You can read the rest of the article here:(CNN) -- A top official at the Department of Veterans Affairs has resigned amid the growing scandal about wait times and care at veterans' hospitals, the department's leader said Friday.
News about the resignation of Dr. Robert Petzel, undersecretary for health in the Department of Veterans Affairs, came one day after he spoke at a Senate hearing about the issue alongside Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki.
In a short statement, Shinseki announced that he accepted Petzel's resignation.
"As we know from the veteran community, most veterans are satisfied with the quality of their VA health care, but we must do more to improve timely access to that care," Shinseki said. "I am committed to strengthening veterans' trust and confidence in their VA healthcare system."
Petzel's resignation came a day after he testified before the Senate's Veterans Affairs' Committee looking into reported delays at numerous VA hospitals and a long list of serious problems and allegations of falsifying wait times, many of which were exposed and reported by CNN.
For six months, CNN has been reporting on delays in medical appointments suffered by veterans across the country and veterans who died or were seriously injured while waiting for appointments and care.
The VA requires its hospitals to provide care to patients in a timely manner, typically within 14 to 30 days.
The most disturbing and striking problems emerged in Arizona last month as inside sources revealed to CNN details of a secret waiting list for veterans at the Phoenix VA. Charges were leveled that at least 40 American veterans died in Phoenix while waiting for care at the VA there,many of whom were placed on the secret list.
But even as the Phoenix VA's problems have riveted the nation's attention, numerous whistle-blowers from other VA hospitals across the country have stepped forward. They described similar delays in care for veterans and also varying schemes by officials at those facilities to hide the delays -- in some cases even falsify records or efforts to "cook the books."
The secret waiting list in Phoenix was part of an elaborate scheme designed by Veterans Affairs managers there who were trying to hide that 1,400 to 1,600 sick veterans were forced to wait months to see a doctor, according to a recently retired top VA doctor and several high-level sources who spoke exclusively to CNN.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/16/politics/va-scandal/
This scandal has created a real conundrum for many liberals for a couple of reasons:
First, Shinseki's a big hero to that crowd for publicly criticizing US invasion plans prior to the Iraq War while still serving in uniform. They were outraged when this caused him to be forced into retirement, (of course these are the same folks who run around with their hair on fire whenever a uniformed general publicly criticizes the policies of a Democratic President, and demand that he be fired.) They were thrilled when he was appointed to head the VA because they saw the appointment as a poke in the eye to George W. Bush, an activity they always applaud. Consequently they're very reluctant to see him go, even as he is revealed to be a clueless, asleep-at-the-switch incompetent.
Second, and probably more important to these folks, (especially the liberals and leftists on The Hill, like Bernie Sanders, who heads the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee) is the fact that the VA has long been held up by them as a shining positive model for government run health care. They have pointed to it as a template for their beloved socialized medicine health care scheme, known euphemistically as "single payer".
To have it revealed that the VA is rife with corruption and incompetence, (pretty much like just about every other government run operation) really puts a crimp in their narrative. So you see them rushing to minimize the problems, claiming that overall it's still a wonderfully run program, (of course these are again the exact same folks who would be bubbling over with indignation and doing the hair on fire routine if this were a Defense Department program.)
I think what's been revealed here is a complete outrage, and that it appears that a thorough housecleaning at the VA is in order. It seems that a widespread culture of bureaucratic butt covering taking precedence over providing first class care to those who served our country has become systemic, and it needs to be purged root and branch.
And in the case of the worst of it, the secret list that led to deaths; in addition to firings, there should be criminal charges. Some person or persons should be doing a long stretch in the pen for that.


