S-3938-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Angus King (I-ME)
What it does
This bill would require the military's Transition Assistance Program (TAP) — the mandatory pre-separation counseling service for departing service members — to include a presentation specifically promoting benefits available from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). It would also require the VA to submit an annual report to Congress identifying which veterans service organizations participated in the presentation, how many service members attended, and any recommended changes to the presentation's content.
Who benefits
Separating and retiring service members who may be unaware of the full range of VA benefits available to them, particularly those who are first-generation military or lack family networks with veterans experience. Veterans service organizations (VSOs) that participate in the presentation would gain a formal platform to reach new veterans. The VA itself could see higher enrollment and utilization rates. Veterans who currently underuse benefits due to lack of awareness — a documented gap — would be indirect beneficiaries.
Who is hurt
Private-sector transition assistance providers and employers who recruit veterans may face a marginally more crowded TAP curriculum, potentially reducing time available for other pre-separation content. Service members who find the additional presentation redundant or who prefer a shorter transition process may experience a longer or more prescribed counseling requirement. There is no direct financial cost imposed on any private party, but organizations not selected to participate as VSOs could be disadvantaged relative to those that are.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that a significant share of eligible veterans fail to enroll in VA benefits they have earned, often due to lack of awareness at the moment of separation — the most critical window for outreach. They contend that embedding a structured VA benefits presentation directly into the mandatory TAP curriculum ensures every departing service member receives consistent, standardized information before losing easy access to military support networks. The annual reporting requirement adds accountability by tracking attendance and VSO participation, allowing Congress to assess and improve the program over time.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that TAP is already a lengthy, congressionally mandated program, and adding another required presentation risks further overloading a curriculum that service members and commanders have criticized for being too long and insufficiently tailored to individual needs. They contend that the bill does not address the deeper structural barriers to VA enrollment — such as complex claims processes and stigma around seeking benefits — and that a promotional presentation may raise expectations without improving actual access. Critics may also note that the annual reporting requirement adds administrative burden to the VA without a clear mechanism to act on its own recommendations.