U.S.
Senate unanimously confirms McDonald to head veterans agency
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[July 30, 2014]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
Senate on Tuesday unanimously confirmed Bob McDonald as the next
Veterans Affairs secretary, pinning Washington's hopes on the former
Procter & Gamble Co chief executive to launch a massive turnaround
effort at the troubled agency.
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McDonald, 61, replaces retired Army general Eric Shinseki, who
resigned in late May amid a scandal over cover-ups of long waiting
times for health-care appointments at VA hospitals and clinics
across the country.
The 97-0 vote to confirm McDonald comes a week after he pledged to
bring corporate-style discipline and accountability to the agency,
refocusing its 341,000 employees on serving veterans.
"In the wake of the biggest scandal in the history of the Department
of Veterans Affairs, Bob McDonald certainly has his work cut out for
him," House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Jeff Miller said
after the Senate vote.
"In order to be successful, McDonald will need to take swift and
decisive action to discipline employees responsible for
mismanagement, negligence and corruption that harms veterans while
taking bold steps to replace the department’s culture of complacency
with a climate of accountability," Miller added.
McDonald, a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point who
served as P&G CEO from 2009 to 2013, is widely expected to start his
new job with an extra $17 billion at his disposal to reduce
months-long health care wait times in new legislation slated for
passage by Congress this week.
The compromise measure reached by the leaders of the Senate and
House of Representatives Veterans Affairs committees on Monday would
allow veterans forced to wait more than 30 days for an appointment
to seek care from private doctors at VA expense. It would provide $5
billion for the VA to hire more doctors and nurses and open 27 new
clinics across the country.
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The measure also would give McDonald sweeping new authorities to
fire or demote VA employees for poor performance, subject to a
21-day appeal process. To date, no one has been dismissed at VA over
the misrepresentation of wait-time data.
McDonald retired last year at P&G, best known as the maker of Tide
detergent, Gillette razors and Crest toothpaste, amid a major
corporate restructuring as some institutional investors had pushed
for faster improvements in profits and better stock performance. The
company brought back McDonald's predecessor, Alan Lafley, to serve
as its chairman and chief executive.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by James Dalgleish and Gunna
Dickson)
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