[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 120 (Tuesday, July 28, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H8531-H8532]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAILING VA MEDICAL CENTER RECOVERY ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Alabama (Mrs. Roby) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. ROBY. Mr. Speaker, it has been almost a year since the director
of the Central Alabama Veterans Health Care System was fired after
numerous reports of mismanagement and malfeasance surfaced--the missing
patient x rays, the falsified records, the employee who took a veteran
to a crackhouse, and the utter lack of discipline and order.
[[Page H8532]]
The removal was possible under new authority granted under the VA
reform law that we passed last year, and I was hopeful that this action
was indicative of a new VA leadership that finally got it, that was
willing to cut through the bureaucracy and make the decisions necessary
to turn around failing medical centers.
I did hear a lot of nice promises--commitments to work through the
system to make sure that the problems were fixed--but, Mr. Speaker, the
problems were not fixed.
Communication and coordination between various levels of management
are still badly out of sync at a time when we can least afford it. It
seems like, every time I think we are in a position to make real
progress in central Alabama, something falls through the cracks, the
ball gets dropped, an opportunity is missed. Every time, the VA
leadership can point to the various layers of bureaucracy for why these
problems exist--promises, excuses--but not action.
Mr. Speaker, I believe the problem is that we have been depending on
a broken bureaucracy to fix itself. I believe the problem is that we
have been asking the VA leaders to intervene in this troubled system
rather than requiring them to. I believe it is time to change that by
breaking through the bureaucracy to get results on behalf of our
precious veterans.
What happens when a public school continues to fail to meet basic
standards? The State Department of Education steps in to take over, and
it takes charge of turning the place around.
It is a process that isn't pleasant, but everyone from principals and
teachers to students and parents understand the consequences of the
failure to improve. I believe we need a similar mechanism at the VA
when medical centers continuously fail our veterans.
Today, I am filing legislation to compel the Department of Veterans
Affairs officials to intervene and take over failing VA medical
centers. It is called the Failing VA Medical Center Recovery Act.
It offers the VA new tools to turn around the worst of our healthcare
centers, and it puts the responsibility for doing so squarely on the
Secretary of the VA. The VA needs a team of leaders who is equipped
with the expertise to identify solutions and the authority to execute
them.
Under my bill, the VA will recruit teams of the best managers and
medical professionals who can rapidly deploy to failing medical centers
to take over and take charge. These takeover teams would be managed
through the newly authorized office of failing medical centers and
would have the new legal tools needed to make a difference at each
location.
This is an antibureaucracy bill. This is the team that no complacent
VA employees want to see coming because they know that the status quo
is about to get shaken up.
Just like a failing school, this can serve as a motivation to keep
performance from dropping off. Also very important is that the
determination of a failing medical center will be based on data, not on
the Secretary's whim or what media attention it is garnering. My bill
sets up an automatic trigger that compels the VA to act under the law.
I am glad the Secretary used his authority to take control of the
situation in Phoenix--but why not Montgomery? Why not Tuskegee? Why not
come and take control of the worst and the second worst situations in
our country, especially after we have repeatedly asked and have pleaded
for him to do so? I am tired of asking, and that is why my bill
requires the VA to step in and take charge.
Mr. Speaker, some might misperceive this as an attack on the VA, and
it is not. It is actually a gift. Entrenched bureaucrats might hate
this plan, but reform-minded leaders at the VA should welcome new tools
and new resources to fix medical centers and help veterans access care.
I have spoken to many of my colleagues about this bill, and I am
pleased as to how well it is being received. I look forward to working
with Chairman Miller and my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to
move this legislation forward.
Let's have a real conversation about getting results on behalf of our
veterans.
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