VIEWPOINTS Saturday, August 20, 2022 East Oregonian A5 SALLY C. PIPES OTHER VIEWS VA shows pitfalls of government health care Some veterans are forced to wait months for appointments for treatment and care at VA facilities I n the fall of 2020, a patient in Augusta, Georgia went to the local Veterans Aff airs medical center for a minimally invasive urologic surgery, according to a new report from the VA’s Offi ce of Inspector General. Less than two weeks later, the OIG reports, he was dead. The Inspector General concluded that there had been “multiple defi ciencies” in the patient’s care. Among them, his doctor allegedly failed to account for his history of chest infections and alcoholism. Sadly, this is just one of countless examples of the VA’s failure to provide adequate care. And it shows why propos- als to nationalize U.S. health care — like Senator Bernie Sanders’s bill to establish Medicare for All, which he reintroduced in May — are bad news. Every six months, the VA’s Inspector General submits a report to Congress on the agency’s performance. And every six months, the story is the same: gross incompetence, fraud, long wait times and substandard care. The OIG’s most recent report, which covered October 2021 to March EVEN 2022, identifi ed more than $4 PATIENTS billion in “mone- tary impact” NOT IN — waste, ques- IMMINENT tionable spend- ing, fraud and the DANGER like. Investiga- tions into off end- FACE THE ing behavior led STRESS OF to more than 100 arrests for crimes ... LONG that included wire fraud and brib- WAITS. ery. One Louisi- ana doctor had received more than $650,000 in kick- backs from a medical supply company. But while the waste and criminal- ity are galling, the patient stories are worse. A veteran who sought treatment and eventually died at a VA center in New Mexico waited 175 days for a CT scan for possible lung cancer, according to the OIG. Then, even though the results showed signs of cancer, the patient did not receive a follow-up biopsy. The patient eventually received a conclusive cancer diagnosis at a non-VA hospital. The OIG also reported on a patient who died 17 days after being discharged from a VA medical center in Gaines- ville, Fla., after a 33-day hospital stay. The Inspector General concluded that the facility “failed to develop a discharge plan that adequately ensured patient safety and continuity of care.” Even patients not in imminent danger face the stress of extremely long waits. At the VA clinic in Anaheim, Cali- fornia., at the beginning of June, new patients could expect to wait 29 days for an appointment. At the three clinics in Jacksonville, Florida, the average wait in early June was 52 days. And at one clinic in Fayetteville, North Carolina, earlier this month, it was 96 days. None of this should be especially surprising. Long waits and sloppy care characterize single-payer health care all over the world. Canadians face a median wait of more than 25 weeks for treatment from a specialist following referral by their general practitioner, according to the Fraser Institute, a Canadian think tank. Such delays have serious consequences. SecondStreet.org, another Canadian think tank, found that over 11,500 Canadian patients died while waiting for surgeries, procedures or diagnostic scans between 2020 and 2021. Canada and the VA off er a glimpse of the subpar treatment, needless suff er- ing and rampant fraud and abuse we can expect under Medicare for All. ——— Sally C. Pipes is president, CEO and Thomas W. Smith Fellow in Health Care Policy at the Pacifi c Research Institute. EDITOR’S NOTE Do you have a point you’d like to make or an issue you feel strongly about? Submit a letter to the editor or a guest column. New look, same mission for Hermiston schools TRICIA MOONEY OTHER VIEWS he Hermiston School District has some very exciting things to cele- brate this fall, and we have the entire Hermiston community to thank for it. In 2019, Hermiston voters approved a bond to build two new elementary schools and add classroom space at the high school. This fall we will offi - cially welcome students to Loma Vista Elementary School, the brand-new Rocky Heights Elementary School. These build- ings give us not only more classroom space, but more secure and energy effi - cient buildings. They continue to create an equitable learning environment for all students and add permanent classroom space without cost-ineffi cient modulars. Work on the high school annex is under way and will continue throughout this school year. Much of Hermiston’s growth in the past few decades has been driven by young families. School districts in Oregon are funded based on enrollment to pay for things like teachers, trans- portation and facility maintenance. But T addressing capacity needs by adding new state, and through this partnership with schools and buildings to keep up with that Amazon and BMCC we will add another growth requires local fi nancial support. layer of STEAM education. I count myself lucky to live and work The education experience is a time in a community that understands invest- when students learn academic material, ment in our schools and students is the but also when they explore how they best way to ensure want to apply their a brighter future interests and skills THE EDUCATION for not just them, in the real world. EXPERIENCE IS A TIME Programs like these but for all of us. doorways Schools are WHEN STUDENTS LEARN open for students to try such a fundamen- tal part of life in ACADEMIC MATERIAL, things they haven’t tried before and Hermiston, and BUT ALSO WHEN THEY learn from experts we’re committed in the fi eld. to making the most EXPLORE HOW THEY It’s another of these facilities. WANT TO APPLY THEIR step to preparing They are gath- for right- ering places for INTERESTS AND SKILLS students fi t jobs, careers or community events, post-high school youth sports and IN THE REAL WORLD. education once they extracurricu- graduate. lar activities. I’m Even though our buildings look diff er- so grateful that residents are willing to ent than a generation ago, our mission support the youth by investing funds in in the Hermiston School District has these buildings and time attending these remained the same — to serve the events. needs of all students through rigorous We’re also excited to launch the and engaging program choices, mutual Amazon Web Services Think Big Space this fall near the Blue Mountain Commu- respect and high expectations. ——— nity College campus in Hermiston. Tricia Mooney is the superintendent of the We’ve built our career technical educa- Hermiston School District. tion program into one of the best in the Making the ‘People’s House’ safe DICK HUGHES OTHER VIEWS he gold man atop the Oregon State Capitol has gone dark. A cavernous hole has arisen at the building base- ment; another is on its way. The governor, secretary of state and state treasurer have been ousted from their offi ces. Guided tours of the Capitol are gone until 2025. Those development are purpose- ful. Such is the price — a half-billion dollars plus a few years of temporary inconvenience — for finally making the “People’s House” safe for the people. The Capitol was in such sad shape seismically that in 2015, state Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, told my colleagues and me: “Given what we know, we should close the Capitol down today. At least we should protect kids from coming in,” referring to school field trips. There’s more. The plumbing is so bad that the drinking fountains are unus- able. The HVAC system could run hot in summer, cold in winter, with creaky ventilation. Parts of the building lacked fire sprinklers and other safety devices, including safe exits and sufficient stair- cases. The building was inhospitable to anyone using a wheelchair, scooter or stroller. The first phases of the renovation and reconstruction corrected some deficien- cies, especially in the 1977 legislative wings. The final, most expensive phase centers on the largest, oldest portion — the Capitol completed in 1938. So that work can be done, that area has been closed to the public, officeholders and legislative employees since July 1. Staff have relocated. If you’re looking for the governor’s office, go to the nearby State Library across the Capitol Mall. History buffs will recall that the previous capitol burned to the ground on T April 25, 1935. A young Mark Hatfield ing heads to get his way that year. The was among the Salem residents who Legislature embraced a much smaller, came out to witness the inferno. Though $59.9 million project the next year as long ago, that experience illustrates the the first phase of the Capitol Accessi- relevance of the safety improvements bility, Maintenance and Safety proj- underway. ect. The 2020 Legislature added phase The construc- 2 at $70.8 million. tion almost didn’t With new leader- BY THE WAY, SOME happen and was ship in the Oregon OREGONIANS LOVE delayed for years by House this year and bipartisan opposi- Courtney finish- THE CAPITOL’S DE- tion. Courtney was ing his final term as Senate president, the cheerleader for SIGN. SOME DESPISE the 2022 Legisla- what in 2015 was a IT, COMPLAINING THE ture approved the $337 million proj- big phase 3: $375 ect. At crunch time, TOP LOOKS LIKE A million. House Speaker Tina Lawmakers are Kotek, D-Portland, CAKE ORNAMENT OR used to conducting and House Majority A BOWLING TROPHY. meetings and public Leader Val Hoyle, hearings virtu- D-Eugene, said the WHAT SAY YOU? ally, so restricted seismic improve- access to committee ments were needed rooms no longer was an impediment. The but the time wasn’t right. construction schedule was reconfigured Joining them in voting “no,” on a so the House and Senate could use their committee vote that effectively stopped chambers during the legislative sessions. the project from moving ahead, were Work should wrap up in late 2025. Rep. Tobias Read, D-Beaverton; Rep. The big hole on the north side of the Greg Smith, R-Heppner; and Sen. Fred Capitol and one that will emerge farther Girod, R-Lyons. Siding with Courtney west are so workers can get under the were Rep. John Huffman, R-The Dalles, building, gut the lower level, hook up and Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin. additional water and sewer lines, put in The price tag, uncertain public temporary shoring, remove the existing support and inconvenience bothered cement columns, and place new columns some lawmakers. During construction, the Legislature and other officials would and devices to keep the structure stable during the quake. have had to vacate the Capitol and use As for the Oregon Pioneer atop the the renovated Public Utility Commission building — a former Sears store near the Capitol — colloquially known as the gold man — Capitol Accessibility, Main- Capitol Mall — as their temporary capi- tenance and Safety director Jodie Jones tol. told me that crews will seek a work- As a result, initial project staff were around to again illuminate the statue at let go; $25 million already had been night. spent. By the way, some Oregonians love Courtney was not happy: “When the Capitol’s design. Some despise it, the magnitude 9 quake hits, the loss of complaining the top looks like a cake life and property across our state will ornament or a bowling trophy. What say be tremendous. The decision not to you? complete this project ensures that those ——— losses will include the Oregon State Dick Hughes has been covering the Capitol and the people inside it.” Oregon political scene since 1976. He persevered instead of knock-