VA officially lifts hiring freeze, but staffing caps still in place for shrinking workforce
The Department of Veterans Affairs is officially lifting a hiring freeze on its health care workforce, after shedding tens of thousands of positions last year.
But the VA, which saw the first-ever workforce net decrease, is unlikely to hire its way to a higher headcount than what it currently has.
A report from Democrats on the Senate VA Committee released Thursday finds VA facilities are still operating βwithin strict staffing caps.β
βFacility leadership in the field are still reporting denials and severe delays in hiring approvals for all positions from clinical staff to custodians to claims processors,β lawmakers wrote.
The report claims the VA lost more than 40,000 employees last year, and that 88% of them worked in health care. About 10,000 of those employees worked in frontline positions that the department has struggled to fill.
VA workforce data shows the department saw a net decrease of 3,000 registered nurses last year, a net decrease of 1,000 physicians and a net decrease of 1,550 appointment schedulers.
In a typical year, the VAβs workforce sees a net gain of about 10,000 employees. But under the Trump administration, the VA sought to eliminate 30,000 positions through attrition by the end of fiscal 2025. The department previously envisioned cutting 83,000 jobs in part through layoffs.
VA Press Secretary Pete Kasperowicz disputed several of the reportβs findings. He said the VA achieved its headcount reduction goal of 30,000 employees, but didnβt lose 40,000 employees, as Senate Democrats claim. The VA also disputes the reportβs claims that veterans, in some cases, are seeing longer wait times for VA mental health care appointments.Β
Committee Ranking Member Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) told reporters in a call that the report shows a βdiminishedβ VA that is unable to keep up with the needs of veterans.
βThe loss of talent is so deeply regrettable, and the results are basically longer wait times,β Blumenthal said.
Kasperowicz said in a statement that, βwhile Blumenthal stages political theater, VA is making major improvements for veterans under President Trump.β
The VA fired about 2,400 probationary employees last year, but largely reduced its workforce through voluntary separation incentives.
VA workforce data shows the department made about 21,000 hires last year, offsetting the total impact of these workforce cuts. Β The latest data from the Office of Personnel Management shows the VA saw a net reduction of more than 27,000 positions in 2025.
But Blumenthal said these new hires have done little to improve the VAβs capacity.
βThey are not the same skilled people as have been either fired or lost because of the toxic environment thatβs been created in many areas of the VA,β he said.
Β

VA workforce data shows the department made about 21,000 hires last year, offsetting the total impact of these workforce cuts. Β The latest data from the Office of Personnel Management shows the VA saw a net reduction of more than 27,000 positions in 2025 (Source: OPM)In a memo last week, VA Under Secretary for Health John Bartrum told department leaders that βall hiring freeze restrictionsβ still in place at the Veterans Health Administration have been lifted.
Bartrum wrote in the memo that each Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN) βhas been allocated a baseline number of positions calculated on their budgeted FTE plus anticipated needs for growth,β and that requests to exceed that headcount must be approved by the VA Strategic Hiring Committee.
βLeaders and managers must manage operational needs within their cumulative full-time equivalent (FTE) budget and position thresholds,β Bartrum wrote.
The report claims veterans are seeing longer wait times for mental health care appointments. In early January, new-patient wait times for individual mental health care appointments in 14 states exceeded 40 days β twice the wait time threshold that allows veterans to seek treatment outside the VAβs health care network. Those states include California, Colorado, Connecticut, Iowa, Idaho, Kansas, Maryland, Maine, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Virginia. According to the report, the national mean for new patients to sign up for individual mental health care appointments is 35 days.
However, Kasperowicz said VA data shows wait times for mental health care were under six days for established patients, and 19 days for new patients.Β
The VA eased requirements for veterans to seek care from non-VA βcommunity careβ last year, and has increased spending on community care. The department is embarking on a $1 trillion next-generation community care contract, one of the largest government contracts in U.S. history.
House VA Committee Chairman Mike Bost (R-Ill.) said in a hearing Thursday that the contract, βif done properly,β would give the VA βunprecedented flexibilityβ to award contract and task orders that would lead to better health care outcomes for veterans.
In their report, Senate VA Committee Democrats found the VA last year cancelled about 2,000 contracts and let another 14,000 expire without plans to renew or replace those services.
VA Secretary Doug Collins has repeatedly defended his plans for a smaller workforce. He told lawmakers last May that increased staffing hasnβt always led to better outcomes for veterans.
Last year, the department decreased its backlog of benefits claims by nearly 60% despite a net decrease of about 2,000 VA claims processors.
Kayla Williams, a former VA assistant secretary and a senior advisor for the Vet Voice Foundation, said the department reduced the initial claims backlog, but has grown the volume of claims requiring higher-level review.
βThese actions were never about efficiency or cost savings,β Williams said.
The VA anticipated a spike in the backlog after Congress passed the PACT Act, making more veterans eligible for VA health care and benefits, because they were exposed to toxic substances during their military service.
Lindsay Church, the executive director of Minority Veterans of America, said 1.2 million veterans have lost their VA providers under the Trump administration.
βClinics canβt keep care teams staffed. Appointments are being canceled or delayed, and veterans who rely on consistent, trauma-informed care are being forced into instability and pressured into community care. Mental health access, which has always been a crisis for our community for decades, has deteriorated rapidly,β Church said.
Mary Jean Burke, the first executive vice president of the American Federation of Government Employees National VA Council, said that by the end of 2026, most VA facilities are on track to lose about 2-5% of their psychologists β and that locations, including Seattle and Buffalo, are on track to see βdouble-digitβ attrition.
Burke said VA health care employees have left because the VA has slashed jobs, stripped away remote work and telework, and brought staff back into βovercrowdedβ spaces.
βThese punishing policies havenβt just lowered morale, they end up compromising the quality of care we provide,β Burke said.
Collins is scheduled to testify before the Senate VA Committee next Wednesday, in a hearing about the departmentβs ongoing reorganization efforts.
The post VA officially lifts hiring freeze, but staffing caps still in place for shrinking workforce first appeared on Federal News Network.

Β© AP Photo/Charles Dharapak
John Baines cannot tolerate a dirty pit. The owner of JBβs Barbeque & More, on the northeast side of Houston, gets calls from aspiring pitmasters in the area who are looking for advice. He tells them the first step is for him to get a look at their cooker. βWhen they open their pit and I see all that gooey stuff,β Baines said, referring to the buildup of soot and grease some people call seasoning, he tells them, βIf you want me to mentor you, clean it up and call me back.βBaines has been cooking barbecue for 25 years, but heβs been a pastor for longer. He started with a small Christian congregation on the northeast side of Houston in 1995. His Heart of Faithβ¦