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CORPORATE TIES RAISE MORE QUESTIONS ABOUT PEAKE
NOMINATION -- Bush's nominee to head the
Department of
Veterans' Affairs is the second to come from a
private company
that rakes in hundreds of millions from VA
contracts.

VA Secretary nominee Dr. James Peake
with President George W. Bush. |
Mark Benjamin has another great article about the
nomination of Dr. James Peake to be VA Secretary.
NOTE: A published report says that Dr.
Peake's confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Veterans'
Affairs will take place on Wednesday, December 5, 2007. VA Watchdog
dot Org will have complete coverage.
For more about Dr. James Peake, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.your
vabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=james+peake&op=ph
For more about QTC Management mentioned in the
story below, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=qtc&op=and
For more article from Mark Benjamin, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.your
vabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=mark+benjamin&op=ph
Today's story here...
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/11/20/va_contracts/
Story below:
Learn
More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Corporate profiteering against Iraq vets?
Bush's nominee to head the Department of Veterans Affairs is the second to
come from a private company that rakes in millions from VA contracts.
By Mark Benjamin
WASHINGTON -- President Bush late last month nominated retired Lt. Gen.
James Peake to be the next secretary of the Department of Veterans
Affairs. It is not an inconsequential wartime post: The department is the
second-largest government agency after the Defense Department. And the VA
faces the awesome responsibility of caring for several generations of
veterans, including the crush of American service members back from Iraq
and Afghanistan.
On paper, Peake seems qualified. Wounded twice in Vietnam, he retired in
2004 from his post as Army surgeon general, the Army's top medical
officer, with 40 years of experience in the field of military medicine.
But Bush plucked Peake directly from a private company that has raked in
hundreds of millions of dollars from contracts with the VA -- and Peake
himself helped develop proposals for the company to contract with the VA.
That has raised questions about conflict of interest, potentially pitting
veterans' care against corporate profits. Moreover, if he is confirmed,
Peake will be the second head of the VA under the Bush administration to
come from that same private contractor, QTC Management Inc.
Article continues below:
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Observers say QTC Management has performed
high-quality work, and its former president, who also headed the VA under
Bush, withstood past scrutiny by congressional investigators. But ever
since Dick Cheney left Halliburton to become vice president, Bush
administration critics have sounded the alarm about war profiteering
seeping into the heart of the U.S. government. The changing leadership at
the VA represents a little-known turn of the revolving door between
contractors and the Bush administration. Veterans' advocates also worry
that Peake's nomination suggests the White House may be interested in
privatizing veterans' healthcare to an unhealthy degree.
The Veterans Affairs Department runs more than a thousand hospitals and
outpatient clinics to care for veterans, including the influx of hundreds
of thousands of veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and are now
out of the military and want to see a VA doctor.
Those veterans also seek disability checks as remuneration for their
service-related ills. Every year the VA hands out over $40 billion in
checks to veterans as compensation for everything from missing limbs to
post-traumatic stress disorder.
When a veteran first applies for that compensation, a doctor conducts a
physical to help determine how much money he or she deserves.
Historically, VA doctors do most of those examinations. But increasingly
they are being performed by QTC Management, the for-profit contractor that
employed Peake as its chief operating officer from 2006 until now.
The company has a virtual lock on the expanding business of performing the
physicals on veterans, which help determine how much they should get in
disability checks from the VA. The company first started conducting the
examinations in the late 1990s, part of a smaller effort to help the
department alleviate a backlog of veterans awaiting benefits. This year
the VA will farm out 100,000 to 150,000 of these examinations to QTC
Management, according to the company's chairman. A 2005 report from the
VA's inspector general says the company charges around $590 for each exam,
making the contracts worth at least $88 million this year alone.
The first VA chief selected by Bush to come directly from QTC Management
was Anthony Principi, then president of the company, who served as VA
secretary from 2001 until 2005. During those years, the company reportedly
hauled in hundreds of millions of dollars conducting examinations for the
VA.
And now Principi is back at QTC Management again, serving as chairman of
the board. (Before returning to QTC Management after serving at the VA,
Principi did a stint at pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and was a commissioner
on a panel studying the closure of military bases.)
That the revolving door has come full circle in Principi's case deepens
suspicions among veterans' advocates. "It is a little bit troublesome that
a company may be a farm team for the VA," said Paul Rieckhoff, executive
director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. "I want to know why
[Peake] and Principi both came from there," Rieckoff said. "I want to know
how directly they are involved in VA contracts."
Rieckoff also wondered: "If you are bringing people from the private
sector, is that because you feel they are going to bring a greater level
of efficiency -- or is it because you want to move toward privatizing
care?"
When a veteran walks in the door to see a doctor, the focus should be on
the veteran and not the bottom line, said Paul Sullivan, executive
director of Veterans for Common Sense, who until March 2006 was a project
manager at the VA in charge of data on returning veterans. "The veteran
absolutely must come first, and with QTC, profits come first and that is
wrong," said Sullivan. "We do not want a Blackwater getting anywhere near
our veterans," he said, referring to the notorious private security firm
that operated with no clear accountability in Iraq.
In a telephone interview with Salon, Principi, the former VA secretary and
current QTC chairman, argued that the company is not providing healthcare,
since the medical examinations conducted by his company help determine how
much each veteran should get in disability payments. "I am personally and
philosophically opposed to the privatization of VA healthcare," he told
Salon. "QTC does no treatment," he said. "We do a medical disability
evaluation. I distinguish that from the treatment and the care that VA
provides."
And Principi said he has gone to great lengths to minimize any perception
of a conflict of interest in going from the company to the VA and then
back again. He said he recused himself from any issues involving QTC
Management while he was in charge of the VA. And although government
ethics rules say he is allowed to contact the VA on business one year
after leaving the government, Principi said he continues to steer clear.
"I try to avoid an appearance of a conflict of interest. I have not
stepped foot inside the VA on business-related matters since I was
secretary," he said. "I have not engaged in any lobbying phone calls. I
have not directly or indirectly tried to be involved in that."
Principi said Peake, the former Army surgeon general, also did not engage
in direct lobbying of the government to bring in cash for the company.
However, Peake did help the company develop proposals to do work for the
VA, Principi acknowledged. "Jim would have the team work on the proposal
and make sure it was a good proposal and make sure all the i's were dotted
and the t's were crossed, and that the technical proposal looked good, and
it read well, and the pricing was good," Principi explained. "He didn't go
lobby the VA or anything." (QTC Management may have had that ground
covered without Peake: Disclosure records show QTC Management paid
Jefferson Consulting Group, a lobbying firm, $20,000 in 2003.)
Principi's behavior has been above board, according to a 2006
congressional investigation. In April 2006, the Los Angeles Times reported
that the company collected $246 million from the VA while Principi was
secretary, and that the company's contracts with the VA could eventually
be worth $1 billion. The House Committee on Government Reform subsequently
launched an investigation. California Rep. Henry Waxman, then the
committee's ranking member, wrote the VA on June 9, 2006, that he was
"satisfied that Secretary Principi's actions were proper and ethical."
And QTC Management has performed well, according to Joseph Violante,
national legislative director of Disabled American Veterans. "According to
our service officers out in the field, they feel that QTC does a much
better job than VA," he said. "They do more thorough exams and they do
them properly."
But the cross-pollination between the company and the VA still creates the
perception of a conflict of interest and raises questions about proper
government oversight, said Dina Rasor, author of "Betraying Our Troops:
The Destructive Results of Privatizing War." Rasor said veterans worried
about privatizing VA healthcare probably do have something to fear, since
all of the Blackwater contractors careening around Baghdad in SUVs are a
testament to the Bush administration's zeal for privatization, even while
oversight and accountability are lacking. "This administration, besides
the cronyism, they have this ideologue thing that government is bad and
privatization is good," she explained. "They take it to the absurd."
Rieckhoff, the veterans' advocate, said Congress needs to take a very
close look at the Peake nomination. Congress should make sure the
contracting issues are kosher and that privatization of veterans'
healthcare is not looming on the horizon. "Those are all legitimate
questions," he said. "This is the part of his record that I think really
needs to be explored during these Senate confirmation hearings."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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