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New Mexico politicians work to keep local VA clinics open

LAS VEGAS, N.M. (AP) – More than a month after the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs recommended closing down four New Mexico VA clinics, including the one in Las Vegas, Sens. Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Luján, as well as Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez, were in town to speak to local veterans as they fight to keep them open.

On March 14, the VA announced recommendations, after years of analysis, that would lead to the closure of community-based outreach clinics in Las Vegas, Española, Raton and Gallup, forcing veterans in those areas to seek treatment elsewhere, specifically at the Raymond G. Murphy VA Medical Center in Albuquerque, nearly two hours away from the current clinic in Las Vegas. In total, it was recommended that 174 local clinics, across all 50 states, close.

Though the process of actually following through on these recommendations, and potentially closing the local clinics, will be a long one, potentially taking years, lawmakers are wasting no time getting in front of veterans and letting them tell their stories in the hopes that personal accounts will sway the VA.

“Don’t feel like you need to convince me that it needs to stay open,” Heinrich said Tuesday as he spoke to a room full of veterans at the Las Vegas VFW Post 1547. “What I need from you is to arm me with the stories of what it’s like to live in a community and to need help where you are, and why it’s unreasonable to have to drive to Albuquerque.”

More than 50 veterans attended at least one of the two meetings with the senators this week. the Las Vegas Optic reported. Many of them shared stories and detailed how losing access to their local clinic would affect them. Among the most vocal in attendance at Heinrich’s event was Bob Phillips, who spoke at length about the challenges he would face.

Phillips, who struggles with various back and knee issues, said traveling the long distance regularly to Albuquerque would do nothing to improve his current situation.

“Driving to Albuquerque is not comfortable,” Phillips said. “And the older you get, the harder it gets.”

He also said he feels, based on this ruling as well as several of his personal experiences, that veterans like him are not seen as a priority when it comes to health care.

“The feeling that I get is, why are veterans at the bottom of the health care system?” Phillips said. “I served my country, I’ve paid my taxes, and I have to fight like heck to get health care.”

The VA made its recommendations earlier this year based on the decline that local VA clinics in rural New Mexico have seen over the past five years. That includes a 55% decline in unique patients at the Las Vegas clinic, with more decline expected over the next decade, according to the VA’s recommendation.

However, Heinrich believes the statistics used in the report don’t take into account the current reality, as many numbers used are from 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Luján in his meeting with veterans at New Mexico Highlands University on Wednesday said that across New Mexico, 32 of the 33 counties in the state are facing health care staffing shortages, making it more difficult for people, and especially veterans, to access the care they need.

“It doesn’t sound to me like we should be closing off even more access to care,” Luján said.

Heinrich, Luján and Leger Fernandez wrote a letter to VA Secretary Denis McDonough last week, inviting him to visit New Mexico and meet with the veterans himself to get a better understanding of how important these clinics are to people living in rural areas.

In the letter, the state’s elected officials ask the VA to reconsider its recommendations because of the impact the decision would have on rural veterans’ access to health care, because of travel and increased wait times from all of New Mexico’s veterans being forced into one centralized location.

The officials also said the decision does not take into account the increased health care worker shortages caused by the pandemic and how the lack of broadband access, specifically in rural areas, would prevent telemedicine from being as realistic as it may be elsewhere.

All VA recommendations must be approved by an AIR Commission, appointed by President Joe Biden. The president is tasked with nominating people to the commission, all of whom must be approved by the Senate. The recommendations also must be approved by the president and Congress.

Heinrich stressed that they are just now at the beginning of a yearslong process, and nothing has been officially decided. But he told the veterans he met with that he would continue to fight to keep the clinic open as long as it takes.

Luján detailed the process that will take place. By Jan. 31, 2023, the commission must make a determination on the recommendations. The recommendations will then go to the president, and then to Congress, which will have the final say. Even if approved by Congress, it would take several years for everything to be finalized, Luján said.

“Nothing is happening today, tomorrow or next week, but we want to make sure we keep pushing forward,” Luján said.

Phillips said keeping the clinic alive is important to him for his own sake, but especially for those who will come after him – the veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, many of whom are not yet seeking frequent care from the VA, but likely will be in the years to come.

“There is not one of us here that wants to see that close because it needs to be there for the next generation of veterans that come along,” he said. “I think anyone who lays down their life to serve this country and protect it deserves, and has earned the right to be taken care of.”