HR-5586-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Jennifer Kiggans (R-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to notify TRICARE beneficiaries of upcoming coverage transition requirements — meaning situations where a beneficiary must make a new enrollment election to keep their coverage — at three set intervals: one year, 180 days, and 30 days before the change takes effect. Notices would be delivered electronically. The bill would also require the Department of Defense to run a public outreach campaign using the TRICARE website, social media, and family readiness groups, and to submit annual reports to Congress on the program's implementation and effectiveness.
Who benefits
Current TRICARE beneficiaries — including active-duty service members, military retirees, and their dependents — who may be unaware of enrollment deadlines that could cause a lapse in coverage. Dependents aging off a parent's plan (e.g., at age 26 under section 1110b) who may be unfamiliar with re-enrollment requirements. Military families with limited access to in-person support resources who rely on digital communications. Family readiness groups and installation support staff who currently field questions about coverage transitions. Congressional defense committees, who would receive annual implementation reports.
Who is hurt
The Department of Defense and TRICARE program administrators would bear new administrative and operational costs to build and maintain the notification system, run the outreach campaign, and produce annual reports. Defense contractors or vendors managing TRICARE's IT infrastructure may face system modification requirements. There are no groups who lose a direct benefit under this bill, though taxpayers broadly would bear any increased administrative costs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that missed TRICARE enrollment deadlines can result in coverage gaps for service members and their families — a population that has already sacrificed civilian career opportunities and employer-sponsored insurance options. They contend that a structured, multi-touchpoint notification system directly addresses a known administrative failure point, and that the cost of building such a system is modest compared to the financial and health consequences beneficiaries face when coverage lapses due to missed deadlines they were never clearly warned about.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill mandates a specific notification architecture — three fixed electronic notices plus a full outreach campaign and annual congressional reports — that may be unnecessarily prescriptive and costly for what is essentially an administrative improvement the Department of Defense could implement on its own. They contend that layering new statutory mandates onto DoD's existing TRICARE infrastructure adds bureaucratic overhead without guaranteeing better outcomes, and that resources spent on compliance reporting could instead be directed toward direct beneficiary services.