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DEMOCRATIC PRESS RELEASE
May 1, 2007
CHAIRMAN AKAKA EXPRESSES CONCERNS ABOUT VA
BONUSES
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI), Chairman
of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, sent a letter to R. James
Nicholson, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, expressing concerns about
bonus awards paid to some of VA’s highest-ranking civil servants. The
letter indicates that personnel based in Washington, D.C. received
higher bonuses than their colleagues outside of DC, and that some
employees received large bonuses in spite of their role in the budget
shortfall in 2005.
“Just one year after VA’s notorious budget shortfall, when VA management
was forced to request emergency funds based on a determination that the
budget was short billions of dollars, several senior budget staff each
received VA’s highest bonus award of $33,000,” Akaka said. “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 copy of the letter is attached below.
April 30, 2007
The Honorable R. James Nicholson
Secretary of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20420
Dear Secretary Nicholson,
I am writing to share with you my thoughts and concerns about bonus
awards paid to some of VA’s highest ranking civil servants. The staff of
the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs has reviewed the summary of bonus
awards paid in FY 2006 to VA Senior Executive Service (SES) personnel
that you forwarded to me earlier this year. The staff found that bonuses
to SES personnel were not distributed evenly across the organization,
and that some employees received large bonuses in spite of questionable
performance outcomes.
For example, SES personnel based in Washington, DC received, on average,
significantly higher bonuses than their counterparts in other geographic
areas. In the VBA, SES bonus recipients based in Washington received an
average of $6,800 or 41 percent more than their counterparts elsewhere.
In the VHA, bonus awards were an average of $4,600 or 30 percent higher
for SES personnel based in Washington. While I understand that these
higher bonuses may to some extent constitute an informal cost of living
adjustment, there are many U.S. cities where the cost of living is
equally high if not higher than here.
VISN directors were the only non-Washington based cohort to receive high
bonuses as a whole, and were among the most generously rewarded in FY
2006. 18 VISN directors across the country received bonuses, to an
average of $24,000. Their subordinate system and facility directors
received, on average, over 40 percent less, and accounted for virtually
all recipients of bonuses of under $10,000, the bottom end of the SES
bonus range.
It is evident to me that, on average, managers based outside of
Washington received significantly lower bonuses in FY 2006. It is also
clear that award size rose in relation to proximity to the center of the
organization. On the whole, medical center directors received the lowest
bonuses, while VISN directors nationwide and top managers in Washington
received the largest. This is despite the fact that all personnel earned
roughly the same base pay, and held the same rank in the sense that they
were all at the top of the Federal salary pyramid and mostly ineligible
for substantial increases in pay.
Another concern is that just one year after requesting emergency funds
based on a determination that the FY 2005 budget and FY 2006 budget
request included insufficient funding, several senior VA budget staff
each received the VA’s highest award of $33,000.
I am not concerned that VA’s SES bonuses are among the highest of any
agency, because I believe that VA has some of the most dedicated and
hard-working employees of any agency. But I also believe that in the
Federal government, awards should be determined according to performance
and retention considerations, and should not give the appearance of an
entitlement for the most centrally placed or well-connected staff.
I would appreciate your thoughts on the FY 2006 bonus awards as well as
on what steps you will take to ensure that future bonus awards are more
fairly distributed throughout the Department.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
DANIEL K. AKAKA
Chairman
---------------
Larry Scott
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