HR-1423-119
Forwarded by Subcommittee to Full Committee by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Mike Levin (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would expand eligibility for Post-9/11 GI Bill educational benefits to members of the National Guard and military reserve components by counting additional types of service toward eligibility. Specifically, it would add active duty, inactive-duty training, annual training duty, and full-time National Guard duty to the types of service that qualify. Under current law, only federal active duty counts toward Post-9/11 GI Bill eligibility.
Who benefits
National Guard members and military reservists who currently perform service that does not count toward GI Bill eligibility — particularly those who serve primarily in non-federal active duty roles. Veterans' families who benefit from increased educational attainment and earning potential. Colleges and universities that would see increased enrollment from newly eligible students. States and communities that rely heavily on National Guard and reserve forces, which tend to be more rural and less affluent on average.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of expanded benefit payments, though the total fiscal impact is not specified in the bill text. Traditional active-duty service members who currently receive preferential eligibility treatment may see the relative value of their benefit reduced. Institutions or programs that compete with higher education for Guard and reserve members' time and attention could see reduced participation.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that National Guard and reserve members perform the same dangerous and demanding service as active-duty troops — including deployments to combat zones — yet are systematically excluded from the same educational benefits. They contend this disparity is inequitable given that Guard and reserve forces have shouldered a disproportionate share of post-9/11 deployments, with over one million mobilizations since 2001, and that expanding eligibility would help recruit and retain these critical components of the U.S. military.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the Post-9/11 GI Bill was specifically designed to reward sustained federal active-duty service, and that broadening eligibility to include part-time and non-federal duty blurs that distinction in ways that could strain the program's long-term fiscal sustainability. They contend that Guard and reserve members already have access to separate educational benefit programs — such as the Montgomery GI Bill Selected Reserve — and that expanding Post-9/11 benefits without offsetting funding could increase costs and reduce benefit quality for all recipients.