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VA HANDS OUT HEFTY BONUSES TO SENIOR
OFFICIALS -- Many groups question the practice
citing short-staffing and underfunding.

Background on VA bonus system at the
hospital level here...
http://vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfMAY07/nf050207-1.htm
Senator Akaka questions bonuses here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/scva07/scva050107-1.htm
And, the other side of the VA bonus story
here...
http://vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfMAY07/nf050407-3.htm
Today's story here...
http://www.citizen.com/apps/
pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070503/N
EWS0102/70503002/-1/CITIZEN
Story below:
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With veterans care under strain, VA hands out
hefty bonuses to senior officials
By HOPE YEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Months after a politically embarrassing $1 billion
shortfall that put veterans' health care in peril, Veterans Affairs
officials involved in the foul-up got hefty bonuses ranging up to
$33,000.
The list of bonuses to senior career officials at the Veterans Affairs
Department in 2006, obtained by The Associated Press, documents a
generous package of more than $3.8 million in payments by a financially
strapped agency straining to help care for thousands of injured veterans
returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Among those receiving payments were a deputy assistant secretary and
several regional directors who crafted the VA's flawed budget for 2005
based on misleading accounting. They received performance payments up to
$33,000 each, a figure equal to about 20 percent of their annual
salaries.
Also receiving a top bonus was the deputy undersecretary for benefits,
who helps manage a disability claims system that has a backlog of cases
and delays averaging 177 days in getting benefits to injured veterans.
The bonuses were awarded even after government investigators had
determined the VA repeatedly miscalculated _ if not deliberately misled
taxpayers _ with questionable methods used to justify Bush
administration cuts to health care amid a burgeoning Iraq war.
Annual bonuses to senior VA officials now average more than $16,000 _
the most lucrative in government.
The VA said the payments are necessary to retain hardworking career
officials.
Several watchdog groups questioned the practice. They cited
short-staffing and underfunding at VA clinics that have become
particularly evident after recent disclosures of shoddy outpatient
treatment of injured troops at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington.
"Hundreds of thousands of our veterans remain homeless every day and
hundreds of thousands more veterans wait six months or more for VA
disability claim decisions," said Paul Sullivan, executive director of
Veterans for Common Sense. "The lavish amounts of VA bonus cash would be
better spent on a robust plan to cut VA red tape."
Sen. Daniel Akaka, chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee,
said the payments pointed to an improper "entitlement for the most
centrally placed or well-connected staff."
Seeking an explanation from Secretary Jim Nicholson, Akaka also asked
the department to outline steps to address disparities in which
Washington-based senior officials got higher payments than their
counterparts elsewhere.
"Awards should be determined according to performance," said Akaka,
D-Hawaii. "I am concerned by this generous pat on the back for those who
failed to ensure that their budget requests accurately reflected VA's
needs."
A VA spokesman, Matt Burns, said the department was reviewing Akaka's
request. Burns contended that many of the senior officials had been with
the department for years, with an expertise that could not be replicated
immediately if they were to leave for the more profitable private
sector.
"Rewarding knowledgeable and professional career public servants is
entirely appropriate," he said. "The importance of retaining committed
career leaders in any government organization cannot be overstated."
In 2006, the VA officials receiving top bonuses included Rita Reed, the
deputy assistant secretary for budget, and William Feeley, a former VA
network director who is now deputy undersecretary for health for
operations and management.
Also receiving $33,000 was Ronald Aument, the deputy undersecretary for
benefits, who helps oversee the strained and backlogged claims system
that Nicholson now says is unacceptable.
The bonuses are determined by the heads of the VA's various divisions,
based in part on performance evaluations. All requests are submitted to
Nicholson for final approval.
In July 2005, the VA stunned Congress by suddenly announcing it faced a
$1 billion shortfall after failing to take into account the additional
cost of caring for veterans injured in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The admission, months after the department insisted it was operating
within its means and did not need additional money, drew harsh criticism
from both parties and some calls for Nicholson's resignation.
The investigative arm of Congress, the Government Accountability Office,
determined the VA had used misleading accounting methods and claimed
false savings of more than $1.3 billion, apparently because President
Bush was not willing, at the time, to ask Congress for more money.
According to the White House Office of Personnel Management, roughly
three of every four senior officials at the VA have received some kind
of bonus each year. In recent years, the payment amount has steadily
increased from being one of the lowest in government _ $8,120 in 2002 _
to the most generous _ $16,713 in 2005.
In contrast, just over half the senior officials at the Energy
Department in 2005 received an average bonus of $9,064. Across all
government agencies, about two-thirds of employees received bonuses,
which averaged $13,814 in 2005, the most recent data available.
Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, said the VA
bonuses appeared to reflect a trend in government where performance
bonuses were increasingly used to reward loyal associates and longtime
employees.
Put in place shortly after the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act, executive
bonuses were designed to increase accountability in government by tying
raises more closely to performance. But while bonuses can help retain
key employees, damage can be done when payments turn into an automatic
handout regardless of performance, Ellis said.
"Simply put, people who nearly shortchanged our veterans shouldn't get a
bonus check at the end of the year," he said.
Joe Davis, spokesman for Veterans of Foreign Wars, one of the nation's
largest veterans groups, agreed. His organization is awaiting
Nicholson's explanation, saying that the budget shortfall was partly to
blame for backlogs and other problems today.
"No one joins the government to get rich, and the bonus may be used as a
retention tool to keep the best and the brightest, but it must be
performance-based in award to be fair and impartial," Davis said.
"Anything else could be viewed as favoritism."
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Larry Scott --