Ronald Bradford, a Gulf War veteran who did two tours of duty in Iraq, left, presents U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, R-Lakeland, with a hand-painted Memorial Day stone in 2023. | Kimberly C. Moore, LkldNow

U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, the Republican from Lakeland, said Thursday that he supports the removal of 80,000 workers from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The wholesale cuts have been spearheaded by the administration of President Donald Trump, including the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, led by Elon Musk.

“I met with the new VA Secretary in my office last week and he laid out his plans to make the agency more accountable and efficient,” Franklin said.

Franklin, who was first elected to the House seat in 2020, is a Gulf War veteran and a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy. He serves on the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Military Construction and Veterans Affairs.

Kiara Smith welcomes visitors to the new Lakeland Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic, which will have it's official grand opening on Friday, July 26, 2024.
The Lakeland Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic opened in July of 2024. | Kimberly C. Moore, LkldNow

Lakeland VA: Roderick Cunningham, chief of communications for the James Haley VA Clinic, said the Lakeland clinic has “dismissed a small number of probationary staff,” but added that “this decision will have no negative effect on veteran health care, benefits or other services.” 

He did not give a specific number of dismissals.

Lakeland’s new VA Clinic opened in July.

Franklin said he wants to see cuts toward the top of the VA.

“Having witnessed the ineptitude in the upper ranks up close over the past couple of years, I know there’s a truckload of low-hanging fruit,” he said. “The 80,000 estimate would take them back to their pre-Covid end strength.”

Added benefits: In 2022, Congress passed the Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act, according to the VA’s Fiscal Year 2024 Agency Financial Report. 

The VA supported more than 350,000 Veterans who have enrolled in VA health care under the PACT Act and screened 1.2 million Veterans for toxic exposures. The VA also increased claims processing efficiency by fast-tracking claims decisions, resulting in nearly 1.1 million PACT Act claims completed in FY 2024.

“The scope of need has grown since then due to passage of the PACT Act, but there is an absurd amount of inefficiency across the agency that can be eliminated without, theoretically, impacting quality of care,” Franklin said.

“We met with Musk (Wednesday night) and reiterated that vets can’t be hurt in this process. He and Veterans Affairs Sec. Doug Collins know we’re monitoring it closely. We’ll see.”

Franklin said a large portion of the VA’s overall headcount is “layered bureaucracy that doesn’t have any direct interaction with veterans” and that “adding massive numbers of employees to a broken system only compounds the problems. It needs to be fundamentally restructured.”

That process is tricky, he said, like trying to repair a jet in flight. “But we can’t afford to not even try. If we don’t rein it in, the day will come when we aren’t able to honor the commitment our government has made to vets.”

It’s no different with Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, Franklin continued. “There will be no safety net for the most vulnerable if the entire system tanks. Without significant reform, that is a certainty.”

Retired U.S. Air Force Col. Gary Clark, chairman of the Polk Veterans Council, said he hasn’t seen the details of the mass layoffs yet. “However, it would be naive to suggest every VA employee is essential,” he said.

“I believe every government agency should be reviewed rigorously to justify funding needs. Taxpayers deserve to have that confidence.”

Related

SEND CORRECTIONS, questions, feedback or news tips: newstips@lkldnow.com

Kimberly C. Moore, who grew up in Lakeland, has been a print, broadcast and multimedia journalist for more than 30 years. Before coming to LkldNow in the spring of 2022, she was a reporter for four years with The Ledger, first covering Lakeland City Hall and then Polk County schools. She is the author of “Star Crossed: The Story of Astronaut Lisa Nowak," published by University Press of Florida. Reach her at kimberly@lkldnow.com or 863-272-9250.

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. Don’t believe the congressman on this one. The first 80,000 is just the beginning. After that round they’ll come back for an additional 80,000. Once service begins to suffer after the massive cuts the repubs will come back with “the system isn’t working” as intended and more job cuts will be needed. Once the VA system is rendered ineffective our congressman will then move to turn the VA over to the private insurance companies and they will do to the VA what they’ve done to Medicare. Remember, at one time Medicare paid all of retirees medical bills. This infuriated the for profit insurance companies because they were cut out of the process. Once they had the opportunity to have another repub administration controlling all three branches of government, Medicare was scaled back to cover 80% of medical costs. The remaining 20% was opened to the for profit insurance industry to compete for. They’ve raked in trillions of retirees dollars. Now, they want to use the same scam for the 15,800,000 US military veterans. They may not rake in trillions but they’ll settle for billions. Don’s trust the congressman. He’s lying.

Leave a comment

Your thoughts on this? (Comments are moderated; first and last name are required.)