideration veteran populations and changes in law and policy.
Ensure that staff receives comprehensive training.
Improve coordination between production and training standards set at the national level and those set locally.
Allow employee input into decisions regarding productivity and training.


Conclusion: AFGE urges Congressional and/or Departmental action in the following areas:

Assured funding formula for the VA health care budget.


Retain the spending ban on using VHA funds for cost comparisons.
All cost comparisons should be conducted through a fair competitive process and with financial oversight; moreover, cost comparisons should be conducted with an eye towards bringing contractor work back in-house.


The BPR initiative should include input from front line workers and veterans, and should be required to substantiate claims of management efficiencies.
AFGE and front line providers should have input into physician pay changes through compensation panels and other key groups.


The VA should address AFGE’s concerns over the leave freeze and other changes in the new physicians leave rule.
AFGE and management should be allowed to negotiate over staffing.


Saturday premium pay should be given to all VHA employees who work Saturday shifts.
Congress should pass mandatory overtime legislation.


VBA needs adequate staffing and resources to handle projected caseloads.

http://www.afge.org/index.cfm?page=Veteransaffairs&Fuse=Content&ContentID=760




While Democrats and a few Republicans were trying to fix the problem, were the veterans in this country paying attention to what was causing all the problems they were facing? Were they paying attention to who was behind all of it? Were they paying attention to other veterans not getting what they needed across the nation?

Between the major service organizations memberships in the millions, it's puzzling how few veterans in this country pay attention to the most pressing issue involving them. While they fought the nation's battles, they ignore the fact they then have to fight another battle against the government to have their needs taken care of. Far too many will receive the benefits and treatments they need then feel no need to insure other veterans receive what they also deserved and earned. They do not feel the need to fight for the others, vote for candidates who show up to make a speech without checking their record on their votes and allow the suffering these same people inflicted on the veterans. What is behind all of this? Are they part of the "I got mine and the rest are on their own club?

While it's true the veterans in this country are a minority group, what is not taken into account within their numbers are the additional families and friends of veterans all across this nation. Their numbers are powerful but they refuse to use the magnitude of their power to its full advantage.

We've all heard the speeches by ranking members of the service organizations as they embrace some candidates appearing to make a speech just as we've heard them welcome warmly President Bush when he was running for his second term but when the applauds end and speech is over, veterans standing there were still standing alone.

It's time for the veterans in this country woke up to the fact that what the government does, what the politicians are willing to allow directly affects them. Too many veterans in this nation have accepted the notion that the Republicans are the ones who take care of them instead of noticing that they do not. They are the ones who stand in the way of bills being passed, of funds being increased and accountability.

Democrats want to take care of people and then business. Republicans want to take care of businesses. It's time for the Republicans to makes sure the veterans in this nation were their business and stop ignoring them until they need their votes.

This is exactly what John McCain has been doing since he was first elected. He's voted against veterans at almost every opportunity he's had to prove he is worthy of their support. He's not the only one. McCain has also been against accountability at the same time billions of our money has been wasted like the $13 billion in the above report. It is time to check his record seriously to know for sure if you really believe he's earned your support instead of just taking that support for granted then forgetting all about you. Check the record of every politician running for re-election and the plans of those who are running for the first time. Understand fully who you are supporting because most of the times you've voted against your best interests.

Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington