HR-6740-119
Committee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Mike Flood (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law to standardize how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) sets pay for Senior Executive Service (SES) employees, requiring their salaries to follow the same pay ranges and limits that apply to SES employees across the rest of the federal government. It would also require the VA to include two additional data points in its existing reports on executive bonuses and performance awards: the specific appropriations account used to fund each award, and the recipient's base salary.
Who benefits
VA Senior Executive Service employees who may receive clearer, more consistent pay determinations. Taxpayers and oversight bodies (Congress, GAO, inspectors general) who would gain more detailed information about how VA executive compensation is funded. Veterans' advocacy organizations and journalists who monitor VA spending. Executives transferring into the VA from other federal agencies, who would receive pay consistent with their established performance and pay level.
Who is hurt
VA senior executives who currently receive pay set under VA-specific rules that may exceed standard SES pay ranges — they could see pay reductions or slower pay growth under the new structure. The VA Secretary would lose some discretion in setting executive compensation. VA leadership may face increased public and congressional scrutiny of bonus and pay decisions due to expanded reporting requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA has historically operated under a separate, more flexible pay system for senior executives that has enabled compensation inconsistencies and made it harder for Congress to conduct meaningful oversight. They contend that aligning VA executive pay with government-wide SES standards promotes fairness, fiscal discipline, and accountability — particularly important at an agency with a well-documented history of management failures and bonus controversies, including the 2014 wait-time scandal in which executives received bonuses despite systemic failures.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the VA competes with private-sector healthcare systems for experienced medical and administrative executives, and that constraining pay to standard SES ranges makes it harder to recruit and retain qualified leaders in a specialized, high-demand field. They contend that reducing compensation flexibility could worsen VA management quality over time, ultimately harming the veterans the bill aims to serve — and that existing reporting requirements already provide sufficient oversight without adding new pay restrictions.