HR-3055-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Tom Barrett (R-MI)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Transportation (DOT) to develop and publicly release a "Veteran to Supply Chain Employee Action Plan." The plan would identify barriers veterans and transitioning service members face when seeking employment or training in the supply chain industry (covering port, ocean, rail, and trucking sectors), as well as challenges employers in that industry face when recruiting and retaining veterans. The plan would also recommend specific short- and long-term actions that DOT, the Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Department of Labor could take to improve veteran employment outcomes in supply chain jobs.
Who benefits
Veterans and transitioning service members who are eligible for the Transition Assistance Program (TAP) and are seeking civilian employment — particularly those with logistics, transportation, or operations backgrounds that may translate to supply chain roles. Supply chain employers (ports, railroads, trucking companies, freight and logistics firms) who struggle to recruit qualified workers. The broader supply chain industry, which faces documented labor shortages. Indirect beneficiaries include consumers and businesses that depend on a well-staffed supply chain.
Who is hurt
DOT staff who would bear the administrative burden of developing and publishing the plan. Taxpayers would bear any costs associated with the planning process, though these are likely modest. Non-veteran job seekers in the supply chain sector could face increased competition if the plan successfully channels more veterans into these roles. Competing workforce development organizations or contractors not selected to assist with implementation could lose business.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans possess highly transferable skills — logistics coordination, equipment operation, and supply chain management — that are directly applicable to civilian port, rail, and trucking jobs, yet veterans often struggle to translate military experience into civilian credentials. They contend that a coordinated, multi-agency action plan would reduce duplication across DOT, DOD, VA, and DOL, and that addressing documented supply chain labor shortages with a trained veteran workforce benefits both groups simultaneously.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that this bill creates only a planning requirement with no guaranteed funding, binding timelines, or enforcement mechanism — meaning it could produce a report that sits unused without producing any actual job placements. They contend that DOD, VA, and DOL already operate overlapping transition and workforce programs, and that adding another interagency planning document risks duplicating existing efforts rather than streamlining them, consuming agency resources without measurable outcomes for veterans.