HR-9140-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Maxine Dexter (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security to develop recommendations for improving how military medics transition into civilian healthcare jobs such as certified nurse aides, licensed practical nurses, and medical assistants. It would also establish a pilot grant program — replacing an existing provision in federal law — that awards up to $600,000 over three years (plus up to $200,000 per renewal year) to nonprofit healthcare providers in medically underserved areas to hire, train, and retain separating service members. The bill authorizes $5 million per year from fiscal years 2027 through 2031 for the grant program.
Who benefits
Separating and recently separated military medics and other clinical health care personnel who would gain clearer pathways to civilian healthcare credentials and employment. Rural and medically underserved communities that would gain access to trained healthcare workers. Nonprofit rural health clinics, federally qualified health centers, nursing homes, and facilities in health professional shortage areas that would receive grant funding. The broader civilian healthcare workforce pipeline, which faces documented shortages. States and licensing boards that would receive federal recommendations to streamline credential recognition.
Who is hurt
Civilian healthcare workers and new graduates who may face increased competition for entry-level positions in underserved areas. For-profit healthcare providers, who are ineligible for the grants, may be at a competitive disadvantage in hiring separating service members relative to grant-funded nonprofits. Taxpayers bear the cost of the $25 million authorization over five years. Healthcare providers in non-underserved areas would not be eligible for grants, potentially concentrating workforce benefits geographically.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that military medics receive rigorous clinical training — often equivalent to or exceeding civilian certifications — yet face a fragmented, state-by-state credentialing system that forces many to restart their education from scratch, wasting both individual talent and public investment. They contend that the U.S. faces a projected shortage of hundreds of thousands of healthcare workers, particularly in rural and underserved areas, and that this bill directly connects a trained, available workforce to the communities that need it most. The grant program's focus on medically underserved areas and nonprofit providers, they argue, targets federal dollars where market forces have failed to deliver adequate care.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's core mechanism — a study and recommendations report — lacks binding authority and may produce little more than a document that sits unimplemented, as similar transition-assistance efforts have done in the past. They contend that the $5 million annual authorization is modest relative to the scale of the credentialing problem, and that the real barriers lie in state licensing laws that Congress cannot directly override without raising anti-commandeering concerns under the Tenth Amendment. Critics may also argue that restricting grants to nonprofit providers in medically underserved areas, while well-intentioned, excludes a large share of the healthcare sector and limits the program's overall reach.