HR-740-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Mike Bost (R-IL)
What it does
This bill would make changes to how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) manages the Veterans Community Care Program (VCCP), which allows veterans to receive health care from non-VA providers. It would write access standards into law, require the VA to notify veterans of their eligibility for community care within two business days, and extend the time window for health care providers to submit claims. The bill would also require the VA to create a standardized screening process for mental health residential treatment, track facility performance on mental health admissions, establish an appeals process for denied or delayed mental health placements, and build an online self-service portal for veterans to schedule appointments, track referrals, and appeal care decisions.
Who benefits
Veterans enrolled in VA health care, particularly those who live far from VA facilities or face long wait times and would gain clearer access to community (non-VA) providers. Veterans seeking mental health residential treatment would benefit from standardized screening, faster admission tracking, and a formal appeals process. Veterans in rural or underserved areas, where VA facilities are scarce, would likely see the greatest gains from codified access standards. Non-VA health care providers and community clinics participating in the VCCP would benefit from the extended claims submission deadline, reducing the risk of unpaid claims due to administrative timing.
Who is hurt
VA-employed health care staff and administrators could face increased workload and compliance burdens from new tracking, notification, and appeals requirements. VA medical facilities and Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs) that currently fall short of mental health admission timelines would face new performance scrutiny. If community care utilization increases significantly, VA-based providers could see reduced patient volume, potentially affecting staffing and resource allocation within VA facilities. Taxpayers could bear higher costs if expanded community care access increases overall VA health spending, though the bill does not include a specific funding mechanism.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VCCP's access standards have long existed only as administrative rules, leaving veterans vulnerable to policy changes without congressional action. Codifying those standards into law gives veterans a durable, enforceable right to community care when VA wait times or distances are excessive. The two-business-day notification requirement directly addresses a documented problem: veterans often do not learn of their eligibility in time to make informed care decisions. The mental health provisions respond to a well-documented crisis — veterans face disproportionately high rates of suicide and substance use disorders, and delays in residential treatment admission can be life-threatening. A formal appeals process and performance tracking would create accountability where little currently exists. The online self-service portal would modernize VA scheduling, reducing the administrative friction that discourages veterans from seeking care in the first place.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that codifying access standards into statute removes the VA's flexibility to adjust eligibility criteria as resources, geography, and veteran population needs evolve — locking in rules that may become outdated or fiscally unsustainable. Expanding community care access without dedicated funding could strain the VA budget, diverting resources from VA facilities and the staff who serve veterans with complex, service-connected conditions that community providers may be less equipped to treat. Critics also contend that new tracking and reporting mandates on mental health admissions add bureaucratic layers without guaranteeing faster care, and that the appeals process could create litigation risk and administrative backlogs. The online portal requirement, while well-intentioned, may be difficult to implement effectively given the VA's historically troubled record with large-scale IT projects, potentially delaying real improvements to veteran access.