HR-1695-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Pat Harrigan (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would change how the National Guard Bureau handles money it receives when states or U.S. territories pay to use federal military property. It would require those reimbursement funds to be returned to the specific budget account that originally paid for the assets. It would also limit how the Department of Defense can spend those funds — restricting use to repair, maintenance, replacement, or similar upkeep of assets that National Guard units used while operating under state active duty status.
Who benefits
State and territorial National Guard units, which would see reimbursement funds directed back toward maintaining the specific equipment and property they use. States and territories that pay reimbursements, as the funds would be tied to upkeep of the assets they rely on. Taxpayers who benefit from clearer accountability over how federal military property funds are tracked and spent. Congress, which would gain tighter oversight over how DoD handles these reimbursements.
Who is hurt
The Department of Defense, which would lose flexibility to redirect reimbursement funds to other priorities. DoD budget planners who currently may use these funds more broadly across accounts. Potentially, other military programs that may have benefited from discretionary use of reimbursement funds under current rules. National Guard units operating under federal (Title 10) status, who are outside the scope of this bill and would not see any direct benefit from the restricted funds.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that reimbursement funds paid by states for the use of federal military property should logically flow back to maintaining that same property — not be absorbed into unrelated DoD accounts. They contend that without this restriction, states effectively subsidize broader Pentagon spending rather than the upkeep of the Guard assets their own communities depend on, undermining both fiscal accountability and National Guard readiness at the state level.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that restricting how reimbursement funds are credited and spent reduces the Pentagon's ability to allocate resources where they are most needed across the defense enterprise. They contend that rigid fund-tracking requirements add administrative complexity without a demonstrated readiness problem, and that the DoD already has internal accountability mechanisms — such as the Appropriations Clause framework — that prevent misuse of these funds without additional statutory constraints.