The Senate passed a bipartisan bill Wednesday designed to improve veterans’ access to health care, following news earlier in the day that the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Phoenix office would explore criminal allegations inside the embattled Department of Veterans Affairs.
Sponsored by Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and John McCain, R-Ariz., the bill seeks to allocate resources for 26 new VA facilities in 18 states, as well as $500 million to hire more doctors and nurses, among other provisions. Its passage comes one day after the House unanimously approved a nearly identical bill.
“Our job is to make certain that every veteran in the country gets quality health care in a timely manner,” Sanders said in a statement after the vote. “At a time when 2 million more veterans have come into the VA in the last four years, we must ensure that there are enough doctors, nurses and other health care professionals to meet the needs of veterans in every facility in the country.”
Speaking to members of the House Judiciary Committee earlier Wednesday, FBI Director James Comey confirmed that the bureau had opened an investigation into a VA office in Phoenix, where an interim report by the VA inspector general’s office found some 1,700 veterans waiting for care. Though the probe will initially focus on Arizona, Comey said the FBI plans to “follow it wherever the facts take us.” According to the Associated Press, the Justice Department had formally asked the FBI to review materials provided by the VA inspector general.









