[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 87 (Tuesday, June 2, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H3646]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PUTTING A STOP TO MISMANAGEMENT AT THE VA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, in 2014, Congress passed legislation with
broad bipartisan support to improve access to and the quality of care
for veterans in response to the nationwide scandal over manipulated
wait times at the VA.
The Veterans' Access to Care through Choice, Accountability, and
Transparency Act created a 3-year program to allow veterans to seek
care from private providers if they live too far from a VA facility or
cannot otherwise get an appointment within 14 days.
It also gave the VA Secretary the authority to fire senior executives
for poor performance and required a top-to-bottom study of the entire
Department to be completed within 1 year of enactment.
When government failure is exposed and legislation aimed at restoring
accountability is enacted, it makes sense that action would be swift
and immediate, people would be fired, and wrongs would begin to be made
right. Unfortunately, that has not been the case at the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
While there are as many as 1,000 employees that could potentially
face disciplinary actions, the VA has punished a total of eight for
involvement in the scandal. We continue to hear about unacceptable
patient wait times, unanswered benefit inquiries, patient safety
concerns, medical malpractice, flagrant mismanagement, infighting,
corruption, and years of construction delays that total millions of
dollars.
Frustration, anger, outrage, Mr. Speaker, these are just a few of the
words that describe how I and other Americans felt when we read these
latest stories about problems within the Department of Veterans
Affairs. The continued ineptitude at the highest levels of the
Department of Veterans Affairs is simply unacceptable. It is past time
to put an end to this agencywide pattern of mismanagement.
Last month, the House continued its efforts to fulfill the commitment
we have made to those who have served by approving several pieces of
legislation to further improve accountability at the VA.
We also passed legislation to increase access to education programs
for veterans and to encourage small businesses to hire them. While it
will never be enough, this legislation is a positive step forward in
meeting our responsibility to America's veterans.
However, Congress cannot transform the VA alone. It is the
President's responsibility to ensure changes are made within the agency
and that employees are held accountable for their actions.
Unfortunately, that is not happening.
Every day, we hear only more stories about further misdeeds.
President Obama must commit to reforming the VA with more than just lip
service. America's veterans deserve a meaningful, decisive plan to
right the many wrongs.
As a country, we are uniquely blessed. We live in a nation where each
of us has the possibility of nearly limitless fulfillment and
prosperity in the world's finest democracy. That unparalleled freedom
and opportunity has been made available to us because of the profound
sacrifices of those who have fought for and defended our Nation.
America's veterans deserve better than the inexcusable misconduct and
neglect that we have seen over the last few years at the VA. It is
critically important that we provide high-quality, timely care for
those who have sacrificed so much to our country.
Republicans are committed to that principle and to the veterans of
this country.
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