A House of Representatives committee Thursday sharply criticized what it described as a lack of cooperation and transparency by the Department of Veterans Affairs that has made it difficult for Congress to adequately investigate delays and deaths at VA hospitals.
At a House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs hearing, lawmakers expressed their frustration with the VA, saying it had failed to submit hearing testimony in a timely manner and was slow to respond to requests for information.
The committee has 70 such requests pending with the VA, some of which are more than a year old, according to Chairman Jeff Miller, R-Fla.
Miller expressed particular concern about pending requests related to committee investigations into safety issues at VA facilities, including a fatal outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease at the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System facility.
“Given that five veterans are dead as a result of the outbreak, which VA’s own inspector general attributed to VA mismanagement, the committee is engaged in an investigation into this matter to determine what went wrong and ensure it never happens again,” Miller said. “Unfortunately, we haven’t seen a similar sense of urgency from VA to help us with our investigative efforts.”
The committee sent its request for emails and documents related to the Legionnaire’s disease outbreak Jan. 18 but hasn’t received the information, Miller said.
Joan Mooney, the VA’s assistant secretary for congressional and legislative affairs, told the committee the VA is working to respond to all congressional requests but that the volume and scope of the requests contributes to a lengthier processing time.
During the past three fiscal years and through August this year, she said, her office has responded to more than 80,000 congressional requests. “Unfortunately, sometimes the sheer volume of work that we receive impedes our ability to provide answers in a timely way,” Mooney said.
Miller responded that Mooney’s office had received a 41 percent increase in budget authority and a 40 percent increase in staff since 2009.
“Resources have been provided, yet frustration persists on a bipartisan and a bicameral basis,” Miller said.
Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo., was particularly interested in a report that detailed delays in diagnoses and treatment at VA facilities in Columbia, S.C., and Augusta, Ga.
Mismanagement of the Columbia VA medical center’s gastroenterology program caused delays that left a backlog of nearly 4,000 patients waiting to be examined at one point in 2011, according to a report this month by the VA’s inspector general.
Concern about the backlog at the Columbia facility surfaced in 2009. Since then, at least 280 patients have been diagnosed with malignancies, 52 of which were associated with the delay in treatment, according to the report.
Coffman said he had asked a top VA health system official at a hearing in March about the delays in Columbia and Augusta.
“Nothing to date has been received,” Coffman said.
Mooney said she would look into the request.
Unsatisfied with her response, Coffman said Mooney was “engaging in the systematic cover-up on information that is embarrassing to the VA about the mistreatment of the veterans who served this country.”
Miller also asked Mooney to rate the VA’s performance in submitting hearing testimony punctually — 48 hours before the hearing — and responding to requests in a timely manner.
“Mr. Chairman, I would rate us at a B-minus, C-plus overall, for the past three and a half years,” Mooney said.
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