[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2192-S2193]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATION OF MICHAEL MISSAL
Mr. JOHNSON. Mr. President, I rise today to urge my colleagues to
confirm Michael Missal, the nominee for the Department of Veterans
Affairs inspector general.
For far too long, our Nation's veterans have been without a permanent
watchdog in place to ensure the VA affords them the care that they
deserve.
I have seen the damage that acting leadership in the VA Office of
Inspector General has done in my own State of Wisconsin. Numerous
veterans of the Tomah VA facility suffered for years through dangerous
prescription practices, whistleblower retaliation, and a culture of
fear. The VA Office of Inspector General, under acting leadership,
conducted a multiyear investigation of the Tomah VA facility but then
swept the allegations under the rug--the secret report that was hidden
from veterans, the public, and Congress.
Months after the report was finalized and closed, Jason Simcakoski, a
35-year-old Marine Corps veteran, died of a lethal cocktail of over a
dozen different drugs at the Tomah VA facility.
Another Wisconsin veteran, Thomas Behr, died after being treated at
the Tomah VA facility. Mr. Behr's daughter Candace told me that had she
known about the inspector general's report, she never would have taken
her father to the facility and he might be alive today.
In other words, had the VA Office of Inspector General been
transparent and published the findings of its investigation, these
tragic outcomes could very well have been avoided.
Under acting leadership, the VA Office of Inspector General has tried
to stonewall my investigation into the tragedies at Tomah VA medical
facility. Its actions have shown that, under acting leadership, the VA
Office of Inspector General has become too close to the VA, the agency
it is charged with overseeing. The acting leadership lacked the
fundamental tenets of transparency and accountability that all
inspectors general should have that could literally mean the difference
between life and death.
I was forced to resort to a subpoena to obtain the information about
the investigation of the Tomah VA Office of Inspector General, and
there are still some documents the acting leadership has refused to
produce. For over a year, I have urged President Obama to appoint a
permanent VA inspector general. I was pleased that President Obama
finally heeded my calls--and, quite honestly, the calls of many of my
colleagues--when he nominated Michael Missal to the position late last
year. My committee, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, moved his nomination after carefully considering
his
[[Page S2193]]
qualifications, and we reported him out to the full Senate immediately.
I am hopeful that under Mr. Missal's leadership, the VA Office of
Inspector General will restore veterans' trust in the inspector
general's office, protect VA whistleblowers, and forge a new
relationship with Congress, but above all else, I hope Mr. Missal will
use his position to help ensure the finest among us receives the high-
quality care they deserve.
I am confident Mr. Missal is up to the task, and I thank him for
agreeing to serve in this supporting role.
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