HR-7643-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity.
Sponsored by James Walkinshaw (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would amend title 38 of the U.S. Code to change how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) calculates and reports employment rates for veterans who complete the VET TEC program, a high-technology job training initiative. It would require the VA to measure employment 180 days after program completion, and would exclude from the "employed" count any graduate hired by their own training provider or a parent/affiliate of that provider as an instructor for a similar program. It would also require the VA to make these reports publicly available, and to continuously collect and use feedback from program participants to evaluate and improve the program.
Who benefits
Veterans considering enrolling in VET TEC, who would have access to more transparent and accurate employment outcome data to inform their decisions. Veterans currently enrolled in VET TEC, whose feedback would be formally solicited and used to improve the program. Taxpayers and oversight bodies, who would gain access to public employment rate data. Competing job training programs that were not inflating their outcomes, who would benefit from a more level playing field. Congressional oversight staff who monitor VA program effectiveness.
Who is hurt
VET TEC training providers whose reported employment rates may decrease under the new calculation method, particularly those who previously counted graduates hired back as instructors. These providers could face reduced enrollment or program eligibility if lower reported rates affect their standing. The VA would face new administrative burdens from ongoing feedback collection and revised reporting requirements. Veterans hired back as instructors by their training provider — a potentially legitimate employment outcome — would no longer count toward program success metrics.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current employment rate calculation can be gamed by training providers who hire their own graduates as instructors, artificially inflating success metrics without demonstrating real labor market placement. They contend that measuring employment at 180 days post-completion and excluding provider-affiliated hires produces a more honest picture of whether VET TEC is actually connecting veterans to technology sector jobs, and that public reporting gives veterans the consumer information they need to choose programs wisely.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that excluding provider-affiliated employment unfairly penalizes a legitimate career outcome — veterans who become instructors in technology training are gainfully employed in a relevant field, and discounting that work distorts the metric in the opposite direction. They contend that the 180-day window is an arbitrary benchmark that may not reflect the full employment trajectory of veterans transitioning careers, and that added reporting and feedback mandates increase VA administrative costs without a clear mechanism to act on the data collected.