S-1024-115
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 166.
What it does
This bill would restructure how veterans appeal VA disability benefit decisions. It would create three separate appeal pathways — a higher-level internal review, a supplemental claim with new evidence, or a direct appeal to the Board of Veterans' Appeals — each with different rules on evidence and hearings. It would also require the VA to certify to Congress that it has adequate resources before fully implementing the new system.
Who benefits
Veterans with pending or future VA disability claims would gain more choices in how they challenge unfavorable decisions. Veterans with new evidence would benefit from a dedicated supplemental claim lane. Veterans who want faster resolution could use the expedited Board review track. Attorneys and accredited agents who charge fees would gain earlier access to represent veterans, beginning at the time of the original decision notice rather than later in the process.
Who is hurt
Veterans who are unfamiliar with the new multi-lane system could choose a pathway that is less favorable to their specific case, potentially losing rights or delaying benefits. Veterans who initiated appeals under the old system and do not opt in to the new system may face a longer, parallel legacy process. The VA workforce could face increased administrative burden during the transition period, potentially slowing processing times for all claimants. Veterans who rely on free representation may be disadvantaged if the earlier entry of fee-charging attorneys shifts the market away from no-cost advocates.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing VA appeals system is severely backlogged, with hundreds of thousands of veterans waiting years — sometimes decades — for final decisions on disability claims. The current one-size-fits-all process forces all appeals through the same bottleneck regardless of complexity. By creating three distinct lanes, this bill would allow veterans with straightforward cases to get faster resolutions while preserving a full evidentiary hearing option for those with complex claims. Allowing fee-based attorneys to enter earlier would give veterans access to professional legal help sooner, potentially improving the quality of their appeals. The requirement that the VA certify adequate resources before full implementation would serve as a safeguard against a chaotic rollout that could harm veterans currently in the system.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding complexity to the appeals process could harm the very veterans it is meant to help, particularly older veterans, those with cognitive disabilities, or those without legal representation who may not understand which lane best serves their interests. A wrong choice of pathway could waive important rights or reset effective dates, costing veterans months or years of back pay. Critics also contend that ending the VA's statutory duty to assist veterans after the original decision removes a key protection that helps claimants gather evidence they may not know exists. The earlier entry of fee-charging attorneys could increase costs for veterans and create financial incentives that do not always align with a veteran's best outcome, especially when free accredited service organizations already provide effective representation.