VA to close 2 clinics, overhaul Augusta leadership

Summary

VA said it will close clinics in Tennessee and New York, while replacing leadership at Augusta’s VA medical center.

Why this matters

The changes affect where some veterans in Tennessee and New York will get care and how far they must travel. The Augusta leadership shake-up also reflects federal oversight of care and workplace problems at a major VA facility.

The Department of Veterans Affairs said it will close two community-based outpatient clinics this year and has replaced leadership at the Augusta VA Medical Center in Georgia.

During a Senate hearing Thursday on the VA’s $488 billion fiscal 2027 budget request, VA Secretary Doug Collins said clinics in McMinnville, Tennessee, and Schenectady, New York, would close because the privately run facilities did not meet VA standards of care. McMinnville will close May 31, and Schenectady will close in August, according to reports.

Collins said contractors managing the clinics were not meeting requirements and veterans were not receiving consistent care.

“For years, our veterans were going and being handed off, handed off, handed off, new doctors coming in all the time … a lot of time they were not showing up, we were having to then schedule them in other places,” Collins said. “This is a problem.”

Lawmakers from Tennessee and New York said the closures could affect about 4,000 veterans and increase travel times for care, in some cases by more than 35 miles.

At the same hearing, Collins said the VA replaced Augusta’s management team within the past month, the second leadership change in 14 months. Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., asked about the facility after a Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General investigation found a hostile work environment, including retaliation against staff, and supply shortages that affected care.

Collins said the VA had completed the inspector general’s recommendations and was working to address management problems. He also said the Veterans Health Administration believed it had followed the law in canceling the clinic contracts, and noted that the VA opened 34 clinics in the past year.

The department’s budget request includes $123 billion for medical care and services, nearly $4 billion for construction, and $4.2 billion for its electronic health records rollout.

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