S-3647-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to create a formal program providing bowel and bladder care to veterans with spinal cord injuries or disorders who cannot perform those functions independently and live outside of institutional settings. The VA would conduct individualized assessments to determine each veteran's care hours, pay monthly stipends to qualifying family members and individually employed caregivers, and pay contracted home health agencies at established rates. Veterans who have been medically determined to need this care for three or more continuous years would be deemed to require it for life, unless their medical provider determines otherwise.
Who benefits
Veterans with spinal cord injuries or disorders who depend on others for bowel and bladder care and live in the community. Family members and individually employed caregivers who would receive formal monthly stipends and VA-provided medical training. Home health agencies that would receive structured payment for covered services. Veterans' households broadly, as caregiver compensation may reduce financial strain on families providing unpaid care. Spinal Cord Injuries and Disorders Centers within the VA, which would gain a formal oversight role in care denial decisions.
Who is hurt
VA administrative staff and budget offices, which would bear implementation and oversight costs. Taxpayers generally, who would fund the new stipend and payment structure. Caregivers who do not meet the bill's qualification requirements and would be excluded from payment. Veterans who can partially perform these functions independently and fall outside the bill's eligibility definition. Competing VA programs that may face indirect resource pressure if appropriations are not increased to match new obligations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that spinal cord injury veterans currently face inconsistent, time-limited, and bureaucratically burdensome access to essential care — care that, if inadequate, can cause life-threatening complications such as autonomic dysreflexia. They contend that formalizing individualized assessments, eliminating arbitrary time limits, and compensating family caregivers recognizes the real-world care infrastructure that keeps these veterans out of costly institutional settings, ultimately saving the VA money while improving veterans' quality of life and dignity.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new, open-ended entitlement program with lifetime care designations and uncapped caregiver stipends could expose the VA to significant, difficult-to-forecast costs without sufficient fiscal guardrails. They contend that the bill's "sense of Congress" provision discouraging self-employment tax treatment of caregivers may conflict with existing IRS rules, and that the three-year lifetime care presumption removes clinical flexibility that VA providers may need to respond to a veteran's changing medical condition.