S-1203-118
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 150.
What it does
This bill would extend the Peace Corps program's authorization through fiscal year 2028. It would increase the minimum readjustment payment volunteers receive when they return home, establish processes for volunteers to return to service after mandatory evacuations, require the Peace Corps to provide departing volunteers with health care information, and codify noncompetitive federal hiring eligibility for returned volunteers. It would also mandate a zero-tolerance policy on illegal drug use, require measures to prevent retaliation against volunteers by supervisors, and authorize suspension without pay for employees engaged in serious misconduct.
Who benefits
Current and future Peace Corps volunteers would benefit from higher readjustment payments, clearer pathways back to service after evacuations, better post-service health care information, and stronger protections against retaliation by supervisors. Returned volunteers seeking federal employment would benefit from the statutory codification of noncompetitive hiring eligibility. Host-country communities would benefit from more stable volunteer placements if evacuation return processes are improved.
Who is hurt
Peace Corps employees found to have engaged in serious misconduct could face suspension without pay, a new disciplinary tool that did not previously exist in statute. Volunteers or trainees who use illegal drugs would face removal under a mandatory zero-tolerance policy, with less discretion for case-by-case review. Peace Corps missions in China are specifically excluded from the provision allowing evacuated volunteers to return to their former country of assignment, which could affect volunteers who had been serving there.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that reauthorizing the Peace Corps through 2028 provides the program with the funding certainty and policy stability it needs to recruit, train, and deploy effective volunteers. They contend that raising readjustment allowances is a matter of basic fairness, since the current minimum rate has not kept pace with the cost of living volunteers face when they return home after years of low-wage service abroad. Supporters also argue that codifying noncompetitive federal hiring eligibility into statute — rather than leaving it to an executive order that could be revoked — gives returned volunteers a durable, reliable benefit that rewards their public service. They further maintain that the zero-tolerance drug policy and anti-retaliation measures would strengthen the integrity and safety of the program, making it more attractive to prospective volunteers and more credible with host countries.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's zero-tolerance drug policy removes the Peace Corps' ability to handle individual cases with appropriate context and nuance, potentially forcing the dismissal of otherwise effective volunteers over minor or isolated incidents. They contend that the mandatory evacuation return process, while well-intentioned, could place volunteers back into unstable or unsafe environments if the conditions that triggered the evacuation have not fully resolved. Critics may also argue that the explicit exclusion of China from the return-to-country provision introduces a geopolitical carve-out into what is otherwise an operational policy, setting a precedent for political considerations to shape volunteer assignments. Finally, some may argue that codifying the noncompetitive hiring benefit into statute, rather than leaving it to executive discretion, reduces the flexibility of future administrations to tailor federal hiring priorities to changing workforce needs.