The agency charged with caring for America's veterans has been backsliding in performance after making improvements from a scandal a decade ago, as patient wait times grow and numerous of its employees are caught swindling taxpayers or fudging statistics. The sheer breadth of problems inside the Veterans Affairs Department were laid bare this month in a lengthy semiannual report by its inspector general that identified nearly $4 billion in losses and problems in just six months. The issues ranged from a failure by the VA to recover more than $200 million in reimbursements from private medical providers to audacious criminal plots by employees and contractors ranging from stealing furnishings donated to homeless veterans to massive kickbacks. Investigations resulted in 104 arrests and more than 500 administrative actions in the first half of 2022.

IN GOD WE TRUST FOR JUSTICE. #americafirst

Democrats Letting vets down: VA backslides on wait times, employee fraud
justthenews.com

Democrats Letting vets down: VA backslides on wait times, employee fraud

Sheer breadth of problems laid bare in new report by VA inspector general that identified nearly $4 billion in problems in just six months.