S-3373-117
Became Public Law No: 117-168.
Sponsored by Tim Kaine (D-VA)
What it does
The Honoring our PACT Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-168) expands eligibility for Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care and disability benefits for veterans exposed to toxic substances during military service, including burn pits, Agent Orange, and radiation. It establishes new presumptions of service-connection — meaning veterans no longer need to individually prove their illness was caused by military exposure — for dozens of conditions linked to toxic exposure. The law also funds research into toxic exposure health effects, requires VA workforce expansion, creates the Cost of War Toxic Exposures Fund, and establishes a federal cause of action for individuals harmed by contaminated water at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
Who benefits
Post-9/11 veterans who served near open burn pits in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other locations. Vietnam-era veterans exposed to Agent Orange in Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Guam, and other previously excluded locations. Veterans who participated in nuclear cleanup operations at Enewetak Atoll, Palomares (Spain), and Thule Air Force Base (Greenland). Persian Gulf War veterans with qualifying illnesses. Civilians, family members, and contractors who lived or worked at Camp Lejeune between 1953 and 1987 and were exposed to contaminated water. Survivors and dependents of deceased veterans who may now qualify for dependency and indemnity compensation. Rural veterans who may benefit from expanded VA facility leases and rural hiring incentives. VA health care workers who receive higher pay caps, bonuses, and loan repayment benefits.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who bear the cost of significantly expanded VA benefits and health care — the Congressional Budget Office estimated the law would cost approximately $280 billion over 10 years. Private insurers and health care providers may lose patients who shift to VA care. Veterans whose claims were previously approved under stricter standards may face administrative delays as the VA processes a large surge in new claims. VA employees and administrators face substantial implementation burdens from new screening, training, recordkeeping, and claims processing requirements. Some legal scholars and fiscal watchdogs argue that broad presumptions of service-connection, without individualized medical evidence, may result in benefits being paid for conditions not actually caused by military service.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that hundreds of thousands of veterans have suffered and died from illnesses linked to burn pit smoke and other toxic exposures while the VA denied their claims for lack of direct proof — a standard they contend was impossible to meet given the government's own failure to track exposures. They point to epidemiological data showing elevated rates of rare cancers and respiratory disease among post-9/11 veterans, and note that the Agent Orange presumption model — established in 1991 — successfully delivered benefits to Vietnam veterans facing the same evidentiary barriers. Supporters further contend that the Camp Lejeune provisions address a documented public health disaster affecting an estimated one million people over three decades.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the law's broad presumptions of service-connection — covering dozens of conditions across vast geographic areas and time periods — sever the individualized causal link that disability compensation has historically required, potentially directing hundreds of billions of dollars to veterans whose conditions may be unrelated to service. They contend that the CBO's $280 billion cost estimate over ten years represents one of the largest expansions of veterans' benefits in history, and that the law's funding mechanism — a separate "Cost of War" fund — obscures the true long-term fiscal impact from standard budget scoring. Critics also argue that the Camp Lejeune cause of action, which waives sovereign immunity for a defined class of plaintiffs, could set a precedent for expansive federal tort liability at other contaminated military sites.