“VA leadership has to work with us and with their employees to change that culture and cultivate an environment where employees feel confident that when they report acts of racism and other types of discrimination, their claim will be taken seriously, prompt action will be taken to address the issue, and they will not be punished for speaking out,” Everett Kelley, the union’s president, said in a statement. He added that VA employees have faced retaliation for raising complaints.
“VA does not tolerate harassment or discrimination in any form,” Noel said in a statement, adding that VA has risen past other federal agencies in “best places to work” surveys. In 2019, the agency substantiated 70 claims of equal opportunity violations, she said, noting VA’s workforce includes about 400,000 employees.
While the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police has incited a nationwide reckoning over racial injustice and overt racism, VA workers who were surveyed said that such issues have run deep within their workplace since long before Floyd’s death in May.
At the Kansas City VA Medical Center in Missouri, Black employees have held occasional protests over alleged discrimination, with more than 100 complaints filed to the local NAACP chapter as of June.
At an event to mark Juneteenth, a holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States, Black employees became “living display” pieces, performing as Martin Luther King Jr., Harriet Tubman and Floyd, according to two medical center staffers and internal emails obtained by The Post.
One staffer, speaking on the condition of anonymity over a fear of retaliation, told The Post they were urged by senior leaders at the medical center to dress as their characters in period clothing and that one supervisor, who is White, suggested in a conference call that they serve watermelon and fried chicken during the event. The supervisor later apologized, the staffer said.
Theresa DiMaggio, a spokeswoman for the Kansas City medical center, denied the employees’ claims and described the event as “voluntary.”
Other staffers at the facility said a nurse, who is White, used the n-word in a public outburst overheard by multiple VA workers, and that another employee who is White, used the n-word on a conference call after he mistakenly believed his phone was on mute.
DiMaggio said the nurse resigned during an investigation into the incident. The other employee no longer works at VA, DiMaggio said, but she declined to confirm the incident occurred.
Minority staffers at other VA facilities also spoke of being insulted by colleagues and patients, and facing barriers to promotion that they felt were tied to race. About 12.3 percent of White VA workers hold senior leadership roles, compared with 3.8 percent of Black workers, according to 2018 government data, the most recent figures publicly available.
Geddes Scott, president of AFGE local 1988 and a licensed practical nurse at the St. Albans Community Living Center in New York City, said Black veterans who reside at the facility have been cast out for behavior that can go overlooked for White veterans.
“The excusing of physical aggression from a White man is more tolerable than that of a Black man,” he said. He declined to provide specifics, citing a concern of retaliation from management.
Michael Drake, a spokesman for the VA medical system in New York, said that the system is proud of its diverse workforce and that it does not tolerate discrimination. A third of senior leadership positions there are held by minorities, he said.
Nuwanna Franklin, an Army veteran and vice president of the AFGE union local 1985, which represents the Carl Vinson VA Medical Center in Dublin, Ga., said minority staffers, including her, have been retaliated against for raising complaints.
She said a dearth of Black leaders there is a significant concern. A regional VA spokesperson said that the facility does not tolerate…
Read More: Veterans Affairs workers see racism against colleagues and patients, union