HR-3983-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to notify employees when they make avoidable delays in processing veterans' benefits claims. It would also require the Board of Veterans' Appeals (BVA) to establish a formal quality assurance program — including error tracking, use of artificial intelligence, and annual performance reviews — and create a mandatory training program for BVA members. The VA Secretary would be required to submit multiple annual reports to Congress on error rates, remand reasons, and training effectiveness.
Who benefits
Veterans who have filed or will file claims for VA benefits, particularly those whose claims have been delayed or incorrectly decided. Veterans whose appeals have been remanded (sent back for correction) by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims would benefit from faster and more accurate re-adjudication. Veterans service organizations that assist claimants would benefit from greater consistency in VA legal opinions. Taxpayers broadly, if improved accuracy reduces the volume of costly appeals and remands.
Who is hurt
VA employees and BVA members who would face more frequent performance reviews (annually instead of every three years) and greater individual accountability for errors and avoidable deferrals. VA administrative staff who would bear the workload of implementing new tracking systems, training programs, and reporting requirements. Congressional staff and committee members who would receive and must process multiple new annual reports. Potentially, veterans whose claims processing could be temporarily slowed during the transition period as new systems and procedures are built out.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA's claims backlog and high remand rate represent a systemic failure to deliver timely, accurate decisions to veterans who have earned their benefits through military service. They contend that without structured error tracking, employee feedback loops, and consistent legal guidance from the Office of General Counsel, the same mistakes recur indefinitely — costing veterans years of delayed benefits. The bill's use of data-driven quality assurance and AI-assisted trend analysis, they argue, modernizes an outdated adjudication system and creates the accountability mechanisms necessary to drive measurable improvement.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding layers of reporting, tracking, and review requirements may consume VA administrative resources without meaningfully reducing the claims backlog, potentially diverting staff time from actual claims processing to compliance activities. They contend that increased individual accountability metrics for BVA members — including tracking of vacated decisions — could create perverse incentives to avoid difficult or novel claims, or to issue overly cautious decisions that favor remand over resolution, further lengthening wait times for veterans. Critics may also note that the bill does not authorize new funding, raising questions about whether existing VA resources are sufficient to implement its requirements.