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VA Healthcare:?
Condition Critical
VA Secretary Nicholson:? ?A crisis??
I don?t agree.?
Opinion by Larry Scott
The VA is facing a healthcare budget shortfall that could be as much as $1.6 billion in FY 2005.? Estimates for FY 2006 show a $2.6 billion shortfall.
The budget shortfalls came to light when Dr. Jonathan Perlin, the VA?s Under Secretary for Health, was being grilled on Capitol Hill.? Dr. Perlin?s testimony sent bipartisan shockwaves through the Beltway.
In testimony before the Senate Committee on Veterans? Affairs on June 28, VA Secretary Jim Nicholson, overcome by indifference, said: ??A crisis?? I don?t agree.?? ?It?s a matter of definition.? It?s not a crisis.?? ?Being off a billion dollars is not unrealistic or a crisis.?
At the same hearing Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) bristled:? ?This Administration has not taken the issue of VA funding seriously.?? ?This shortfall is either deliberate misdirection or gross incompetence.?
From Senator Ken Salazar (D-CO):? ?This was decided way above your [Nicholson?s] pay-grade.? At the OMB and the White House.?
And from Senator Barack Obama (D-IL):? ?We pose in front of the flag and take pictures with soldiers.? We give away tax cuts?[but] when it comes to VA funding, we?re not there.?
Secretary Nicholson explained the VA?s ?non-crisis? by blaming outdated actuarial models which did not anticipate returning troops and did not include cost projections for long term care, dental care or prosthetics.? Nicholson wanted to borrow money from other parts of the VA budget, most of it coming from capital improvements, which would have eliminated much needed repairs and upgrades to VA facilities.?
On June 29 Secretary Nicholson held a press conference surrounded by Republican House members including Rep. Steve Buyer (R-IN), Chairman of the House Committee on Veterans? Affairs.? Secretary Nicholson, having experienced an overnight epiphany, for the first time asked for more funding.? Rep. Buyer, sharing the same religious experience, for the first time promised more funding.
Also on the 29th, the Senate passed legislation authorizing $1.5 billion for VA healthcare.? Earlier in the year Sen. Murray?s request for $2.2 billion for the VA suffered a partisan defeat.? All Republicans, except one, voted against additional VA funding.? This historic voting pattern has blocked proper VA healthcare funding for years.
On the 30th of June, the House Committee on Veterans? Affairs held a hearing, with Secretary Nicholson finally testifying he needs more funds for VA healthcare.? However, Nicholson only asked for $975 million, far short of what is needed.? This was the figure approved by President George W. Bush.
Later that night the House had their
?come to Jesus? moment and
passed
legislation authorizing the $975 million expenditure.? Now the Republicans will try to take credit
for this legislation when, for years, they have stood in the way.? It?s a tried-and-true political game:? Create a problem, blame somebody else, solve
the problem, take credit for the solution.
Now the House and Senate must pass compromise legislation to settle on an actual dollar amount that will go to VA healthcare.? Whatever that figure may be, the VA will NOT get enough funding to provide adequate healthcare for qualified veterans.? This is an old political trick.? You have two choices, but they are both bad.
Veterans must call their elected representatives and tell them to vote for the Senate version and, at the same time, let them know that even the $1.5 billion is NOT ENOUGH.? The toll-free number to call your rep. is:? 1-877-SOB-U-SOB (honest).
VA Secretary Nicholson said he has
plenty of money in his budget.? This
while nurses at the
Republican members of Congress vote
against proper funding for VA healthcare.?
This while the
In the past three weeks I have
spent five days at the
Secretary Nicholson must accept responsibility for trying to hide this budget shortfall and for trying to gut other parts of the VA budget.? But, as was said, this is all decided way above his pay-grade.? Nicholson?s marching orders from the White House and OMB filter down to a Republican-controlled House and Senate and President George W. Bush gets exactly the VA budget he wants, and not a penny more.
It?s time for President George Bush to stop the meaningless rhetoric and fully fund VA healthcare.? A half-hearted ?thank you? to our troops doesn?t pay the medical bills when they come home.? A ?mission accomplished? doesn?t accomplish a damned thing when veterans have to wait two, three or more years for the VA to grant a PTSD claim.? And a small monetary Band-Aid today only aggravates the wounds of all veterans in the long term.
Healthcare delayed is healthcare denied.? The lives of millions of veterans are at stake.