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Tuesday, September 08, 2015

VA’s record of waste, fraud and abuse keeps piling up From stolen gravestones to Orlando junkets, agency frustrates Congress

Over the last year, the Department of Veterans Affairs has been repeatedly cited for waste, fraud, abuse and theft that took valuable tax dollars away from veterans, many who are still waiting in long backlogs to get benefits decisions.

The examples are jaw-dropping, starting with the a memo that surfaced in March by the VA’s chief procurement officer, Jan. R. Frye, who went public with a stunning admission that the VA likely wastes $6 billion a year on unnecessary contracts, purchases and services.

“Doors are swung wide open for fraud, waste and abuse,” Mr. Frye, the deputy assistant secretary for acquisition and logistics, wrote in a whistleblower letter that made national headlines.

The examples backing up Mr. Frye’s claims just keep piling up:

• The VA’s inspector general reported that the agency's human resources department wasted $6.1 million on two conferences in Orlando, Florida, that treated employees more to vacation than to training.

• The inspector general also divulged in that report that department officials wasted $97,906 on trinkets like bags, pens and water that were unnecessary. VA employees also improperly accepted gifts including room upgrades, meals, limousine services, golf, spa services, helicopter rides and tickets to see the Rockettes.

• In July, an employee at the Rhode Island Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Exeter pled guilty to stealing 150 marble headstones from a veterans cemetery in a scheme that went unnoticed for a long time.

• In June, a former head engineer at the VA hospital in East Orange, New Jersey, was accused of taking $1.2 million in kickbacks for contracts, which fleeced taxpayers.

• The VA’s inspector general found last month that the Veterans Benefits Administration mismanaged millions of dollars in benefits for veterans who were unable to manage their own income and estates due to age, injury or disability. Among the woes cited in the report was a failure to remove two custodians who had misspent benefit funds.

• In testimony before Congress in May, Mr. Frye cited reports that VA employees in the Bronx in New York City had swiped charge cards 2,000 times, saying they were buying prosthetic legs and arms for veterans. Each charge was for $24,999, one dollar below the VA’s charging limit for purchase cards. When lawmakers demanded details about the charges, they were told there was no documentation.

For wasting federal tax dollars intended to help veterans who deserve the best health care money can buy after their service to this country, the Department of Veterans Affairs wins this weeks Golden Hammer, a weekly distinction awarded by The Washington Times highlighting the most egregious examples of wasteful federal spending.

The recent record of VA woes frustrates spending watchdogs, because the agency claims it needs more money to clear backlogs of cases for veterans waiting for benefit determinations.

“At a time when the VA has a massive backlog in getting veterans health care and getting veterans paperwork processed so they can see a doctor, it is obscene that they are wasting money on self congratulatory conferences,” said Richard Manning, president of Americans for Limited Government, a spending watchdog.

Following initial reports in 2014 that 40 veterans had died while waiting for health care at the Phoenix, Arizona, VA hospital, lawmakers, veterans groups and watchdogs called for President Obama to fire top VA officials and have echoed those cries since.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

And Congress has called how many to the carpet regarding specific "scr3w the government and the vets"? Zero.
And how many are being charged with crimes that we know of, like the prosthetic limb scammers? None.

What the heck, Congress? And especially, what the heck the Congressional VA Oversight Committee? If all that you people are interested in is prolonging your careers in government, move the hell over and let somebody who has the tools and desire take over. To be really honest, more of you need to have served in the military to get an appreciation of what it's like to be a veteran in need.
This is a message to all who have served and want to serve again, but in a much larger capacity. Replace those who can, but don't, and those who can't, but pretend that they can.

lmclain said...

Just make sure you wear your seat belt and pay all the taxes you owe.
Toe the line. Sit down when told. Mostly, STFU.
Two sets of laws.
And your "representatives", including 'your guy', are neck deep in bribery, fiscal mismanagement, theft, misappropriation, falsification of fiduciary documents, and every other kind of theft, scam, and crime imaginable.
They can't point the finger (have someone arrested maybe??) because THEIR "career" (Congressional service was NEVER intended to be a
"career", by the way) would be over. How would they live without that under-the-table side income? How would their families exist without being a lobbyist with a dad in Congress (Harry Reid has 4 or 5 kids doing THAT).
Remember this continuing insult to veterans the next time one of your lying, thieving, two-faced, alcoholic, pedophilic, adulterous, draft dogging, cheating liars (oops, but that one deserved a double mention) stands in front of a microphone and lauds our "heroes" and "honors their sacrifice". They should burst into flames.
Either that, or dangle from a rope. Just as good, though not as entertaining as the fire thing.
Keep cheering.