Veterans Affairs Admits to Spending Billions on Private Health Care Costs

Veterans Affairs Admits to Spending Billions
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert McDonald was appointed by President Barack Obama in 2014. He has been the head of the agency that has been embroiled in controversy and allegations of misspending and mistreatment of veterans. File Photo by UPI/ Dennis Brack | License Photo

 

Veterans Affairs Admits to Spending Billions on Private Health Care Costs

 

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert McDonald was appointed by President Barack Obama in 2014. He has been the head of the agency that has been embroiled in controversy and allegations of misspending and mistreatment of veterans. File Photo by UPI/ Dennis Brack | License Photo
Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert McDonald was appointed by President Barack Obama in 2014. He has been the head of the agency that has been embroiled in controversy and allegations of misspending and mistreatment of veterans. File Photo by UPI/ Dennis Brack | License Photo

 

WASHINGTON, June 2 (UPI) — Officials from the Department of Veterans Affairs told a House Committee on Tuesday, that the agency has been spending billions of dollars a year, on private medical care for veterans in hospitals and clinics without contracts.

The hearing before the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs’s investigations panelwas a result of allegations of misspending of billions of dollars brought forward by Jan R. Frye, deputy assistant secretary for acquisition and logistics at the VA.

Medical care costs for veterans outside of VA hospitals and clinics are estimated to exceed more than $10 billion this fiscal year, according to The Washington Post.

Acting Assistant Secretary for Management and Interim Chief Financial Officer Edward J. Murray testified before the hearing.

“VA acknowledges that our long-standing procurement processes for care in the community need improvement,” Murray said referring to the care of veterans outside of the VA system, also known as non-VA care, adding that “serious legal questions” have been brought up over the medical care of veterans outside of VA hospitals and clinics.

Frye sent a 35-page memo to the VA Secretary Robert McDonald in March, where he accused VA officials of spending at least $6 billion a year in violation of contracting regulations, also describing a culture of “lawlessness and chaos” at the Veterans Health Administration healthcare system that serves nearly 9 million veterans.

“When federal contracts are required and you don’t use them, there are terms and conditions that are missing from the contract,” Frye said at the hearing. “There are termination issues. Disputes over fair and reasonable prices. A whole host of issues. Safety and efficacy. Without them, the contractor is there to do what he or she wants.”

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