At the Veteran’s Administration, it pays to support your president. Literally.
By lying about their budget, doling out care so bad it risked the lives of wounded veterans, and presiding over rat-infested hellholes, the guys and gals who run the V.A. took the biggest “performance payments” of anyone in civil service.
The list of bonuses to senior career officials at the Veterans Affairs Department in 2006… 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.
Ever idly wondered what selling your soul feels like? Just ask the V.A. They sold theirs to Bush.
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 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.
V.A. officials based in Washington D.C. got the biggest checks, triggering the Senate Chair of the Veteran’s Affairs Committee, Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii) to ask what’s up with that. Smells like cronyism to me.
After six years of Bush, the big surprise is that we can still be surprised at his administration’s blatant raiding of the public till. After all, this is small potatoes compared to the rip-off which is private contracting. But still.
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…
“Simply put, people who nearly shortchanged our veterans shouldn’t get a bonus check at the end of the year,” he said.





Thank you, Trish, for supporting our veterans when the partisan leaders at VA have turned their backs on us. If you want to know more about the serious leadership failures at VA, please visit our web site, http://www.VeteransForCommonSense.org
Best,
Paul Sullivan, Executive Director
Veterans for Common Sense
Your story is appalling, lacking only mention of the VA centers and hospital ordered CLOSED in time of war.
HOWEVER: Walter Reed, ordered closed by Rumsfeld’s BRAC, is an Army-run facility, not VA. And a Halliburton spinoff company was awarded the contract to run it these last several years. Long term federal employees were kissed off and not replaced. More money to Cheney’s pockets via Halliburton.