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Hosted on MSNVA fires 1,400 more staffers in second round of workforce reductionsVeterans Affairs leaders dismissed more than 1,400 additional probationary employees on Monday evening, the second round of mass layoffs at the department this month. Monday's dismissals included bargaining-unit employees who have served less than two years in their posts.
The Trump administration set out to shake up Washington—will that mean strengthening the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) or dismantling it?
23h
Military Times on MSNVA secretary emphasizes reforms, accountability for federal workforceIn his first public address to a veterans group, Doug Collins outlined plans to broaden VA benefits and cut back bureaucracy.
19h
Military Times on MSNVA staff told to reply to Musk’s ‘What did you do last week’ emailMore than 2 million federal workers received an email over the weekend threatening firing if they can't justify their work performance by Monday night.
Doug Collins, the new secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, attends the Disabled American Veterans’ winter conference outside Washington, D.C.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Collins
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Veterans Affairs Secretary Collins: “We’re not cutting benefits.”
Trump’s Sober Pick for Veterans Affairs Has His Work Cut Out
VA secretary: ‘We’re not cutting benefits’
Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins defended the Trump administration's recent layoffs at the department, arguing that cuts have not been made to "critical health care" or other benefits.
3h
News Nation on MSNVA axes another 1,400 employees amid outcry over transparencyThe Department of Veterans Affairs on Monday fired another 1,400 employees amid outcry over a lack of transparency from the agency after 1,000 workers were axed earlier this month. The VA said the individuals dismissed were “non-mission critical” probationary employees who have served less than two years,
More than 1,000 employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs were fired amid the Trump administration's broad layoffs last week.
The accessing of veterans’ information by Elon Musk surrogates comes amid agency layoffs and after the firing of its inspector general.
U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff wants Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins — a fellow Georgian — to provide clarity about Elon Musk's potential access to veterans' private information.
The Department of Veterans Affairs on Friday ordered its employees to end remote work and return to the office in the coming months.
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