HR-9237-119
Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 1423 Reported to House. Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 139, H.R. 8595, H.R. 9237 and H.R. 1181. The resolution provides for consideration of H.R. 139, H.R. 9237, and H.R. 1181 under a closed rule, and H.R. 8595 under a structured rule with one hour of debate and one motion to reconsider on each bill.
Sponsored by Mike Bost (R-IL)
What it does
This bill would expand and modify a wide range of Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) programs. It would increase disability compensation for certain veterans, extend benefits to remarried surviving spouses, expand family caregiver support, and revise disability ratings for conditions like sleep apnea and tinnitus. It would also modify education and training benefits, extend a suicide prevention grant program, expand VA mental health research, codify eligibility standards for the Veterans Community Care Program, and address VA hiring and infrastructure.
Who benefits
Veterans with combat-related disabilities who currently cannot receive both disability compensation and military retired pay simultaneously. Remarried surviving spouses of veterans who previously lost access to certain benefits upon remarriage. Disabled veterans who would receive a new supplemental monthly allowance. Family caregivers of veterans who would receive expanded support. Veterans with sleep apnea or tinnitus who may receive revised (potentially higher) disability ratings. Veterans and service members pursuing apprenticeships, who would receive a higher housing allowance. Veterans seeking community-based (non-VA) health care under the VCCP. Veterans at risk of suicide who could benefit from the extended grant program. Spouses, children, and dependents of veterans who would gain expanded eligibility for memorial headstones or markers.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of expanded benefits and increased compensation rates. VA administrative staff who would face new implementation, screening, and hiring mandates. Private insurers and community care providers participating in the VCCP, who would face codified eligibility standards that may constrain program flexibility. Independent study programs that may be excluded from veterans' educational assistance coverage under the modified criteria. Veterans who prefer the current disability rating system for sleep apnea or tinnitus, if revised ratings result in lower compensation for some.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the bill addresses longstanding gaps in veterans' benefits — particularly the prohibition on concurrent receipt of disability compensation and military retired pay, which has long been criticized as a financial penalty on combat-injured retirees. They contend that extending benefits to remarried surviving spouses corrects an inequity that punishes widows and widowers for rebuilding their lives, and that expanding caregiver support and suicide prevention funding responds directly to documented crises: VA data shows more than 6,000 veteran suicides annually, and family caregivers often bear significant uncompensated burdens.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's broad scope and multiple simultaneous benefit expansions would generate substantial long-term fiscal obligations without a clear offset or funding mechanism, potentially adding to the federal deficit. They contend that codifying VCCP eligibility standards into statute reduces the VA's administrative flexibility to adapt the program as health care costs and veteran needs evolve, and that revising disability ratings for widespread conditions like sleep apnea and tinnitus — affecting millions of veterans — could dramatically increase compensation costs beyond what current budget projections account for.