HR-299-116
Became Public Law No: 116-23.
Sponsored by Mark Takano (D-CA)
What it does
This law extends the presumption that certain diseases (linked to Agent Orange/herbicide exposure) are service-connected to veterans who served offshore of Vietnam (1962–1975) or near the Korean Demilitarized Zone (1967–1971). It also expands health care and benefits to children with spina bifida whose parent served in Thailand during that period. Additionally, it removes the cap on VA home loan guarantees, eliminates loan size limits for Native American veterans buying homes on tribal trust land, waives loan fees for active-duty Purple Heart recipients, and adjusts VA home loan fee rates.
Who benefits
- "Blue Water" Navy veterans who served offshore of Vietnam and were previously excluded from Agent Orange presumption benefits - Veterans who served near the Korean DMZ during the specified period - Children with spina bifida whose parent served in Thailand and may have been exposed to herbicides - All veterans using VA home loans, who would see adjusted fee rates and removal of the Freddie Mac loan size cap - Native American veterans purchasing homes on tribal trust land, who would face no cap on direct housing loan amounts - Active-duty service members who received the Purple Heart, who would have loan fees waived
Who is hurt
- U.S. taxpayers and the federal budget, as expanded VA disability compensation, health care, and home loan guarantees increase federal spending - The VA, which faces a larger administrative workload processing new claims from newly eligible veterans and their dependents - Freddie Mac and private mortgage lenders, who may see reduced business as the removal of the VA loan cap makes VA-guaranteed loans more competitive for higher-value properties - Future veterans or other federal program beneficiaries, to the extent that increased spending on this program competes with other budget priorities
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that "Blue Water" Navy veterans were exposed to Agent Orange through contaminated drinking water distilled from the ocean and through direct contact with herbicide-laden vessels and equipment, yet were arbitrarily excluded from the same presumption of service-connection granted to veterans who served on Vietnamese soil. Decades of illness and denied claims represent a failure to honor the commitment made to those who served. The law corrects a documented inequity by aligning the evidentiary standard for offshore veterans with that of their land-based counterparts. Extending benefits to children with spina bifida whose parents served in Thailand similarly closes a gap for families bearing the multigenerational health consequences of wartime herbicide use. The home loan provisions modernize a program that had become less useful in high-cost housing markets, ensuring the VA benefit retains real value for all veterans regardless of where they live.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the scientific evidence linking offshore naval service specifically to Agent Orange exposure is less direct and more uncertain than the evidence for ground troops who operated in areas where herbicides were actively sprayed. Extending the presumption of service-connection without a clear, documented exposure pathway sets a precedent that could significantly expand VA liability based on geographic proximity rather than confirmed contact. The Congressional Budget Office estimated the law would add billions of dollars to federal spending over ten years, raising concerns about fiscal sustainability and the VA's capacity to process a large new wave of claims without delays that could harm veterans already in the system. Critics also note that removing the VA home loan cap could expose the federal government to greater financial risk on large loans, particularly in the event of a housing market downturn.