HR-9413-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Grace Meng (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Defense to establish the Military Family Limb Loss and Limb Difference Support Program beginning in fiscal year 2028. The program would provide peer mentorship, education, community reintegration support, and outreach to military dependents and other TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries who have experienced limb loss or limb difference. The Secretary would be authorized to contract or enter cooperative agreements with experienced nonprofit or other organizations, and would be required to submit an implementation plan within 180 days and annual reports to Congress for four years after launch.
Who benefits
Military dependents (spouses and children of active-duty and retired service members) living with limb loss or limb difference, who would gain access to peer mentoring and community support services. Other TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries with limb loss or limb difference. Pediatric patients within the military health system who have congenital or acquired limb differences. Nonprofit and advocacy organizations with experience in limb loss support, which could receive federal contracts or cooperative agreements. Researchers within the military health system, who would benefit from required integration of program data with health outcomes research.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of the new program, though the bill does not specify an appropriation amount. Existing DoD programs or contractors that may face resource competition if the Department redirects funds or staff to implement the program. Service members themselves are not covered beneficiaries under the bill's definition — only their dependents and other TRICARE-eligible individuals — meaning active-duty members with limb loss would need to rely on separate programs. Organizations that do not meet the "demonstrated experience" threshold in subsection (c) would be ineligible for contracts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that military families bear unique sacrifices and that dependents — particularly children with limb differences — often lack access to the peer support networks available to veterans through VA programs. They contend that nonclinical services like peer mentorship and community reintegration are proven complements to medical care, and that the bill's required performance metrics and annual reporting to Congress build in accountability. The bipartisan sponsorship (Meng and Fitzpatrick) reflects broad agreement that this population has an identifiable, unmet need within the existing military health system.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new, open-ended federal program without specifying a funding level or sunset date, leaving cost estimates undefined and potentially duplicating existing DoD and VA support services. They contend that the Department of Defense already operates extensive rehabilitation and family support infrastructure, and that adding a parallel program risks bureaucratic overlap and inefficiency. Critics may also note that active-duty service members with limb loss — arguably the most directly affected group — are excluded from the bill's definition of covered beneficiaries, raising questions about the program's design logic.