HR-4160-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity.
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to collaborate with the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to create a five-year pilot program. Under the program, DHS would use the existing DOD SkillBridge Program — which allows servicemembers to train with civilian employers during their final 180 days of active duty — to recruit, train, and hire transitioning servicemembers as Border Patrol agents for U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
Who benefits
Transitioning servicemembers who would gain a structured pathway to civilian law enforcement employment before leaving active duty. Veterans who successfully complete the program and are hired as Border Patrol agents, receiving stable federal employment. CBP and DHS, which would gain a pipeline of recruits with military training, discipline, and relevant skills. Border communities that may benefit from increased staffing levels at CBP. Taxpayers, to the extent that leveraging existing military training reduces CBP onboarding costs.
Who is hurt
Civilian applicants for Border Patrol positions who do not have military backgrounds and may face increased competition from a structured veteran hiring pipeline. Servicemembers who do not qualify for or are not selected for the SkillBridge slots, who would not benefit from the program. DOD units that may experience temporary reduced availability of servicemembers participating in the program during their final months of service. Federal agencies that administer the program would bear coordination and administrative costs across three departments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that transitioning servicemembers already possess many of the core competencies required of Border Patrol agents — physical fitness, firearms proficiency, discipline, and experience operating in austere environments — making them highly efficient recruits. They contend that CBP has faced persistent staffing shortages for years, and that a structured SkillBridge pipeline directly addresses that gap by converting military service into credentialed federal law enforcement careers, reducing both training costs and attrition rates compared to civilian recruits.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that Border Patrol work requires specialized skills — including immigration law, community engagement, and de-escalation — that military training does not fully provide, and that fast-tracking veterans through a pilot program could result in undertrained agents in high-stakes situations. They contend that the program may create a two-tiered hiring system that disadvantages equally qualified civilian applicants, and that without rigorous evaluation metrics built into the pilot, Congress may lack the data needed to assess whether the program actually improves CBP performance or retention.