S-3329-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Elizabeth Warren (D-MA)
What it does
This bill would designate service in the U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps between July 1, 1943, and December 31, 1948, as active duty military service. Qualifying individuals would receive honorary veteran status and eligibility for burial and memorial benefits, but would not be entitled to Department of Veterans Affairs health care or other standard VA benefits. The Department of Defense would be required to issue honorable discharge documents to eligible members and would be authorized to produce a service medal, commendation, memorial plaque, or grave marker in their honor.
Who benefits
Surviving members of the U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps (a very small number, given the program ran 1943–1948 and members would be in their late 90s or older). Families and descendants of deceased Corps members who would gain access to burial and memorial benefits, including grave markers. Veterans' advocacy organizations that have long sought this recognition. Historians and institutions focused on women's contributions to WWII-era military service.
Who is hurt
U.S. taxpayers would bear the administrative costs of issuing discharge documents, producing medals or commendations, and processing any burial benefit claims. Arlington National Cemetery and other national cemeteries would not be affected, as interment there is explicitly excluded. No existing veteran group's benefits or priority status would be directly reduced. Federal agencies — primarily DoD and VA — would absorb implementation workload.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the approximately 124,000 women who served in the Cadet Nurse Corps were federally recruited, trained, and deployed to fill critical wartime nursing shortages under a federal program, yet were never granted the veteran recognition afforded to comparable wartime service groups. They contend that decades of congressional inaction have left surviving members and their families without burial honors that reflect their documented wartime contributions, and that this bill corrects a longstanding inequity before the last surviving members pass away.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that Cadet Nurse Corps members were civilian trainees who received federal subsidies for nursing education in exchange for a service commitment, and that their service was structurally distinct from military enlistment — they were never subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, could not be deployed overseas in combat zones, and faced no military discipline. They contend that retroactively reclassifying civilian wartime service as active duty sets a precedent that could open the door to similar claims from other WWII-era civilian programs, creating administrative and fiscal uncertainty.