VA Emails Employees Resignation Buyout Offer as Senator Urges Caution Before Accepting
The
Department of Veterans Affairs building in Washington DC, is shown in this June
21, 2013, photo. (Charles Dharapak/AP File Photo)
Posted: February 4, 2025 --- Military.com | By Patricia
Kime
Published February
03, 2025, at 6:13pm ET
Veterans
Affairs (VA) Acting Secretary Todd Hunter emailed all VA employees on
Monday saying the VA will honor an offer for federal workers to be paid
through September 30th if they submit a "deferred
resignation" by the February 6th deadline. The email is a
follow-on to one issued January 28th by the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) that announced a deferred resignation program for
federal employees.
The "Fork
in the Road" announcement said federal employees must
return to work in the office and could be subject to downsizing, among other
changes, if they stay. But a U.S. Senator warned on Monday that no federal
funding has been authorized by Congress to actually pay for such resignations,
and the government could not guarantee employees who take the deal would
actually be paid through September. Also, job positions may no longer exist if
employees change their minds.
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In
his email, Acting VA Secretary Hunter extended the offer to all employees but
later noted that not all would be accepted. "On January 28, 2025, the U.S.
Office of Personnel Management sent a government-wide email presenting a
deferred resignation offer to federal employees ... on behalf of the Department of Veterans Affairs, I am informing
you that the officer is valid, lawful and will be honored by VA," Hunter
wrote in his email.
Hunter
promised that if VA employees tenured their resignations, they would
receive pay and benefits through September 30th and would not be subject to any reductions in force or premature separations. "You
are not expected to work during the deferred resignation period and will be
able to take a non-governmental job during the deferred resignation period,
subject to applicable laws and regulations," Hunter wrote.
The
announcement follows more than 2 years of extensive hiring by the VA to fill
essential roles, including clinical staff and benefits workers. In fiscal 2023,
the Veterans Health Administration staff grew by 7.4% with the hiring of
roughly 61,000 people, for a net increase of 28,000, and the Veterans Benefits
Administration, which handles claims, hired more than 6,000.
But
the VA announced in early 2024 that it needed to trim 10,000 full-time positions, largely
as a result of the record hiring and improved retention. The VA has roughly
450,000 employees. As a result of an executive order from Trump in January
calling for a federal hiring freeze, the VA announced that more than 304,000 jobs at the department were considered
exempt, under exceptions that include health-care workers and
public safety personnel.
But
it also said that no other vacancies would be filled and those who were hired
but hadn't been onboarded before February 8th would have their job
offers rescinded. In his email Monday, Hunter reiterated that agencies could
reject resignation requests from those who work in "health care, law
enforcement, public safety and other limited categories of essential
services."
On Monday, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, D-Washington State, sent emails to federal workers in Washington DC saying OPM could not guarantee that workers who submit their resignations would be paid through September 30th, given that the government is currently funded only through March 14th and Congress must pass fiscal 2025 appropriations. "At this point, there is no funding allocated to agencies to pay staff for this offer," said Senator Murray, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee.
She added that the offer comes with caveats and federal employees should be aware that if they change their mind, their job may no longer exist. The offer also says that federal employees aren't expected to work if their resignation is accepted, but Hunter's email notes there may be exceptions to that rule. "The lack of clear information and resources about exactly what will be allowed is rightfully creating confusion for the more than 56,000 federal workers across Washington State. To me, this leaves far too many questions unanswered," Senator Murray wrote.
The VA Acting Secretary's email also noted that the VA will seek the ability to allow for voluntary early retirement, a program that enables the federal agencies to temporarily lower age or service requirements for workers to get federal retirement. The number of VA employees who would be eligible for early retirement in 2025 has not been disclosed. The VA did not respond to requests for additional information by publication.
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