Top Veterans Affairs Official Lays Out Overhaul Plan For VA Health Care System To Lawmakers
Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson told the House Committee on Veterans Affairs that the agency was working to improve the network of private doctors available to veterans. In other VA news, a former Phoenix VA hospital director will keep her bonus despite being fired for misconduct. And Rep. John Mica introduces a bill that would transfer federal control of a VA nursing home to Florida.
The Washington Post:
Top VA Official: Private Doctors Must Be ‘Part Of The Fabric Of VA Care’
A top Veterans Affairs official told lawmakers Wednesday that the government’s network of private doctors available to veterans at taxpayer expense is “too complicated” for veterans, physicians and VA employees. Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson, laying out an ambitious plan to merge and expand VA’s private health-care system, said reforming what has become an inefficient, unwieldy bureaucracy is crucial to making outside care “part of the fabric of VA care” to meet a growing demand from veterans. (Rein, 11/18)
The Arizona Republic:
Ruling: Former Phoenix VA Boss Sharon Helman May Keep Bonus
The Department of Veterans Affairs cannot rescind a bonus paid to former Phoenix VA hospital Director Sharon Helman shortly before she was fired last year for misconduct, according to a ruling by an administrative judge. (Wagner, 11/18)
The Orlando Sentinel:
Mica's Bill Would Have State Run Lake Baldwin VA Nursing Home
Rep. John Mica wants to transfer the operations of an empty nursing home on the Lake Baldwin campus from the federal Department of Veterans Affairs to Florida VA. He introduced a bill on Wednesday, hoping that the transfer to the state would speed up the re-opening of the 120 empty beds. "These valuable nursing beds cannot remain vacant at Lake Baldwin," said Mica. “The State of Florida can speed up the opening of the nursing care facility, provide staffing, reduce costs to federal taxpayers and operate more efficiently." (Miller, 11/18)