Thursday, May 15, 2014

Federal Bureaucrats Get $500 Million In Furniture...While Vets Die

VA Spends Close to $500 Million on Conference Room, Office Makeovers Under Obama

President requests 3 percent increase for VA budget
Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki / AP
Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki / AP
BY: 
President Barack Obama has increased the Department of Veterans Affairs’ budget each year since he took office, claiming the funds would give veterans the health care they deserve. However, an analysis of records show the agency has spent close to $500 million on office furniture under the Obama administration.
This upcoming fiscal year Obama requested a 3 percent increase for the Veterans Affairs budget. Obama’s FY 2015 budget request points out he has increased the VA discretionary budget by 35.2 percent since 2009 so veterans continue to access necessary services.
“VA’s 2015 budget provides the necessary resources to allow us to serve our veterans who selflessly served our nation,” stated the president’s FY 2015 budget.
As the embattled agency faces charges of record tampering and neglect of veterans, records reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon show the VA has not neglected upgrading and decorating its offices throughout the country.
The VA has spent a total of $489 million to upgrade conference rooms, buy draperies, and purchase new office furniture during the past four-and-a-half years.
A total of 15,010 contracts were awarded for office furniture by the VA for Fiscal Years 2010 through 2014.
“This is just one of many misplaced priorities at the VA, and unfortunately, I think we’ve only begun to scratch the surface,” Sen. John Cornyn (R., Texas) said in an emailed statement. “I will not stop until the VA is investigated top to bottom, and new leadership is brought in to clean up this dysfunctional agency.”
One contract awarded $6.8 million for construction of a conference room and facilities at its Carol Stream, Ill., office. That renovation is ongoing and is expected to be completed next April.
The VA’s San Juan, Puerto Rico office spent $1.8 million on new office furniture, and one of its Virginia offices spent $1.9 million on “systems office furniture.” That project is expected to be completed at the end of this month.
Another $1.4 million is currently being spent on a yearlong third floor renovation project for the “design, purchase/installation of furniture” in Saint Petersburg, Fla. That is expected to be completed on Sep. 17. The Free Beacon found a second contract for the same office signed earlier this year in which $267,131, for “non-upholstered wood household furniture manufacturing.”
The VA also spent $1.8 million for “systems furniture” in Philadelphia; $1.8 million for “multi-functional, mobile, enhance learning space” in Tampa; $1.8 million for “showcases, partitions, shelving” for its Los Angeles office.
To make the office makeovers complete, draperies, roller shades, and cornice boxes were also purchased. The VA spent $10.7 million in the past five fiscal years on curtains and draperies.
Some of those contracts include $454,085 for “cubical curtains and draperies” for its Brecksville, Ohio, office. The Pittsburg, Pa., VA office spent $382,879 on window shades which were just installed in January.
Instead of draperies, the VA’s Los Alamitos office preferred cornice boxes and roller shades. The contract shows they spent $106,615 on its window treatments.
The Free Beacon also found pricey filing system expenditures. For example, $1.7 million was spent on a filing system for the California office. The reason the VA is spending high amounts on filing systems is unclear, since Obama’s FY 2015 budget included $138.7 million in Veteran Claims Intake Program for the conversion of paper documents into eFolders.
- See more at: http://freebeacon.com/issues/va-spends-close-to-500-million-on-conference-room-office-makeovers-under-obama/#sthash.aXDcsBpa.dpuf

Friday, May 9, 2014

McCain: VA Care Problems Are National


Sen. John McCain told a crowd of veterans that reported lapses in care at Phoenix veteran hospitals are part of a nationwide problem.
The Arizona senator made the comments Friday afternoon in Phoenix in front of about 100 people.
Several veterans voiced their anger and frustration to the senator at what they say is a broken system.
McCain said veterans should be allowed to pick other health care providers outside the VA, but said the system is still relevant.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki said this week he has ordered an audit of access to care at all VA medical centers.
Critics contend Phoenix VA administrators kept an off-the-books list to conceal long wait times as 40 veterans died waiting to get an appointment.


Tuesday, May 6, 2014

GOP calls for Shinseki to step down.


GOP calls for Eric Shinseki resignation

Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki is pictured. | AP Photo
Even some Democrats are weighing Shinseki’s future. | AP Photo
Senate Republican leaders called for Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki to resign on Tuesday in the wake of the medical center scandal in Arizona.
Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) called for Shinseki to step down shortly after Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) gave a floor speech demanding he resign, as Republicans quickly ramped up pressure on the embattled VA secretary.

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Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) stopped short of calling for Shinseki’s resignation outright, but said “a change in leadership might be a step in the right direction.”
Cornyn said it was time for Shinseki’s tenure to come to an end as the VA was suffering from a “failure of leadership and incompetence.”
“Veterans are being denied the health care and services they have earned,” he said.
The resignation calls come less than 24 hours after the American Legion announced that it wanted Shinseki gone from the VA following the Phoenix scandal, in which VA officials are alleged to have falsified waiting lists and more than three-dozen veterans died waiting for care. Shinseki is also facing criticism for other problems with medical care, as well as the disability claims backlog.
While lawmakers have previously called for accountability at the VA over the backlog, the deaths in Arizona have put several lawmakers over the edge.
Sen. Richard Burr (N.C.), the top Republican on the Veterans Affairs Committee, told POLITICO Tuesday that he also thinks it’s time for Shinseki to go.
“With all the problems the VA has had over the last several years, it’s time for new leadership,” said Burr. “I have no hope you can accomplish any changes with the current regime.”
Even some Democrats are weighing Shinseki’s future.
“I’m looking at it and I’m trying to figure out what is going to be the best for veterans. It shouldn’t be about a political scalp. It should be: How are we going to improve care for veterans,” Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) told POLITICO. “It may be that him going is the way to do that, but it may be that there are other ways that could change things that would have more dramatic impact than going through a who knows how long confirmation battle and not having any leadership at the agency for a while.”
But the growing Republican calls for Shinseki’s resignation risk opening a rift in the party as the VA secretary has backing of several senior GOP defense hawks.
Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) say they want to see the results of an inspector general investigation before they’d call for Shinseki’s resignation.
“Obviously we’re very unhappy, and the investigation needs to go on, but let us get through this investigation,” McCain told reporters Tuesday.
Armed Services ranking member Jim Inhofe said that he backed Shinseki.
“I’ve been working Gen. Shinseki for many years. He’s made great sacrifices for his country, including loss of limb. So I’m not about to call for resignation,” Inhofe said.
Shinseki is the latest member of President Obama’s Cabinet to face Republican resignation calls. Last week, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) called on Secretary of State John Kerry to resign over comments about Israel. Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) wanted former HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to step down last year amidst the botched the healthcare rollout. And Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) called for Attorney General Eric Holder’s resignation in 2012 over Fast and Furious.
Inhofe said that the tactic doesn’t typically yield results.
“I’ve never seen it work yet,” he said. “I’ve only been around 20 years.”
In the House, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) has criticized the VA over the Phoenix scandal, but he is not calling for the VA secretary’s resignation.
Many Senate Democrats are also still backing Shinseki.
“I know the feelings are strong on it, and that’s one way to express feelings, but I don’t favor it,” said Armed Services Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich).
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said that Shinseki is “a fine man.”
“The issue that came up in Phoenix, these are allegations,” Reid said.
The White House said Tuesday that Obama remains confident in the secretary.
“The president remains confident in Secretary Shinseki’s ability to lead to the department and take appropriate action based on the IG’s findings,” said White House press secretary Jay Carney.
The VA said it is taking the allegations in Phoenix seriously.
“The Department of Veterans Affairs takes any allegations about patient care or employee misconduct very seriously,” VA spokesman Drew Brookie. “If the VA Office of Inspector General’s investigation substantiates allegations of employee misconduct, swift and appropriate action will be taken.”

American Legion calls for resignation of VA Director Shinseki


American Legion calls for resignation of VA leaders


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Amid allegations of fatal treatment delays for veterans at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, the American Legion is taking the rare step of calling for the resignation of top VA officials.
Daniel M. Dellinger, national commander of the veterans group, is planning to make the announcement at 2 p.m. today at the group's headquarters in Indianapolis.
It's the first time the American Legion, which boasts 2.4 million members, has called for a leadership change at the VA in more than 20 years.
"Senior VA leadership in Washington has demonstrated its incompetence through a series of incidents at VA medical facilities involving preventable deaths of veterans, long wait-times for medical care and other quality-of-care issues, and the awarding of bonuses to senior executives who have overseen such operations," the group said in a press release. "As the country's largest organization of wartime veterans, The American Legion believes that VA is a system worth saving, and that the department has reached a point of crisis nationwide that warrants the removal of VA's top leadership in Washington."
The call for resignations comes amid reports that scores of veterans have died because of screening and treatment delays at the VA.
Department officials revealed last month that the deaths of 32 veterans were linked to delayed cancer screenings dating back four years.
More recently, a retired doctor, Sam Foote, alleged that 40 other veterans died because of treatment delays at a VA hospital in Phoenix. VA officials says there's no evidence to support those claims, but the hospital administrator was placed on leave pending an investigation by the agency's inspector general.
And today, USA Today reported that a VA investigation at one of its outpatient clinics in Colorado found that clerks at the Department of Veterans Affairs were instructed last year how to falsify appointment records to it appeared the small staff of doctors was seeing patients within the agency's goal of 14 days.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

3 On Leave-Evidence Destroyed in VA Death-Gate

Veterans Affairs puts 3 on leave; Congress threatens subpoena over destruction of 'secret' wait list

BY   
Department of Veterans Affairs officials were threatened Thursday with a congressional subpoena if they fail to explain the destruction of a secret list of medical appointments at the Phoenix veterans' hospital and preserve documents for an inspector general's investigation.
Meanwhile, the agency placed three officials from the Phoenix facility on leave.
Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, said he is prepared to call an emergency committee meeting to subpoena the information formally if he does not get answers by next week.
Whistleblowers say more than 40 patients died because of delays in treatment while in the Phoenix VA Health Care System.
In a letter sent Thursday to VA Secretary Eric Shinseki, Miller also rebuked the agency for failing to act quickly to preserve documents related to allegations hospital administrators in Phoenix kept two sets of appointment lists to hide large backlogs of medical appointments.
Miller issued a directive at an April 9 hearing that scheduling records at the Phoenix hospital be preserved.
But VA lawyers did not formally issue the preservation order until April 17, eight days later. That order went to, among others, Dr. Sharon Helman, director of the Phoenix VA Medical Center.
“It is extraordinarily disconcerting that more than a week was allowed to pass before any directive was issued to Dr. Helman and her staff to preserve all potential electronic and paper evidence,” Miller said in his letter to Shinseki.
Helman and Phoenix Associate Director Lance Robinson were both placed on administrative leave Thursday by Shinseki, along with a third Phoenix VA employee who was not identified publicly.
The secretary said the three would be on leave until further notice, "based on the request of the independent VA Office of Inspector General, in view of the gravity of the allegations and in the interest of the Inspector General’s ability to conduct a thorough and timely review."
Miller initially raised questions about the VA keeping two sets of lists in Phoenix at the April 9 hearing, saying at the time that there had been allegations hospital administrators sought to hide actual wait times for medical treatment and that may have contributed to the deaths of about 40 patients.
He also directed Thomas Lynch, VA assistant deputy under secretary for health, who was a witness at the hearing, to ensure the documents were preserved for an investigation by the inspector general.
“I would like to know why it took so long to issue the directive, given my public request at a Congressional hearing, the formal request letter to you, and most importantly, the explosive nature of the allegations regarding the deaths of veterans while waiting for care,” Miller wrote.
Patients in need of a medical appointment were initially put on an unofficial list with long wait-times, according to whistleblowers who have talked to the media.
When the patient’s appointment date was a couple of weeks away, the patient’s name would be entered onto the official list.
That way, it would seem to show patient wait-times were within the agency’s guidelines, typically two weeks to a month.
The original records showing how long patients really had to wait were then destroyed, according to whistleblowers.
The Examiner reported Thursday that more than 1.5 million medical orders were cancelled by the VA without any guarantee the patients received the care they needed.
The agency has been under pressure to reduce long delays, especially for critical medical tests such as colonoscopies that can detect cancers early.
Delayed medical screenings at VA health facilities nationwide have been linked to the deaths of 23 patients with gastrointestinal cancers, according to an agency fact sheet released in April.
No figures were released on the number of patients who died from other conditions.
VA officials in Phoenix deny they kept a secret wait-list or that delays in care caused patient deaths.
Lynch told staff members of the House and Senate veterans' committees at an April 24 meeting that an “interim” list of appointments was kept in Phoenix.
That may be what whistleblowers and the media refer to as the secret list, Lynch said, according to Miller’s letter to Shinseki. Lynch also acknowledged the interim list was destroyed.
“When asked why this document was destroyed, Dr. Lynch responded that there was no legal requirement to preserve it,” Miller wrote.
“Since that briefing, my staff has made multiple attempts with VA Congressional Affairs staff to learn more about this ‘interim list,’ in particular, the date or date range of its destruction. We have received nothing to date,” Miller wrote.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

40 Deaths Of Veterans a Cover-up?

McCain, Flake call for Senate probe of Phoenix VA


Two Arizona congressional leaders are calling for a U.S. Senate investigation and hearings into accusationsof "gross mismanagement and neglect" at the Phoenix VA Health Care System in the wake of allegations that up to 40 patients died while waiting for medical appointments.
In a Wednesday letter to Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., citedArizona Republic reporting on whistle-blower allegations about the veteran deaths and accusations that VA administrators have kept "secret books" and misrepresented wait times for health care.
McCain and Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., signed a letter to leaders of the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs asking for an inquiry and hearings.

Arizona Republic editorial cartoonist Steve Benson draws his take on Senators McCain and Flake calling for an investigation into allegations of mistreatment of patients in the Phoenix VA Health Care System.
McCain said in the past year his office has been inundated with complaints from physicians and patients indicating that "systemic problems with how PVAHCS serves veterans were not only widespread but also quickly escalating."
"I am appalled by the number of veterans who stated to my office that the VA was just 'waiting' or 'hoping' that they would die and be one less burden on the system," McCain told Shinseki.
On April 10, The Republic reported statements of Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., during a House Committee on Veterans' Affairs hearing about wait times and deaths in Phoenix. The news article contained comments and complaints filed with the VA's Office of Inspector General by whistle-blowers at the medical center in Phoenix.
The Republic in March filed a public-records request for patient access data, IG complaints and other documents related to the controversy. No materials have been provided to date.
Sharon Helman, director of the Phoenix VA system, said Tuesday she does not know of any patients who died awaiting care, and that she is unaware of any improper manipulation of patient-access data. She said the VA has no knowledge of veteran deaths stemming from delayed care, and does not have names of those who purportedly died while awaiting appointments.
McCain met with Helman and other VA administrators on April 18. In his letter to Shinseki, McCain posed numerous questions about care for vets that he said require "urgent attention."
"Whether these deaths were specifically caused by the mismanagement of PVAHCS officials is unclear," he wrote, "these allegations appear indicative of broader trends that I have observed regarding the VA's failure to provide quality health care to our veterans in an effective, efficient and timely matter."
Meanwhile, House inquiries into VA access and care issues continue today in Tucson, where Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, D-Ariz., a member of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, will host a field hearing on mental health care.
Kirkpatrick will be joined by Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., and Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo., chairman of the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, to review VA access for patients with brain injuries and post-traumatic stress.
- See more at: http://www.deltanewsandreview.com/2014/04/40-deaths-of-veterans-cover-up.html#sthash.QZqdZjxN.dpuf