Title 38 › Part PART I— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS › § 323
Creates an Office of Accountability and Whistleblower Protection inside the Department. The President appoints its leader, called the Assistant Secretary for Accountability and Whistleblower Protection. The Assistant Secretary reports straight to the Secretary and may only be given duties that match the Office’s listed work. The Office cannot be placed inside the Office of the General Counsel, and the Assistant Secretary may not report to the General Counsel. The Secretary must give the Office the staff, money, and access to information it needs. The Office must advise the Secretary about accountability and whistleblower retaliation, take anonymous and named disclosures by phone or online, send disclosures to the Medical Inspector, Inspector General, or other investigators when needed, accept referrals from the Special Counsel, track whether audit and investigation recommendations are carried out, study hotline and other data to find problems, investigate serious allegations about senior, policy-making, or supervisory employees (including retaliation cases), and recommend disciplinary or corrective action. Every year by June 30, starting in 2017, the Assistant Secretary must report to the House and Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committees with analysis, trends, resource needs, and recommendations. If the Secretary does not act on a recommended discipline within 60 days, the Secretary must explain why to those committees. Definitions: supervisory employee — a Department supervisor; whistleblower — someone who makes a whistleblower disclosure; whistleblower disclosure — information an applicant or employee reasonably believes shows a law violation, gross mismanagement, waste, abuse of authority, or serious danger to public health or safety.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 323
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73