STATEMENT OF EUGENE A. BRICKHOUSE
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF HUMAN RESOURCES AND ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT
OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT AND INVESTIGATIONS
MARCH 11, 1999
Mr. Chairman, and members of the Subcommittee: Thank you for the opportunity to appear
before you today to share information on the policies and protections afforded to
Department of Veterans Affairs employees who "blow the whistle" or who otherwise
believe they may be subject to retaliation for disclosures or complaints.
Avenues available at VA for redress of whistleblower retaliation claims
At VA, as is true at all Federal Departments and agencies, there are a number of
avenues, created by statute and regulation, which an employee may use to seek redress of
reprisal as a result of whistleblowing activities. Outside the EEO arena, an
employees choices for raising a claim of retaliation include:
- The Merit Systems Protection Board
(MSPB) This avenue is available to
employees who have received adverse personnel actions appealable to the MSPB. Employees
may raise claims of whistleblower reprisal in their MSPB appeal. All VA employees are
informed of this appeal right and are provided with an MSPB appeal form at the time that
the adverse action is taken. That form specifically solicits information on any
whistleblower claim the employee wishes to rise at the MSPB. An employee who is
dissatisfied with the MSPBs final decision may appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit.
- Office of Special Counsel
(OSC) Employees may file claims with OSC if
they believe they have been subjected to any prohibited personnel practice, including
reprisal for "whistleblowing," even in cases which are not otherwise appealable
to the MSPB (e.g., reassignment, non-selection, title 38 disciplinary actions). If after
review and/or investigation, a claim is dismissed by OSC, employees may, and are informed
by OSC of their right to, appeal to the MSPB through the filing of an Individual Right of
Action appeal. Again, MSPB decisions may be appealed to the Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit by employees dissatisfied with the result.
- VA Office of Inspector General (OIG)
The Inspector General is available to
receive complaints of whistleblower reprisal from VA employees at any time. If the OIG
makes a finding of retaliation, management is required to concur or disagree with that
finding. The employee may, at any time, file the claim with the OSC (or, if available the
MSPB).
- Title 38 personnel action appeal --
Reprisal issues may be raised in the statutory
title 38 disciplinary procedures. Title 38 employees (VHA health care professionals) are
also entitled to pursue claims of whistleblower retaliation through other procedures
including the OSC and an Individual Right of Appeal to the MSPB.
- Negotiated grievance procedure
This avenue is available if a personnel action
has been taken which is grievable under a negotiated grievance procedure contained
in a labor-management collective bargaining agreement. In this regard, two national
collective bargaining agreements (AFGE and NAGE), covering approximately 120,000 VA
employees, contain provisions which give employees protection from reprisal. Employees may
elect to use either this procedure or the previously described statutory procedures, but
they may not use both.
- VAs administrative grievance process
This avenue is available to
non-bargaining unit employees in covered cases, which are not otherwise appealable within
the VA. Use of the agency grievance procedure does not preclude going to the OSC.
There are additional avenues employees may use when they believe they
have been retaliated against due to their exercise of rights under the law.
For example, a claim that an employee has suffered reprisal due to his
exercise of rights under the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations
Statute may be included in an unfair labor practice complaint. The same is
true of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, environmental laws and other
Federal statutes. And, as you know, VA is currently implementing its new
statutory procedure for issuing and reporting final agency decisions on EEO
complaints, including claims of reprisal for the exercise of EEO rights. Of the
821 final decisions on the merits issued by VAs new Office of Employment
Discrimination Complaint Adjudication (OEDCA) to date, 26 found discrimination.
Ten of those 26 decisions (approximately 38%) included a finding of retaliation
because of the complainants prior EEO activity. The Director of OEDCA has
reported these ten findings of retaliation to the Secretary, along with 7 retaliation
findings issued by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Informing VA employees of their rights
This enumeration of avenues of redress illustrates how difficult and confusing they may
be to the employee. The Department acknowledges that there is room for improvement in
insuring that the VA workforce is fully informed of the existence of all these procedures
and that employees are aware of the choices available to them. VA facilities have
significant authority in managing their Human Resources programs, including determining
the manner in which employees and supervisors are informed of the protections against
whistleblower reprisal. Although copies of the national agreements mentioned earlier have
been distributed to all bargaining unit employees and supervisors, we recognize that the
uniformity and consistency regarding what and how the information on this topic is
provided may need improvement. Employees are informed of their whistleblower rights and
protections in ways that vary from facility to facility through information posted
on bulletin boards, or distributed in employee handbooks, facility newsletters and
employee orientation materials. Actions are now underway to improve our information
dissemination process and to make it more formalized and consistent.
First, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs has issued additional guidance to both
managers and employees on whistleblower rights and the avenues of redress available to
those who believe they have suffered reprisal due to whistleblowing activities. This
guidance consists of a Memorandum to All Employees and a Memorandum for
Administration Heads, Assistant Secretaries and Other Key Officials. In both of these
memoranda Secretary Togo D. West, Jr. reminds employees about the special review
procedures, instituted by VA in 1993, for handling complaints of reprisal. Under
these procedures, all investigative reports on reprisal complaints are to be reviewed by
management officials above the facility level where the reprisal is alleged to have
occurred. This provides the higher level officials with an opportunity to make specific
corrective interventions if considered appropriate. The higher-level review requirement
applies to all types of reprisal complaints other than those which arise in the EEO
process. Since enactment of Public Law 105-114, the Office of Resolution Management (ORM)
Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) counselors provide early intervention in the counseling
process by apprising ORM EEO Officers of retaliation complaints that may necessitate the
involvement of higher level officials. Further, the Office of Employment Discrimination
Complaint Adjudication (OEDCA) refers all final decisions finding retaliation for EEO
activity to the Secretary.
In addition, in the memorandum to all employees, Secretary West lists avenues for
redress available to those who believe they have been or are being retaliated against for
whistleblowing. In the memorandum to senior managers, Secretary West reminds these key
officials of their responsibility for protecting employees from reprisal. The Secretary
directs that information about whistleblower protections and responsibilities be included
in all new employee orientation programs and supervisory training. The Secretarys
instructions will help establish consistent policy and mechanisms for informing employees
of their protections.
Other steps are being taken as well. VAs Office of Human Resources is creating a
page entitled "Whistleblowing" which is linked to VAs home page on
VAs Intranet. This new page will display a message directing the reader to
the fact that it is a new addition. It will contain information about whistleblowing,
protections afforded to employees, and links to helpful resources. Although the web site
is still a work in progress, the Secretarys memoranda on this subject will be added
to it, as will a copy of the MSPB Handbook that provides questions and answer about
whistleblower appeals, and links to the MSPB and OSC web sites. VA intends this web page
to be a useful resource for employees and managers alike. As VA obtains and develops more
information on this topic, it will be posted on the web.
VA has also decided that all senior employees will receive annual reminders regarding
the rights of whistleblowers and the prohibitions against whistleblower retaliation
possibly as an adjunct to their annual required ethics training.
Finally, the Secretary asked two of his senior managers, the General Counsel and the
Assistant Secretary for Human Resources and Administration, to establish a team of VA
employees to review aspects of the whistleblower and retaliation issues at VA. The initial
focus of the group will be on identifying the information needed at headquarters to assess
and manage whistleblower protection matters, and how that information may be effectively
collected. The team has been appointed and begun meeting. We would be happy to share the
teams report with the Committee as soon as it is available.
Opening up a dialog between employees and managers is key
With increasing frequency, employees at all agencies are filing reprisal complaints
after they have filed other types of claims or complaints. According to statistics in the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commissions most recent (1997) Federal Sector Report
on Complaints Processing and Appeals Report, reprisal is the most common cited basis for
discrimination complaints representing 22% of all Federal complaints, or 15,477. This
number has grown, Federal-wide, each year since 1994. At VA, the Office of Resolution
Management is finding that miscommunication and misunderstanding between supervisors and
complainants often give rise to complaints.
There are instances where retaliation for protected whistleblowing has occurred.
Retaliation may involve direct and substantial actions such as disciplinary action,
failing to promote or giving an employee a negative performance appraisal. It may be more
subtle. Whether subtle or direct, however, VA does not and will not condone such behavior.
Supervisors who engage in such behavior will be dealt with appropriately, including the
imposition of discipline when warranted. Those of higher rank however, will not be
treated more leniently due to their rank. VA is aware of the perception by some that the
Department protects members of senior management who transgress in this area. Regardless
of whether that perception is accurate, any favoritism showed to senior managers would be
intolerable. To ensure consistency in how the Department deals with this issue, a
requirement was put into effect in March 1997 under which all proposed actions related to
conduct or performance problems involving senior officials must be reviewed by the
organization head and coordinated with the Office of General Counsel, the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Human Resources and Administration, and the Secretarys
office.
It will take time to educate our entire workforce, especially one the size of VA, but
that is what we intend to do. The results of our efforts may not be fully quantifiable,
but our goal nonetheless is to not only protect the whistleblower who has been the victim
of retaliation, but also to prevent such retaliation from occurring in the first place.
Only when we have achieved that will we be able to maximize our service to Americas
Veterans.
We appreciate the Subcommittees focus on these issues. Your attention has
required the Department to scrutinize its policies and identify areas that must be
improved. We look forward to working with the Subcommittee as we make necessary
improvements. We will be happy to answer any questions you may have.