S-275-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This bill would codify specific wait-time and drive-time standards that trigger a veteran's eligibility to seek care from non-VA community providers, require the VA to notify veterans of that eligibility within two business days, and mandate written explanations when care requests are denied. It would also establish a standardized screening process for admission to VA mental health residential rehabilitation programs — including 48-hour admission timelines for high-risk veterans — and create a three-year pilot program allowing enrolled veterans to access outpatient mental health and substance use services without a referral or pre-authorization. Additionally, it would extend the deadline for community care providers to submit payment claims from 180 days to one year.
Who benefits
Veterans enrolled in VA healthcare who face long wait times or long drives to VA facilities, particularly those in rural or highly rural areas. Veterans with mental health conditions, substance use disorders, or suicide risk who need faster access to residential rehabilitation. Veterans who require a caregiver or attendant when seeking care. Community (non-VA) healthcare providers who gain a longer window to submit payment claims and access to a broader patient base. Veterans service organizations that gain a formal consultative role in periodic access standard reviews. Family members and social support networks of veterans in mental health programs, who are explicitly considered in placement decisions.
Who is hurt
VA-employed healthcare providers and facilities that may see reduced patient volume as more veterans are routed to community care. VA administrators and staff who face new compliance burdens, mandatory training timelines, and performance tracking requirements. Taxpayers who may bear increased costs if expanded community care utilization exceeds VA in-house care costs — the bill itself requires a report assessing whether program costs create disincentives to placement. Non-VA residential facilities that must meet accreditation and licensing requirements to participate, potentially excluding smaller or newer providers. Veterans in areas with few accredited non-VA mental health residential facilities, who may have limited alternatives even if VA capacity is insufficient.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing Veterans Community Care Program has been undermined by inconsistent eligibility determinations and poor notification practices, leaving veterans — particularly those in crisis — without timely care. They contend that codifying the 20-day and 28-day wait-time standards into statute, rather than leaving them to administrative discretion, closes a loophole that has allowed the VA to count telehealth availability as meeting in-person access standards. They further argue that the 48-hour admission requirement for high-risk veterans, including those flagged for suicide risk or overdose, directly addresses a documented gap in mental health residential care that has contributed to preventable veteran deaths.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating rigid wait-time thresholds and automatic community care referrals could accelerate the fragmentation of veteran healthcare, diverting patients and funding away from VA facilities and undermining the VA's capacity to maintain specialized services over time. They contend that the bill's 48-hour admission mandate for priority mental health cases, while well-intentioned, may be operationally unachievable given documented staffing shortages at VA residential facilities, potentially forcing reliance on non-VA providers whose quality and military cultural competence are less consistently verified. They further argue that extending the provider claims deadline from 180 days to one year increases administrative complexity and may delay detection of billing irregularities.