83,000 VA Employees Slated to Be Fired This Year by Musk's DOGE, Memo Says
Veterans, military family members and
advocates call for Senate Republicans to change their votes on a bill designed
to help millions of veterans exposed to toxic substances during their military
service, on the steps of the Capitol in Washington, Aug. 1, 2022. (AP Photo/J.
Scott Applewhite, File)
Posted:
March 6, 2025 -- Military.com | By Rebecca Kheel
Updated March
05, 2025 at 6:46pm ET | Published March 05, 2025 at 2:40pm ET
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) plans to fire more than 80,000 employees under a sweeping reorganization effort
being planned to comply with Trump's orders to slash the federal government,
according to an internal VA memo obtained by Military.com. In the memo, VA
Chief of Staff Christopher Syrek said the department's "initial
objective" is to return to 2019 staffing levels of 399,957 employees -- or
about 83,000 fewer employees than the VA has right now.
If
implemented, the layoffs would bring the VA down to the level of
employees it had before the PACT Act, the wide-ranging 2022 law that
expanded VA health care and benefits for millions of veterans exposed to toxic
substances during their military service. After the law was passed, the VA
under the Biden administration embarked on a massive hiring spree in order to
ensure the department could handle the influx of new patients and benefits
claims.
"VA,
in partnership with our DOGE leads, will move out aggressively, while taking a
pragmatic and disciplined approach to identify and eliminate waste, reduce
management and bureaucracy, reduce footprint, and increase workforce
efficiency," Syrek wrote in the memo, referring to the Elon Musk-led White
House office that has, in Musk's words, been taking a "chain saw" to
the federal government.
The
VA did not immediately respond to Military.com's request for comment on the
memo, which was first reported by news outlet Government Executive, but
VA Secretary Doug Collins posted a video to social media late Wednesday
afternoon addressing the planned firings. Under the plan outlined in Syrek's
memo, the VA will complete an internal review May 9th and publish
its reorganization plan in June. Layoffs would begin in August, according to
the memo.
If
implemented, the layoffs would reverse the extensive hiring the Biden
administration undertook to implement that PACT Act. In 2023 alone, the VA's
Veterans Health Administration hired nearly 62,000 new employees. Those
included about 12,000 new nurses, as well hundreds of new psychiatrists, a
category of doctors that government watchdogs have said the VA had a
"severe shortage" of, Military.com previously reported.
The
"reduction in force," as the layoffs are formally called, is being
planned as part of Trump's February executive order requiring agencies to
work with Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, and subsequent
guidance from the White House offices in charge of budgets and personnel directing agencies to prepare for
large-scale layoffs.
Since
its 1st day in office, the Trump administration, under the auspices
of DOGE, has hacked away at the size of the federal government, including with
a hiring freeze and mass firings. DOGE has also moved to cancel a wide array of
contracts that the administration has described as wasteful but in some cases
have turned out to be worth far less than advertised, have already expired or
have been for core services.
At
the VA, that has included firing 2,400 so-called probationary workers who
had been hired, promoted or transferred within the last couple of years. The
department also announced earlier this week it was canceling more than 500
contracts, pared down from more than 800 contracts it
originally was going to cancel after outcry that some of the contracts were
crucial for veterans' care and benefits. The department has not released a full
list of the 585 contracts it is canceling.
In
each announcement, the department has vowed that the cuts would not hurt
veterans services. For example, in implementing the hiring freeze, the VA said
it was exempting hundreds of thousands of health care jobs.
"We're going to accomplish this without making cuts to health care or
benefits to veterans and VA beneficiaries," Collins said in his social
media video Wednesday about the upcoming 83,000 firings. "VA will also
fulfill its duty to provide veterans, families, caregivers and survivors the
health care and benefits they have earned. That’s a promise."
But lawmakers have surfaced examples of the cuts affecting veterans directly. For example, while the VA has insisted the fired probationary workers did not include Veterans Crisis Line responders, Senate Democrats have pointed to at least two fired employees who did critical support work for the suicide helpline even if they were not the ones answering the phones. The cuts have also halted research on areas such as cancer and suicide prevention.
And
now, the planned reduction in force would go much further than the probationary
firings. The memo from Syrek on Tuesday does not specify any exemptions to the
potential tens of thousands of layoffs. "This effort will require the
entirety of VA staff and organizations to work together in a collaborative
fashion, as well as to coordinate actions with DOGE and the administration as a
whole, to achieve the desired results within the allotted time frame,"
Syrek wrote.
The
department envisions that "a portion" of any savings from the firings
would be "reinvested in the veterans we serve," Syrek added. Veterans’
advocates have previously warned the Trump administration not to reverse the
progress on PACT Act implementation as it pursues budget cuts.
"This
is not just a budget decision -- it's a life-or-death issue for veterans
suffering from toxic exposure-related illnesses," Rosie Torres, co-founder
of Burn Pits 360 and a leading proponent of the PACT Act, said in a statement
last month. "The government made a promise. We honored our oath, now honor
yours."
As
word of Syrek's memo leaked, Democrats accused the Trump administration of
undermining the PACT Act. "Congress worked in a bipartisan manner to pass
the PACT Act and equip VA with the tools and resources needed to serve more
veterans than ever," U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., the ranking
member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, said.
"This
memo makes their goal crystal clear: They want to roll back the PACT Act by
cutting 80,000 jobs -- including 20,000 veterans -- while starving VA's ability
to meet increased demand in order to justify privatizing VA." The estimate
of 20,000 veterans being laid off appears based on the fact that one-quarter of
VA employees are veterans.
Meanwhile, House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Mike Bost, R-Ill., said he is working to get clarity from Collins on the memo. "I have questions about the impact these reductions and discussions could have on the delivery of services, especially following the implementation of the PACT Act," Bost said in a statement Wednesday. "And from my position as chairman, I will continue to ask questions and keep a close eye on how, or if, this plan evolves."
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