With his job on the line, Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki said he was “personally angered and saddened” by an alleged cover-up within the department that may have cost the lives of 40 veterans.
“VA takes any allegations about patient care or employee misconduct very seriously,” Shinseki said in his prepared remarks before the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Thursday. “Any adverse event for a veteran within our care is one too many.”
The department is under fire after leaks blew the lid on an alleged cover-up scandal in the Phoenix VA Health Care System. According to whistleblowers, hospital officials kept a “secret list” that tracked appointments to shield excessively long wait times for veterans seeking primary care. As many as 40 veteran deaths may be linked to the delays, they claim.
“If these allegations are true, they are completely unacceptable,” Shinseki said.
But the four-star retired Army general said Thursday that he’s not going anywhere.
“I intend to continue this mission until I have satisfied either that goal or I am told by the commander in chief that my time has been served,” he said.
Ahead of the hearing, President Obama tasked his White House deputy chief of staff Rob Nabors to review the VA’s policies on scheduling appointments and patient safety rules, a signal of the president’s growing concern over the controversy, the Associated Press reported.
The VA ordered an Inspector General (IG) to investigate the allegations in Phoenix, and placed three officials in the VA hospital system there on administrative leave amid the ongoing investigation.
Vermont Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders, chairman of Senate committee, urged caution against jumping to conclusions before the results of the IG investigation are released.









