The long running problem, seen once again now that the tepublicans have taken control of the House that has existed for the past decades, is some see so called saving a dime now is what their jobs are while it costs dollars for same dime in costs to catch up with the back longs and more created from not funding, building and maintaining the best systems on the front end which save not only that dime but even more in the than constant catchup dollars spent continuously heading forward. In cases like this laying blame on the agencies for any and all problems. They've been doing this for decades, supported by their base who like war spending but not the long costs of the results from, especially related to the decades since our conflict, Vietnam, and the veterans of this country. In this, the IT part of the budget, we get constant condemnation of the VA for the long backlogs, and more related, from wars created which in turn quickly enhances the numbers and the needs of our veterans of our military joining those huge numbers of our previous misadventures. And still no demand for sacrifice by the country, over a decade now and added to the previous decades.
07/07/2011 - The Veterans Affairs Department's 2012 information technology budget request fared better in the Senate Appropriations Committee -- which last week approved the full amount of $3.161 billion -- than it did in the House of Representatives, which cut 4.3 percent, or $136 million, in the version it passed in May.
The bodies will work out differences later this year in conference.
The Senate, in its report on the 2012 VA budget bill, restricted the department from spending $536.4 million in IT development funds until it certifies to Congress the amounts that will be spent on each of 76 planned projects. The Senate also included language similar to the House bill to require VA to submit monthly IT spending reports to both chambers' appropriations committees.
When VA submitted its budget request in February it did not know the financial requirements for a joint electronic health record it planned to develop with the Defense Department. The Senate report said the VA 2012 IT budget includes "sufficient flexibility" to reprogram funds for the joint record project. read more>>>
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