[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 184 (Thursday, December 17, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8779-S8780]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SUPPORTING OUR VETERANS
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I think it is important that we pause for
a moment at the end of 2015, look back upon the past 12 months and, in
particular, look at the Veterans Administration and the veterans who
have served our country, looking at the problems that we have solved
and the things we have done to better improve those services.
When the year dawned, we had a scandal in Arizona at a Phoenix
hospital. We had bonuses being paid to employees who had not performed.
We had medical services that weren't available to veterans who had
earned them and deserved them. As a Senate, we came together in the
Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, which I chair. We had a bipartisan
effort to see to it we addressed those problems.
So for just a second I want everyone to pause and realize what we
have done bipartisanly and collectively for those who have served our
country and the veterans today.
No. 1, by the end of January, we had passed the Clay Hunt Suicide
Prevention for American Veterans Act to deal with the growing problem
of suicide with our veterans. It is already working with more
psychiatric help available to our veterans, quicker responses for those
who seek mental help, better diagnosis of PTSD and TBI, and a reduction
in the rate of the suicides that take place in the veterans community.
That was affirmative action. It passed 99 to 0--Republicans and
Democrats--in the Senate of the United States.
We took the veterans choice bill, which had passed in August of last
year, and made it work better for the veterans of our country. In the
first 9 months of this year, the Veterans Administration fulfilled 7.5
million more individual appointments for veterans and benefits than
they had in the preceding year, all because we made the private sector
a part of the VA and allowed veterans to go to the doctor of their
choice under certain qualified situations. We made access easier, we
made access better, and because of that, we made health care better.
Then we addressed the Denver crisis, and this is the most important
thing of all. In January we got this little note from the VA that they
had a $1.3 billion cost overrun on a $1.7 billion hospital, a 328-
percent increase in cost with no promise that it would go down.
Ranking Member Blumenthal, myself, and the Colorado delegation flew
to Denver and brought in the contractors and the VA. We made
significant changes. First we took the VA out of the construction
business. They had proven they didn't deserve the ability to manage
that much money or to build things. Their job was to deliver health
care.
We took the construction and put it in the hands of the Corps of
Engineers, where construction and engineering was responsible. We told
the VA: You may have a $1.385 billion cost overrun, but if you are
going to pay for it, we are not going to borrow from China. You are
going to find it internally in the $71 billion budget of the Veterans
Administration. And they did.
By unanimous consent this Senate and the House of Representatives
approved the completion of that hospital, the funding of the shortfall,
and the management takeover by the Corps of Engineers. Today it is on
progress to be there for the veterans of the Midwest and the West in
Denver, CO.
Then we dealt with many other programs, such as homelessness and
caregiver benefits to our veterans' caregivers, to see to it we have
the very best care possible available.
Then we changed the paradigm. The VA had so many acting appointees
and so many unfilled positions that they couldn't function as well as
they should. So we went in, and we approved Dr. David Shulkin to be the
under secretary for medicine. We took LaVerne Council and approved her
to be the head of information technology. We took former Congressman
Michael Michaud and made him the Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Veterans' Employment and Training. We put highly qualified people who
knew what they were doing in positions where we had vacancies. We are
already seeing a benefit in health delivery services, planning for IT
coordination, and, hopefully, interoperability between the Department
of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense in terms of medical
records, which is so important.
But we also did something else. We said we are no longer going to
tolerate scandals in the VA or look the other way, and we are not going
to pay rewards and bonuses to people who aren't doing the job. As you
heard earlier today with Senator Cassidy from Louisiana and Senator
Ayotte from New Hampshire, with the help of Senator Sherrod Brown of
Ohio, we are going to pass legislation that is going to hold VA
employees accountable, have a record if they are not performing, and in
the future prevent any Veterans Administration employee who is not
doing a job from getting a bonus for a job that is not well done. That
is the way it works in the private sector. It ought to be the way it
works in the government.
Then we took another problem. We took the problem of the scandal in
the VA relocation benefits, which cost hundreds of thousands of lost
revenue to the VA--funds that were given to VA people for transferring,
some of them within the same geographic area where they originally were
working. We told Secretary McDonald: You need to go in there, and you
need to clean this thing up. To his credit, the Secretary did, and to
his credit, the former brigadier general who was the head of that
department retired. He resigned from the VA rather than face the music
in terms of the investigation.
But we took affirmative action to see to it we would have no more
scandals. We want zero tolerance for poor performance, and we want to
reward good performance, but that is the way it needs to be. It is very
important also to understand that we have goals for the future. We are
going to continue as a committee with the VA leadership on a quarterly
basis. Senator Blumenthal and I go to meet with the leadership of the
VA to see what they are doing and to share with them the frustration we
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have in the House and the Senate about things that aren't going right,
but to share with them the joy we have with the things that they are
doing to improve.
Then we have set goals for next year, a full implementation of the
Veterans Choice Program and a consolidation of all veterans' benefits
and VA benefits to see to it that veterans get timely appointments and
good-quality services from the physicians in the VA or physicians in
their communities.
We are going to improve the experience of our servicemembers in
transitioning from Active Duty to Veterans Affairs. Quite frankly,
today that is the biggest problem we have in the country. Active-Duty
servicemembers who leave service and go to veteran status fall into a
black hole. There is no interoperability of VA and DOD health care
records and electronic records. There is no transition in the handoff.
We are going to see that change.
We are going to improve the experience of women veterans, including
protecting victims of military sexual trauma.
We are going to combat veteran homelessness and meet the goal of the
President to get it to zero. We have already reduced it by a third.
We are going to ensure access to mental health so no veteran who
finds himself in trouble doesn't have immediate access to counsel. On
that point, I commend the Veterans Administration for the hotline. The
suicide prevention hotline that they established has helped to save
lives in this country this year, and we are going to continue to see to
it that we have more and more access for our veterans.
Simply put, we are going to make the Veterans Administration work for
the veterans and work for the American people. We are going to have
accountability of the employees. We are going to reward good behavior,
and we are not going to accept bad behavior. In the end, we are going
to take the veteran of America, who served his or her country, and make
sure that they get every benefit that is promised to them and that it
is delivered in a high-quality fashion. We are going to do it working
together as Republicans and Democrats and as Members of the Senate to
do so.
As we close this year, I wish to pause and thank the Members of the
Senate for their unanimous bipartisan support for the significant
changes we have made to address the problems of the Veterans
Administration and to remember this season of the year in Christmas the
great gift we have had to all of us of our veterans who have served us,
many of whom have sacrificed and some of whom have died to see that
America remains the strongest, most peaceful, and freest country on the
face of this Earth.
With that, I pause and yield back the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sasse). The Senator from Oklahoma.
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