HR-8732-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Jamie Raskin (D-MD)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law to consolidate retirement pay for commissioned officers of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) into the existing Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund. It would require an actuarial board to calculate the unfunded pension liability for past NOAA and PHS service by January 1, 2027, and establish a repayment schedule. It would also update related survivor benefit and family protection plan statutes to apply uniformly across all uniformed services.
Who benefits
Retired and currently serving commissioned officers of NOAA and the Public Health Service, who would gain access to the more established and better-funded DoD Military Retirement Fund. Future NOAA and PHS retirees who may benefit from greater long-term pension security. Taxpayers and federal budget planners who may benefit from consolidated actuarial oversight and reduced administrative fragmentation. The Departments of Commerce and Health and Human Services, which would transfer pension liability management to DoD.
Who is hurt
The Department of Defense, which would absorb new pension liabilities for NOAA and PHS retirees — potentially increasing the fund's obligations. DoD budget planners who may face increased actuarial complexity and funding demands. Taxpayers if the unfunded liability calculation reveals a significant gap that requires additional appropriations to amortize. Existing DoD Military Retirement Fund beneficiaries (active and retired military) if consolidation strains fund solvency, though the bill requires actuarial review to mitigate this risk.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that NOAA and PHS commissioned officers are legally designated uniformed services members who serve alongside the military, yet their retirement pay flows through separate, less-resourced departmental accounts rather than the dedicated DoD Military Retirement Fund. They contend that consolidation would eliminate administrative redundancy, ensure consistent actuarial management, and provide NOAA and PHS retirees with the same pension security enjoyed by their military counterparts — correcting a structural inequity for roughly 6,000 active and retired uniformed officers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring NOAA and PHS pension obligations into the DoD Military Retirement Fund shifts a potentially significant unfunded liability onto a fund that primarily serves combat military retirees, without a clear guarantee that Congress will appropriate the funds needed to cover the amortized gap. They contend that the bill's actuarial review requirement does not itself authorize the additional appropriations needed to liquidate the liability, leaving the fund — and by extension existing military retirees — exposed to underfunding risk until Congress acts separately.