S-3466-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would make wide-ranging changes to how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) delivers health care. It would set binding appointment scheduling deadlines (7 days for non-urgent care, 48 hours for urgent care), tighten quality and training standards for community care providers, expand the independent practice authority of VA physician assistants and other licensed health professionals, increase pay incentives for critical VA staff, and authorize funding for VA facility upgrades and land acquisitions. It would also require new transparency reporting on wait times, spending, and provider performance, and expand Inspector General oversight authority over community care contractors.
Who benefits
Veterans who use VA health care — approximately 9 million enrolled — particularly those in rural or underserved areas who face long wait times. Women veterans and survivors of military sexual trauma (MST) who would gain access to specially trained community providers. Veterans with kidney disease who would benefit from a dialysis care review. VA physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and psychologists who would gain expanded practice authority and reclassified employment status. VA pharmacists and nurse executives who would receive higher pay. VA police officers reclassified as law enforcement officers for retirement purposes. Community care providers who complete training and earn "MST Aware" or "high-performing" designations, gaining visibility and referrals. Taxpayers and the VA system broadly, through fraud prevention and improved billing recovery from private insurers.
Who is hurt
Community care providers who fail to meet new training, data-reporting, or quality standards and face removal from VA networks. Third-party administrators (TPAs) who manage VA community care networks and would face new compliance, reporting, and audit burdens. Community care providers who currently use telehealth as a default option and would face new restrictions on when telehealth can substitute for in-person care. Health care entities that submit claims late or fraudulently, who face new suspension and termination authorities. VA medical centers that may face budget pressure if community care spending continues to grow. Private health insurers of veterans, who may face increased billing and cost-recovery efforts by the VA. Providers excluded from federal health programs who would face mandatory contract termination with no discretion.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA's chronic wait-time failures — including the 2014 Phoenix VA scandal that revealed falsified scheduling records and contributed to veteran deaths — demonstrate the need for enforceable scheduling standards backed by accountability mechanisms. They contend that the bill's layered approach, combining mandatory timelines, provider quality screens, expanded workforce capacity, and Inspector General oversight, addresses the structural causes of access failures rather than simply redirecting veterans to community care. They further argue that expanding full practice authority for physician assistants and psychologists would immediately increase the VA's clinical capacity without requiring new physician hires, a model already proven effective in the private sector and in states that have granted full practice authority to advanced practice providers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing rigid 7-day and 48-hour scheduling mandates without guaranteed funding to meet them risks repeating the conditions that led to the 2014 scandal — where pressure to hit metrics incentivized data manipulation rather than genuine access improvements. They contend that the bill's restrictions on telehealth through community care could reduce flexibility for veterans in remote areas where in-person options are scarce, and that new training and data-reporting mandates on community providers may shrink already-thin provider networks in rural regions. They further argue that expanding physician assistant practice authority without adequate physician oversight could compromise care quality, particularly for complex cases involving veterans with multiple service-connected conditions.