(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is planning to cut 80,000 positions as part of an "aggressive" overhaul of the agency that runs programs for veterans and members of their families.

The VA's chief of staff, Christopher Syrek, told top VA officials on Tuesday that it would to return to 2019 staffing levels of just under 400,000 employees. That would require dismissing about 83,000 employees after the VA expanded during the Biden administration.

It will work with the Department of Government Efficiency to create a workforce optimization plan, Syrek said in an internal memo obtained by multiple news outlets, including Government Executive, which first reported on the memo. He said VA will "move aggressively" to reduce bureaucracy, cut the department's footprint and "increase workforce efficiency," the outlet reported.

House Committee on Veterans' Affairs Democrats said the move could hurt veterans.

"83,000 VA employees are set to be fired," the committee wrote on X. "These cuts won’t just impact those seeking health care. They will create chaos across every aspect of VA – delaying benefits, straining claims processing, and making it nearly impossible for student veterans and schools to get the assistance they need. Veterans will suffer the consequences."

The VA added staff quickly during the Biden administration as it staffed up to address increased coverage under the PACT Act, a law that expanded VA health care and benefits for veterans exposed to burn pits, Agent Orange, and other toxic substances.

News of the overhaul comes after relatively minor cuts at the agency. Earlier this week, Veterans Affairs started cancelling close to 600 "non-mission critical" and "duplicative" contracts valued at about $1.8 billion – and this is just the beginning, according to the department.

The cancellations result from the early stages of a “deliberative, multi-level review” by some of the people responsible for the contracts, VA senior leaders and contracting officials and will allow Veterans Affairs to redirect about $900 million back to veteran benefits and services, the agency said.

The 585 contracts the department has begun canceling "represent less than 1% of the roughly 90,000 contracts VA currently has in place," and the department plans to perform a thorough review of all of them.

In February, VA dismissed more than 1,400 probationary employees in non-mission critical positions. At that time, VA said it was continuing to hire for more than 300,000 mission-critical positions that are exempt from the federal hiring freeze. Earlier that same month, VA announced it dismissed more than 1,000 of its 43,000 probationary employees in a move expected to save $98 million a year. The agency said those let go included non-union probationary employees who have served less than a year in a competitive service appointment or who have served less than two years in an excepted service appointment.

VA has more than 43,000 probationary employees across the department, the vast majority were exempt from termination "because they serve in mission-critical positions – primarily those supporting benefits and services for VA beneficiaries – or are covered under a collective bargaining agreement," according to the agency. VA employees who signed up for the Office of Personnel Management's deferred resignation program were also exempt from termination.

"The dismissals announced today are part of a government-wide Trump Administration effort to make agencies more efficient, effective and responsive to the American People," the agency said in mid-February. "To that end, VA is refocusing on its core mission: providing the best possible care and benefits to Veterans, their families, caregivers and survivors."

The agency did not immediately respond to an email seeking comments on the deeper cuts planned for the summer.