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UPDATE: SENATE PANEL OKs PEAKE NOMINATION TO VA --
The unanimous vote by the Senate Veterans'
Affairs
Committee came after Peake offered fresh
assurances
that he would learn from past VA mistakes.

Dr. James Peake
How was Dr. James Peake "packaged" for the job of
VA Secretary? Story here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfDEC07/nf121007-1.htm
And, here are Dr. Peake's responses to questions
submitted by the Senate Vets' Committee...
http://www.v
awatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfDEC07/nf121307-1.htm
For more background on Dr. Peake, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.
yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=peake&op=and
Today's story
here...
http://ap.google.com/arti
cle/ALeqM5i4d0cYUmlzDYH1Zy2tWbGVIfFmYQD8TGKORO0
Story below:
-------------------------
Senate Panel OKs Peake Nomination to VA
By HOPE YEN
WASHINGTON (AP) — James Peake's nomination as the next Veterans Affairs
secretary was sent to the full Senate on Thursday, with confirmation all
but assured for the former Army surgeon general who is pledging renewed
efforts to fight soldiers' resistance to getting treatment for depression.
The unanimous vote by the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee came after
Peake offered fresh assurances that he would learn from past VA mistakes
by placing more medical staff at VA clinics and planning better for the
agency's budget needs. He also promised to find other ways to retain
senior VA officials than awarding lucrative performance bonuses each year
regardless of merit.
Peake was expected to win confirmation by the full Senate this month.
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"I believe General Peake's heart is in the right
place, but this job will take more than just promises," said Sen. Patty
Murray, D-Wash., a member of the Senate panel. "He needs to work everyday
to overcome the bureaucratic ineptitude, backlog of claims, wait times,
and other challenges that our veterans face every day."
In a new 22-page disclosure provided to the committee this week, the
retired lieutenant general said he wants to plan better for veterans'
health care during wartime and other national crises. Responding to a
question from Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., Peake distanced himself from the
VA's award of bonuses under former VA secretary Jim Nicholson.
The Associated Press earlier this year reported that Nicholson approved a
generous package of more than $3.8 million in bonus payments in 2006,
citing a need to retain longtime VA executives, despite their roles in
crafting a flawed budget that fell $1 billion short and jeopardized health
care.
"The bonus program is only one incentive and perhaps not the most
important in attracting and retaining the best, brightest and hardest
working for government service," Peake wrote. "If confirmed, I look
forward to working ... to create a measurable, realistic and transparent
bonus program for the VA executive leadership."
In hearings last week, Peake, a retired lieutenant general who has spent
40 years in military medicine, promised to be an independent advocate for
veterans and get needed funding for their care.
Responding this week to follow-up questions by the panel, Peake said he
will look immediately into the most serious charges leveled against the VA
under Nicholson. They included a recent VA inspector general's report that
found the agency repeatedly understated wait times for injured veterans
seeking all types of medical care.
Peake said stigma that soldiers and veterans face in seeking care for
post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury was a major
barrier. He promised to make that a top issue for the VA in the waning
months of the Bush administration.
Only recently, the VA has taken steps to add mental health counselors and
24-hour suicide prevention services at all facilities, after high-profile
incidents of veterans committing suicide. In the past, the VA had failed
to use all the money for mental health that was allotted to it.
According to Army figures released Thursday by Murray's staff, 77 soldiers
killed themselves from Jan. 1 through Nov. 27. Thirty-two other deaths are
pending final determination as suicides.
Peake, 63, said he would use his experience as Army surgeon general from
2000-2004 as a guide, noting that after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks he
quickly moved to "proactively" address the mental health needs of Pentagon
workers.
Assembling a team in a "crisis action mode," Peake said he dispatched
workers to clinics, areas outside clinics and every office to spread the
message that it was normal if workers were feeling emotionally affected by
events and needed to talk.
"This was not done in response to someone acting 'crazy,' or having a
traumatic response. Rather, it was done proactively," he said. "It worked!
It is hard to prove the negative, but after a year, there were no suicides
in that group of workers and there were a number of people who had,
without fanfare, received longer-term treatment."
Other strategies could include better training of military leaders and
family, putting more mental health providers in primary care settings and
"imbedding" medical workers in military units, Peake said.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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