HR-8962-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to publish and update — at least every 90 days — a publicly accessible list of dietary supplement ingredients and performance-enhancing substances prohibited for use by military members. It would give commanding officers discretion to forgo discipline or administrative separation for first-time offenders who unknowingly used a prohibited supplement in good faith. It would also direct the Department of Defense to improve its Operation Supplement Safety website, review dietary supplement safety education for troops, and submit multiple reports to Congress on implementation.
Who benefits
Active-duty service members, particularly those who unknowingly consume prohibited supplement ingredients and currently face automatic discipline or separation. Military recruits who may be less familiar with prohibited substance rules. Service members who purchase supplements from DoD-affiliated retail facilities (e.g., base exchanges). Dietary supplement vendors who sell to military personnel, who would gain clearer guidance on prohibited ingredients. Commanding officers, who would gain formal discretion they may currently lack. Indirectly, military readiness could benefit if fewer service members are separated over inadvertent supplement use.
Who is hurt
Service members who deliberately use prohibited substances may face less consistent enforcement if commanding officers apply the good-faith exception unevenly. Competitors of service members who do not use prohibited supplements may face a less level playing field if enforcement becomes more discretionary. The DoD and military branches would bear administrative costs of maintaining and updating the list, improving the website, and producing multiple congressional reports. Taxpayers would indirectly bear those administrative costs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the dietary supplement industry is poorly regulated — the FDA does not pre-approve supplements before sale — meaning service members can unknowingly purchase products containing prohibited ingredients that are not clearly disclosed on labels. They contend that separating or disciplining troops for good-faith supplement use wastes trained military personnel and undermines morale, and that a regularly updated, searchable prohibited list gives service members a fair and practical way to verify compliance before purchasing.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that introducing a good-faith exception and commanding officer discretion into prohibited substance enforcement could weaken the integrity of the military's drug and performance-enhancing substance policies, creating inconsistent standards across units and branches. They contend that the existing strict-liability framework exists precisely to deter all prohibited substance use and that a case-by-case discretionary system may be difficult to apply uniformly, potentially opening the door to favoritism or uneven discipline across demographic groups.