HR-9316-119
Referred to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Kimberlyn King-Hinds (R-MP)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law (title 38, U.S. Code) to allow veterans with any service-connected disability rating — not just those rated 30% or higher — to receive VA beneficiary travel payments if they live in a U.S. territory or a Freely Associated State (the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, or Palau) where no VA medical facility exists. Currently, travel pay eligibility in those locations requires a disability rating of at least 30%. The bill would remove that rating threshold specifically for veterans in these "medical desert" jurisdictions.
Who benefits
Veterans with service-connected disability ratings below 30% who live in U.S. territories (such as Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands) or the Freely Associated States (Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, and Palau) where no VA medical facility is located. Veterans from these regions who served in recent conflicts and have lower disability ratings would gain access to travel reimbursement they currently cannot receive. Indirectly, VA healthcare providers who serve these veterans may see increased patient access and utilization.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers would bear the cost of expanded travel reimbursements, though the affected population is small. VA administrative staff would face additional claims processing workload. Veterans in the continental U.S. or Hawaii with sub-30% ratings who must travel long distances to VA facilities would not receive the same expanded benefit, potentially creating a perceived inequity. Budget-conscious legislators may view this as a precedent for further threshold reductions in other contexts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans in territories without a VA facility face a unique and unavoidable hardship — they cannot access VA care without traveling significant distances, often across open ocean, through no choice of their own. They contend that applying the 30% rating threshold in these circumstances effectively denies care access to veterans with real, documented service-connected injuries, and that the existing policy treats equally situated veterans unequally based solely on geography. The bill's narrow scope limits fiscal exposure while addressing a concrete access gap.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the VA beneficiary travel program already faces administrative strain and that lowering eligibility thresholds — even in a limited geographic context — sets a precedent that could be extended to other underserved areas, expanding costs beyond what is currently projected. They contend that the proper solution to healthcare access in territories is building or contracting VA facilities there, not subsidizing travel indefinitely, and that the bill does not address the underlying infrastructure gap that creates the problem in the first place.