S-4232-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Bill Cassidy (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize the national service laws governing AmeriCorps and related programs through fiscal year 2031. It would modernize program operations by allowing shorter service terms, expanding age eligibility for the National Civilian Community Corps from 24 to 26, increasing the number of educational awards a member can earn from 2 to 4, and allowing members to choose a cash stipend instead of an educational award. It would also expand the uses of educational awards to include career pathway and workforce training programs, tighten timekeeping and financial accountability requirements, and grant AmeriCorps alumni non-competitive hiring eligibility for federal jobs.
Who benefits
Current and future AmeriCorps members, who would gain more flexible service terms, higher educational award limits, a cash stipend option, and a pathway to federal employment. Young adults aged 25–26 who were previously ineligible for the National Civilian Community Corps. Members without college plans who would benefit from the ability to use awards for career and vocational training programs. Federal agencies seeking to hire mission-aligned workers through a streamlined process. Communities affected by natural disasters, which would receive faster volunteer deployment through state commission flexibility. Nonprofit and community organizations hosting AmeriCorps members, who would benefit from reduced duplicative compliance reviews. Taxpayers broadly, through strengthened financial accountability and timekeeping requirements.
Who is hurt
AmeriCorps members who prefer the current 7- or 10-year window to use educational awards, which would be shortened to 5 years under this bill — potentially causing some to forfeit unused awards. Traditional four-year colleges and universities, which may see reduced demand for educational awards if more members redirect funds to vocational and career pathway programs. Subgrant recipient organizations that currently benefit from Corporation oversight as a check on primary grantees, since the bill shifts compliance responsibility entirely to primary grant recipients. Competing applicants for federal jobs, who would face additional non-competitive hires from the AmeriCorps alumni pool. Members who do not complete a full term of service and would not qualify for the new stipend option.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that AmeriCorps has operated under an authorization that lapsed in 2014, leaving the program in a prolonged state of uncertainty that hampers long-term planning and recruitment. They contend that expanding award flexibility — including the new stipend option and career pathway eligibility — modernizes the program for the roughly 75,000 Americans who serve annually, many of whom do not pursue traditional four-year degrees. Supporters also argue that tightened timekeeping and Inspector General certification requirements directly address documented audit findings of financial mismanagement, making the program more accountable to taxpayers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing AmeriCorps at open-ended "such sums as may be necessary" levels, combined with a new unobligated funds carryover mechanism, removes meaningful congressional spending controls and could allow the Corporation to accumulate and spend funds without annual appropriations scrutiny. They contend that the shift of subgrant compliance responsibility entirely to primary grantees weakens federal oversight of how taxpayer dollars are used at the ground level, potentially increasing fraud risk. Opponents may also argue that non-competitive federal hiring preferences for AmeriCorps alumni expand a pathway that bypasses merit-based civil service competition, disadvantaging other qualified applicants.