HR-2288-115
Became Public Law No: 115-55.
Sponsored by Mike Bost (R-IL)
What it does
This law restructures the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) disability benefits appeals process. It creates three distinct appeal pathways for veterans: a higher-level review using the existing evidence record, a supplemental claim allowing new evidence and hearings, or a direct appeal to the Board of Veterans' Appeals with options for expedited review or a full hearing. It also requires the VA to certify it has adequate resources before full implementation and mandates public reporting on appeals processing.
Who benefits
Veterans with pending or future VA disability benefit claims, particularly those with long-standing appeals stuck in the old single-track system. Veterans who want faster resolution would benefit from the new expedited review lane. Veterans with strong new evidence benefit from the supplemental claim pathway. Veterans' attorneys and accredited claims agents benefit from earlier access to fee-based representation. Veterans with favorable prior findings benefit from the new binding-findings rule.
Who is hurt
Veterans who find the new three-pathway system confusing or who choose the wrong lane and lose appeal rights may be negatively affected. Veterans without legal representation or advocacy support may struggle to navigate the more complex system. VA employees face increased workload during the transition period. Taxpayers bear the cost of standing up a new parallel appeals infrastructure. Veterans with appeals already deep in the old system may face uncertainty during the transition.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the old VA appeals system was a single, rigid track that forced veterans to wait an average of three to seven years for a final decision — one of the longest administrative backlogs in the federal government. This law gives veterans meaningful choices: those who simply want a fresh set of eyes on their file can get a faster higher-level review, while those with new medical evidence can submit it without starting over. The binding-findings rule prevents the VA from reversing favorable determinations without clear and convincing evidence, giving veterans stronger procedural protections. Requiring the VA to certify adequate resources before full rollout adds a safeguard against implementation failure. Supporters contend that modernizing this system is a basic obligation to those who served.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating three separate appeal lanes adds complexity that many veterans — especially older, rural, or unrepresented claimants — will find difficult to navigate without professional help, potentially causing them to forfeit rights by selecting the wrong pathway. Critics note that allowing fee-based attorneys to enter cases earlier could shift a disproportionate share of benefits awards to legal fees rather than to veterans themselves. Some argue the law does not address the root cause of the backlog — understaffing and inconsistent rating decisions at the regional office level — and that a structural overhaul of the front-end claims process is needed instead. Others raise concerns that pilot programs authorized under the law could be used to test changes with limited congressional oversight, weakening accountability.