[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 107 (Thursday, June 22, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3728-S3729]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VA ACCOUNTABILITY AND WHISTLEBLOWER PROTECTION ACT
Mr. SCHATZ. Mr. President, the Senate recently passed the Department
of Veterans Affairs Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act.
This legislation is intended to improve the VA by strengthening the
process of holding nonperforming VA employees accountable, but it does
this by removing certain due process protections that are currently in
place to protect VA employees from unlawful discrimination or
retaliation. Dr. David Shulkin, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs,
asked for this authority to reform the personnel system, and the Senate
obliged his request.
In Hawaii we have a much different and more pressing problem that
this legislation does not address, and that is the challenge we face
with recruitment and retention of VA leaders and filling vacant
positions at the VA.
Nowhere is this challenge more evident than in the VA's yearlong
search to recruit a new executive director for the Pacific Island
Health Care System in Honolulu. During this time, six executive
directors from six different VA healthcare systems on the mainland
rotated through Hawaii on an interim basis. The VA said that its search
dragged on for so long because it faced a shortage of individuals with
the right skills to fill these medical director positions, but that is
no excuse. The VA should have been doing more to develop a pool of
qualified people to fill vacant medical director positions. Failure to
find long-term, stable leadership undermines accountability not only at
the highest level, but across the entire healthcare system.
I am also bothered by the decision to rotate medical directors in
from other healthcare systems, even on an interim basis. This stopgap
measure failed to ensure the proper leadership required to provide
long-term direction for the Pacific Island Health Care System and to
make sure that there was someone to hold accountable for the delivery
of services to the more than 120,000 veterans that the VA is
responsible for in the Pacific. Those veterans and their families
deserve better.
Leadership recruitment is not the only staffing issue we face. In its
September 2016 report on the Pacific Island Health Care System, the
VA's Office of the Inspector General specifically noted that
recruitment and retention of staff is an ongoing challenge across our
neighbor islands, in large part due to cost of living, distance, and
physical isolation. At the time of its report, the OIG noted that there
were 75 unfilled positions at community-based outpatient clinics across
Hawaii. These are vacant positions at clinics that directly affect
veterans' access to healthcare.
I worry that removing important due process protections for VA
employees will only make this problem worse, because, where there are
already issues in physician recruitment and retention, the VA could
compete through the promise of a stable job, in an environment free
from unlawful discrimination or retaliation. Knowing that those
protections are in place is not only helpful to attracting recruits,
but it is helpful to promoting a culture free of inequity and
intimidation because people know they will be held to account for their
actions. That kind of culture is critical to recruitment and retention
because the last thing the VA wants is hard-working employees to search
for
[[Page S3729]]
jobs that offer better working conditions elsewhere.
At our recent subcommittee hearing on military construction and
veteran affairs appropriations, Secretary Shulkin acknowledged that the
VA has seen cases of documented whistleblower retaliation, and that is
important, because it means that Secretary Shulkin is going to have to
be vigilant so that this new legislation is not abused. In his mind, he
is not seeking this legislation so that the VA can fire employees
without any reason or to allow supervisors to abuse them, and I hope
that is how this plays out in practice across the country, but there is
going to be more risk for a workforce of 360,000 that is decentralized,
where decisions are made locally, and so we will be vigilant with him
and will hold Secretary Shulkin accountable for any wrongdoing.
We are still left grappling with the challenge of recruitment and
retention, and unfortunately, this legislation does not address it, and
it may make addressing it even harder. With nearly 50,000 vacant
positions across the VA workforce, Congress needs to get a handle on
this issue because these vacancies risk undermining the delivery of
services and care to our veterans who rely on the VA. We can and need
to do better by them.
Thank you.
____________________