HR-3482-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 496.
Sponsored by Tom Barrett (R-MI)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to implement an electronic scheduling system for health care appointments made directly through the VA and through the Veterans Community Care Program (VCCP), which allows veterans to see non-VA providers. The VA would have two years from enactment to implement the system, and would also be required to create a mandatory training program for scheduling staff, set measurable performance benchmarks, and conduct outreach to encourage private community care providers to participate. Separately, the bill would extend an existing cap on pension amounts for certain veterans who are hospitalized or institutionalized through June 30, 2033.
Who benefits
Veterans who use VA health care or community care and currently face scheduling difficulties or delays — approximately 9 million enrolled VA patients. Veterans in rural or underserved areas who rely on community care providers may benefit from streamlined access. VA scheduling staff who would receive standardized training. Community care providers who participate in the VCCP and would gain a clearer, more efficient referral and scheduling interface. Veterans whose pension amounts are stabilized by the extended cap provision.
Who is hurt
Community care providers who do not wish to adopt electronic scheduling systems may face administrative burden or pressure to participate. VA staff who must undergo mandatory training may face workload disruption during the transition period. Taxpayers would bear implementation and training costs. Veterans who are less comfortable with digital tools may find electronic-only scheduling less accessible than phone-based alternatives. Veterans receiving pensions who are hospitalized or institutionalized would continue to have their pension amounts limited under the extended cap through 2033.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA's scheduling failures — most visibly exposed in the 2014 wait-time scandal, which revealed that veterans faced months-long delays and that staff falsified records — demonstrate a systemic need for modernized, transparent scheduling infrastructure. They contend that electronic scheduling with mandatory performance benchmarks would create accountability mechanisms that paper and phone-based systems lack, and that extending the community care program's reach through better scheduling technology directly addresses veterans' access to timely care.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a specific technological solution without sufficient flexibility could create implementation problems if the VA's existing IT infrastructure — which has a documented history of costly, delayed modernization projects, including the ongoing EHR system overhaul — cannot support the new system within the two-year window. They contend that without adequate funding and a clear interoperability standard, the mandate may produce a patchwork system that burdens community providers and fails to meaningfully reduce wait times for veterans.