[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 216 (Saturday, December 19, 2020)]
[Senate]
[Page S7849]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mr. REED (for himself and Mr. Tester):
S. 5072. A bill to improve Vet Centers for the Department of Veterans
Affairs, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Mr. REED. Mr. President, as many of my colleagues know, the
transition from deployment to civilian life is frequently difficult.
Vet Centers, created in the wake of the Vietnam War, are community-
based centers that were designed to provide critical services for
veterans, service members, and their families. Today, there is a need
to enhance these Centers to realize that original vision--which is why
I am introducing the Vet Center Improvement Act.
This legislation is an outgrowth of a Government Accountability
Office (GAO) investigation that Senator Tester and I requested into
allegations that changes to performance metrics at Vet Centers may have
negatively impacted care and additional concerns that he and I had
about their staffing practices. The subsequent GAO report concluded
that recent changes ``have the potential to negatively affect care and
create undue burden and stress on counselors providing that care at
some Vet Centers.'' This report included recommendations to improve
care, transparency, and hiring and staffing methods that form the
foundation for our legislation.
Specifically, the Vet Center Improvement Act requires periodic review
and reform of performance standards at Vet Centers; the creation and
periodic reevaluation of a staffing model, along with standardization
of position descriptions and responsibilities across Vet Centers; the
creation of a working group to implement changes to improve quality of
care for veterans and recruitment and retention of staff; and the GAO
to review Vet Center infrastructure and examine what future investments
are needed.
Additionally, our legislation creates a pilot program to provide
grants to combat food insecurity and provide necessary heating and
cooling assistance to veterans and their families. Food insecurity and
the need for heating assistance are growing issues for veterans and
others as a result of the pandemic.
I would like to thank Senator Tester for not only the attention he
has paid to this issue as Ranking Member of the Senate Veterans Affairs
Committee, but also for joining with me on this important legislation.
Our legislation has received support from such organizations as the
Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), American Veterans (AMVETS), Disabled
American Veterans (DAV), National Community Action Foundation (NCAF),
National Association for State Community Services Programs (NASCSP),
the National Energy & Utility Affordability Coalition (NEUAC), and the
URI Feinstein Center for a Hunger Free America. I look forward to
continuing our partnership on this and other measures to improve care
for our veterans, and I hope our colleagues will join us in this
endeavor.
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