HR-6652-119
Forwarded by Subcommittee to Full Committee (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Kimberlyn King-Hinds (R-MP)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to enter into agreements with the governments of the Freely Associated States (the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau) to provide VA health services to U.S. veterans living there. At minimum, those services must include telehealth and mail-order pharmacy delivery. The bill sets a 30-day deadline to begin outreach, a one-year deadline to finalize agreements and begin services, and requires quarterly progress reports to Congress. It also amends existing law to make beneficiary travel payments mandatory — rather than discretionary — once the Secretary exercises that payment authority in any given fiscal year.
Who benefits
U.S. military veterans residing in the Freely Associated States (FAS) — primarily citizens of the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau who served in the U.S. armed forces and now live in their home nations. Veterans' families in the FAS who depend on the veteran's access to healthcare. Telehealth and mail-order pharmacy providers who would gain new federal contracts. Congressional oversight committees that would receive regular implementation reports.
Who is hurt
The Department of Veterans Affairs, which would bear new administrative and financial obligations to negotiate agreements and deliver services across international borders. U.S. taxpayers who fund VA operations, as implementation costs are unknown but would be ongoing. Other VA programs that could face indirect resource competition if implementation costs are significant. FAS governments that must negotiate and administer agreements on a compressed one-year timeline, which may strain their administrative capacity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans in the FAS served under the U.S. flag and earned the same healthcare benefits as veterans anywhere else, yet currently face significant barriers to accessing VA services due to geography. They contend that telehealth and mail-order pharmacy are low-cost, proven delivery mechanisms already used domestically, making extension to the FAS both practical and equitable. The Compact of Free Association Amendments Act of 2024 already established the legal framework for these agreements — this bill simply compels the VA to act on authority Congress has already granted.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending VA service delivery across international borders to sovereign nations introduces complex logistical, legal, and cost challenges that the VA is not currently equipped to manage, and that the one-year implementation deadline may be unrealistic. They contend that the bill converts discretionary beneficiary travel payments into a mandatory obligation without a clear funding mechanism, potentially creating an unfunded mandate that competes with VA resources serving the far larger domestic veteran population. The quarterly reporting requirement, while well-intentioned, adds administrative burden without guaranteeing timely implementation.