The Department of Veterans Affairs is preparing to eliminate as many as 35,000 health care positions, a move that could reshape how millions of veterans receive care. The plan focuses largely on unfilled roles, including doctors, nurses, and clinical support staff, according to CNBC. Even without immediate layoffs, the scale of the reduction raises urgent questions about access, wait times, and the strain placed on an already stretched system.
VA leaders argue the cuts will streamline operations and remove positions created during the pandemic that are no longer needed. Agency officials have said the changes will not affect care delivery. But veterans’ advocates, unions, and lawmakers warn that the math does not add up when demand for services continues to grow.
A woman gently touches the shoulder of a man in a wheelchair during a conversation.
The VA plans to eliminate up to 35,000 health care positions.
What the Cuts Actually Mean
Most of the positions slated for elimination are vacant. That detail matters, but not in the way officials suggest. Unfilled jobs often represent unmet needs, not excess. As Forbes reports, the VA workforce could shrink by roughly 10 percent from last year, returning staffing levels closer to where they stood before recent expansions in eligibility.
The agency has already lost about 30,000 employees through buyouts, attrition, and hiring freezes. At the same time, applications to work at the VA have dropped sharply, reflecting a national shortage of health care workers and growing uncertainty inside the department. Canceling open positions now may lock in those shortages for years.
Medical professionals consult with a soldier in a healthcare setting.
Most of the jobs targeted for elimination are currently unfilled.
A System Under Pressure
The timing is critical. Expanded eligibility under the PACT Act brought more than one million newly enrolled veterans into the VA health system. Many are seeking treatment for toxic exposure–related illnesses that require specialized, long-term care. Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee leaders have warned that removing thousands of clinical roles will stretch remaining staff thinner, leading to longer waits and reduced access, according to the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
Frontline workers echo those concerns. Reports of canceled job postings for nurses and physicians have fueled fears that clinics and hospitals will struggle to cover shifts, particularly in rural areas where recruiting is already difficult. A leaked internal memo described by Raw Story suggests managers have been instructed to pull back on hiring even as workloads rise.
Two hands clasped together, symbolizing connection and support, with a camouflage hat nearby.
The cuts include doctors, nurses, and clinical support staff.
Why Veterans Are Alarmed
Veterans’ groups argue that health care cannot be treated like a simple budget line. Each vacant position represents a potential appointment, a mental health visit, or a specialist referral that may now be delayed. Advocacy organizations have pushed back forcefully, warning that repeated workforce reductions risk pushing veterans toward private care, where costs and continuity can become barriers, MS NOW reports.
For veterans who rely on the VA as their primary source of care, the concern is practical and personal. Fewer clinicians mean fewer choices, longer drives, and longer waits. In a system built to serve those who served, staffing decisions ripple far beyond internal spreadsheets. They shape daily realities for millions who earned that care through their service.
Click below to make a difference.
Stop the VA From Gutting Health Care For Veterans
Stop the VA From Gutting Veterans Health Care
The Department of Veterans Affairs plans to eliminate tens of thousands of health care positions, even as more veterans than ever rely on the VA for treatment tied to their service.
Unfilled roles still represent care veterans are waiting for. Fewer doctors and nurses can mean longer delays, fewer appointments, and reduced access to critical services.
Veterans kept their promise to this country. We have a responsibility to keep ours.
Add your name to call on VA leadership to rehire health care professionals and protect the care veterans were promised and earned.
Sign the Petition!
Matthew Russell
Matthew Russell
Matthew Russell is a West Michigan native and with a background in journalism, data analysis, cartography and design thinking. He likes to learn new things and solve old problems whenever possible, and enjoys bicycling, spending time with his daughters, and coffee. Read more articles by Matthew Russell.