Dear
Friend,
Today,
I
held
a
field
hearing
in
Chicago,
as
Chairman
of
the
Senate
Appropriations
Subcommittee
on
Military
Construction
and
Veterans
Affairs
to
question
whistleblowers
about
the
pattern
of
abuse
at
the
Edward
Hines,
Jr.,
VA
Hospital
in
Maywood,
Illinois.
Watch
or
read
the
ABC
7
Chicago
story
below
to
learn
more
from
whistleblowers
who
came
forward
to
protect
Illinois
veterans,
despite
ongoing
retribution.
Protecting
those
who
stand
up
for
veterans
is
crucial
to
ending
the
systemic
breakdown
in
the
care
we
are
seeing
in
Illinois
and
nation-wide.
Sincerely,

Senator
Mark
Kirk

CHICAGO
(WLS)
-
The
mistreatment
of
veterans
and
retaliation
against
whistleblowers
at
the
Hines
Veterans
Administration
Hospital
near
Maywood
will
be
the
focus
of
a
U.S.
Senate
hearing
in
Chicago
on
Friday.
More
than
a
year
and
a
half
ago,
the
dark
side
of
the
VA
first
came
to
light
--
veterans
dying
while
waiting
for
care,
corruption
in
the
executive
ranks
and
retaliation
against
staffers
who
tried
to
blow
the
whistle.
U.S.
Sen.
Mark
Kirk
and
individuals
scheduled
to
testify
at
the
hearing
said
things
have
not
improved
and
may
have
gotten
worse.
Some
of
them
spoke
to
the
ABC7
I-Team
exclusively
on
Thursday.
The
hearing,
which
will
be
at
the
Dirksen
Federal
Building
in
the
Loop,
is
being
held
by
Illinois
Sen.
Kirk,
a
Republican,
who
chairs
the
powerful
Veterans
Appropriations
Subcommittee.
"I
want
to
make
sure
that
after
23
years
in
the
Navy
Reserves
that
my
fellow
veterans
are
protected
in
the
best
way
possible,"
Kirk
said.
"Protecting
those
who
protect
our
veterans
and
to
make
sure
that
whistleblowers
who
see
a
veteran
mistreated
don't
have
anyone
retaliate
against
them."
Germaine
Clarno,
president
of
the
American
Federation
of
Government
Employees
Local
781,
which
represents
employees
at
the
VA
facility,
is
scheduled
to
testify
at
the
hearing.
"Putting
fear
into
employees
is
still
going
on.
It
happens
every
day
in
fact
I
think
that
it
has
gotten
worse
to
really
silence
the
employees,"
said
Clarno,
a
Hines
VA
social
worker.
Clarno
adds:
"It's
not
about
the
veteran.
It's
about
other
self-centered
motives.
And
to
me,
I
think
America
needs
to
understand
exactly
what
is
going
on.
We
need
to
stand
up
together
as
Americans
and
say
we
are
not
going
to
have
this
go
on
any
more.
Our
veterans
deserve
better."
More
than
100
whistleblowers
at
50
VA
facilities
have
reported
corruption,
much
of
it
affecting
patient
care.
Whistleblowers,
including
former
Hines
cardiologist
Dr.
Lisa
Nee,
are
scheduled
to
testify
on
Friday.
"Not
only
are
veterans
being
harmed
but
your
taxpayer
dollars
are
being
wasted,"
Nee
said.
Kirk
said
he's
doing
his
best
to
help
veterans.
"I've
even
had
them
talk
to
the
White
House
deputy
chief
of
staff;
to
the
secretary
of
Veterans
affairs,
to
ask
them
to
change
this
culture
of
corruption
inside
the
VA,"
Kirk
said.
A
spokesperson
for
Hines
VA
said
employees
work
diligently
to
create
a
collaborate,
problem-solving
environment
that
they
hope
is
conducive
to
the
needs
of
veterans.
At
the
hearing,
a
different
point-of-view
is
expected
to
be
heard.
Notice:
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