S-141-118
Became Public Law No: 118-210.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This law makes dozens of changes to Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) programs across five areas: health care, education and employment, disability benefits, homelessness assistance, and VA oversight. It expands access to community-based care, modifies GI Bill rules, strengthens employment protections for service members, increases funding for homeless veteran housing, and adds new reporting and inspector general requirements to improve accountability within the VA.
Who benefits
Veterans enrolled in VA health care, particularly those in rural areas who gain expanded access to community providers and ambulance reimbursement. Veterans with ALS, spinal cord injuries, or similar conditions who gain access to higher-cost home care alternatives. Family caregivers of veterans in the Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC). Surviving spouses and children of service members who died from service-connected disabilities, who gain expanded Fry Scholarship eligibility. Native American veterans seeking home loans on federal trust land. Homeless veterans receiving transitional housing per diem payments and HUD-VASH program participants. Veterans seeking high-tech job training through the new technology education program. Same-sex surviving spouses of veterans who gain explicit recognition for benefits eligibility. Veterans with disabilities who gain the right to have examinations conducted only by licensed health care professionals.
Who is hurt
Educational institutions that must now report adverse actions within 30 days or face revocation of VA program approval, and that face increased scrutiny through risk-based surveys. Third-party administrators of VA community care networks who face new annual reporting and oversight of payment rate waivers. VA employees and administrators who face new training mandates, staffing model requirements, and inspector general cooperation duties. Taxpayers who fund increased per diem rates for homeless veteran service providers (up to 200% of the standard rate for some recipients). Veterans who transferred Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits to dependents and failed to complete service agreements, who now bear sole liability for any resulting overpayments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that this law closes long-standing gaps in care and benefits that have left veterans — especially those in rural areas, elderly veterans, and caregivers — without adequate support. They contend that allowing veterans and their clinicians to jointly determine eligibility for community care restores medical decision-making to where it belongs: between a patient and their doctor. Supporters point out that expanding the Fry Scholarship, strengthening USERRA employment protections, and creating a technology job training program directly address the economic challenges veterans face when transitioning to civilian life. They also argue that increased oversight mechanisms — including mandatory inspector general training for new VA employees and regular OIG assessments — are essential to rooting out the administrative failures that have historically delayed or denied care to veterans who earned it through their service.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the law's breadth — spanning dozens of programs across five titles — makes it difficult to evaluate whether any individual provision is adequately funded or will be effectively implemented, risking a repeat of past VA reform efforts that produced mandates without results. They contend that raising per diem payments for homeless veteran housing providers to 200% of the standard rate for some recipients, without a clear competitive or needs-based selection process, could direct funds inefficiently. Critics also argue that placing sole liability for GI Bill overpayments on veterans who transferred benefits to dependents is punitive toward individuals who may not have fully understood complex service agreement requirements. Additionally, opponents may argue that expanding community care eligibility based on veteran and clinician preference, without stronger cost controls, could significantly increase VA spending on outside providers in ways that are difficult to predict or cap.