HR-9247-119
Referred to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Erin Houchin (R-IN)
What it does
This bill would amend title 38 of the U.S. Code to require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to ensure that a suicide prevention coordinator is available at every VA medical center, including outside of normal operating hours, whenever a veteran requests suicide prevention planning services. Notably, the bill explicitly prohibits the VA from hiring any additional full-time equivalent employees to meet this requirement, meaning the VA must fulfill the mandate using its existing workforce.
Who benefits
Veterans experiencing suicidal ideation outside of normal VA business hours who currently may not have access to a dedicated on-site coordinator. Veterans in crisis who prefer in-person or facility-based support over phone or telehealth options. Mental health advocates and veteran service organizations that have pushed for expanded after-hours access. Families and caregivers of at-risk veterans who may benefit from improved crisis response infrastructure.
Who is hurt
Current VA suicide prevention coordinators, who may face expanded on-call or after-hours obligations without additional staffing support, potentially increasing workload and burnout risk. VA medical center administrators who must restructure staffing schedules within existing headcount limits. Veterans in rural areas served by smaller VA facilities, where a single coordinator covering extended hours may be less feasible. Taxpayers and VA budget planners who may face indirect costs if the mandate strains existing staff retention.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veteran suicide is a persistent national crisis — the VA reports approximately 17–18 veteran suicides per day — and that crises do not occur only during business hours. They contend that requiring after-hours coordinator availability closes a critical gap in the VA's mental health infrastructure, and that the no-new-hires constraint encourages the VA to use existing resources more efficiently through scheduling and on-call arrangements rather than expanding bureaucracy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating expanded availability without authorizing additional staff is an unfunded mandate that sets up the VA for failure: existing coordinators are already stretched thin, and requiring after-hours coverage from the same workforce may worsen burnout and turnover among the very mental health professionals veterans depend on. They contend that without new positions or funding, the bill may produce paper compliance — coordinators nominally "available" but practically inaccessible — rather than meaningful improvement in veteran crisis care.