S-2513-117
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Ordered to be reported without amendment favorably.
Sponsored by Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV)
What it does
This bill would change how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) manages clothing allowance payments for veterans whose service-connected disabilities require them to use a prosthetic, orthopedic appliance (such as a wheelchair), or a prescription skin medication that damages clothing. It would make the allowance automatically continue each year unless the veteran opts out or the VA determines the veteran is no longer eligible. It would also establish a structured review schedule — with the first review five years after initial receipt and periodic reviews after that — while exempting veterans whose qualifying condition cannot change from ongoing eligibility reviews.
Who benefits
Veterans who currently receive a VA clothing allowance due to a service-connected disability involving a prosthetic, orthopedic appliance, or damaging skin medication — particularly those who face administrative burdens re-applying or re-certifying each year. Veterans with permanent, unchanging qualifying conditions would benefit most, as they would be exempt from periodic eligibility reviews entirely. Veterans who were previously at risk of losing benefits due to missed paperwork deadlines would also benefit from the automatic continuation provision.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers broadly could be affected if automatic continuation results in payments continuing to veterans who have become ineligible but whose status has not yet been flagged for review. VA administrative staff may face an increased workload from implementing and managing the new structured review schedule. Veterans who are ultimately found ineligible during a review could face a disruption in benefits they had been receiving under the automatic continuation system, potentially creating financial hardship during the transition period.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current system places an unnecessary and recurring administrative burden on veterans who have permanent or long-term service-connected disabilities — conditions that are unlikely to change. Requiring these veterans to repeatedly re-certify for a benefit they clearly qualify for wastes their time and risks cutting off legitimate payments due to paperwork errors rather than actual ineligibility. The bill's structured review schedule still protects against fraud and improper payments, while the exemption for permanent conditions reflects common sense: if a veteran's limb loss or permanent disability is not going to reverse itself, there is no reason to make them prove it again every year. Supporters also contend that this change honors the nation's commitment to those injured in service by reducing bureaucratic friction in accessing earned benefits.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that automatic continuation of benefit payments without regular re-certification creates a meaningful risk of improper payments to veterans who are no longer eligible — for example, those whose medical circumstances have changed or who have passed away. They contend that periodic verification is a standard and necessary safeguard for any government benefit program, and that weakening it — even with a five-year review cycle — could allow erroneous payments to accumulate over time, wasting taxpayer funds. Critics may also argue that the bill shifts the burden of proof from the recipient to the government, requiring the VA to affirmatively discover ineligibility rather than having veterans confirm continued eligibility. This, they suggest, could strain VA administrative resources and undermine the integrity of the broader benefits system.