News

The Department of Veterans Affairs earlier this year had planned to cut tens of thousands of workers to return its workforce to just under 400,000.
The department abandoned its previous plan to cut 80,000 workers, saying it expected a reduction of around 30,000 jobs by the end of September.
After an initial target of around 80,000, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced a sizable revision in workforce reduction amid leftist challenges. (Video Credit: Fox Business Network) […] ...
A department press secretary said the new policy is to ensure reasonable accommodations remain "necessary, reasonable and ...
VA’s REACH VET model scans veterans’ electronic health records to identify those in the top 0.1% of suicide risk and then ...
The Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General has released a report on the West Haven VA Medical Center. It highlights several problems, including nursing ...
News about Veterans Affairs Department, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.
T he Trump administration said Monday that it expects the Department of Veterans Affairs to lose nearly 30,000 employees by ...
House lawmakers approved a $435 billion funding plan for fiscal 2026 for the Department of Veterans Affairs on Wednesday over objections from Democrats. (VA) ...
VA Secretary Doug Collins will visit the Dallas VA Medical Center, marking his first visit to Texas as the agency's leader.
Responders at the 24-hour veterans crisis line encounter abusive callers, incessant contacts from “disruptive” callers and pressure from their own managers to answer multiple texts from ...