[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 209 (Thursday, December 21, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8204-S8205]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VA ACCOUNTABILITY AND VETERANS HEALTHCARE
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, let me mention something that is very
significant to me personally. I remember it was 2 years ago today that
I picked up USA TODAY, and in a USA TODAY article, they singled out my
State of Oklahoma and said that we are not treating our veterans right.
We were in shock at that time. In fact, the article detailed some
really appalling things that were going on and were not going on in my
State of Oklahoma. There were things the inspector general reported
during the Obama administration that we had no way of knowing about.
We seem to have more veterans per capita in Oklahoma. One of the
reasons is we have five major military establishments, and Oklahoma is
a great place to live, so a lot of them retire there. They were not
getting the help they need, and they were not getting the treatment to
the highest standards that were available.
This isn't how we take care of veterans in Oklahoma. Senator Lankford
and I and two of the House Members worked on this and talked to
regional Veterans' Administration leadership. We talked to the
veterans. We talked to whistleblowers. And we identified three key
problems that we needed to fix. This is interesting because these are
three problems in my State of Oklahoma, but they would be the same
thing in Nebraska or any other State because it is not just in our
State of Oklahoma.
The first one was that the VA couldn't fire bad employees.
This is always a problem. You go into an organization and you find
that things are not going very well because there are one or two bad
employees. Yet it takes you a year before you are able to get rid of
these people. Despite having been identified, it takes forever to
terminate an employee.
Well, we fixed that this past summer when President Trump signed the
VA Accountability Act that included our language to allow the Secretary
of Veterans Affairs to immediately fire employees for misconduct or
poor performance. That was successful. We did it. That is history.
I have to say that during President Trump's administration so far, he
has used this firing authority on over 500 bad actors from the VA, and
we are finally creating a culture of accountability in the VA, which is
having positive results. That is the first reform.
The second one: Too many veterans were forced to receive care from VA
facilities that were hours away or didn't provide specialized care.
This is a problem. A lot of these veterans don't have the capability
to move around and get the care they need, and they didn't have the
choices. So we actually had to make a change, and we did. We worked
with the President and reauthorized the bipartisan VA Choice Program.
The VA Choice Program is great because it allowed our veterans to
actually, in those hard-to-reach areas, get high-quality healthcare,
regardless of where they had to travel to get it done. That was a
success.
Finally, after the USA TODAY article, we requested an accredited
third-party look at the problem at our VA facilities because previous
reports from the Obama Veterans Affairs inspector general failed to
identify and correct these problems. Well, my request was denied. It is
just like any bureaucracy. They don't want someone looking over their
shoulder, so they said: No, we are not going to allow you to have a
third party accompany the VA to look into the problem that you have.
Some are not aware of this, but in the Senate, when someone is
nominated, we can put a hold on them and not allow them to go through
confirmation--at least for a long period of time. At that time, the
President--our current President--had nominated a person to be the
inspector general of the Veterans' Administration. We put a hold on him
until they allowed someone to come in and monitor the evaluation that
the VA was doing of their own bureaucracy in Oklahoma. That worked,
except the problem with that is it was a one-time authorization. We
needed to make that a permanent part of our structure. I am pleased to
say we did that.
When we signed the Enhancing Veteran Care Act, it permanently granted
the VISN directors--that is one of the director levels of the VA--and
gave the medical center directors the authority to request, at their
request, an outside oversight in order to evaluate what they had done.
It has been very successful.
It is important for the regional directors to have the authority
because
[[Page S8205]]
they have the best idea of the reality of care at their facilities.
I appreciate the work of my colleagues, Senator James Lankford,
Congressman Markwayne Mullin, and Congressman Steve Russell. It turned
out to be a real good team, and we are able to get these things done.
We are already starting to see real progress in improving the veterans'
care in Oklahoma and across the country because as we are improving the
system we had in Oklahoma, that same system can be improved in Nebraska
or any other State.
We need to get our VA facilities from their current ratings to the
highest standard. The highest standard rating is five stars. We are now
up to three stars in Oklahoma. We were at one star when we first
discovered this problem on that fateful day 2 years ago today in an
article in USA TODAY.
President Trump will continue to be an important partner for Oklahoma
as we continue to improve our veterans' care.
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