S-4511-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 603.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This bill would modify several Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) programs and benefits. It would make changes to the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, which provides legal and financial protections for active-duty military members. It would also adjust rules governing VA education benefits, burial benefits, the VA home loan program, service-connected disability determinations, and protections against financial exploitation of veterans.
Who benefits
Veterans who use VA education benefits (such as the GI Bill) would see expanded or modified access to educational support. Veterans seeking VA-backed home loans would be affected by changes to that program. Veterans with service-connected disabilities would be affected by modifications to how those disabilities are evaluated and compensated. Surviving family members of veterans could benefit from changes to burial benefits. Veterans at risk of financial exploitation would gain additional protections. Active-duty servicemembers would be affected by changes to the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.
Who is hurt
Private lenders and financial institutions that work with VA home loans could face new compliance requirements or restrictions. Schools and educational institutions participating in VA education benefit programs could face modified eligibility or oversight rules. Parties who currently benefit from existing legal arrangements under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act — such as landlords or creditors — could see those arrangements altered. The VA itself would face administrative costs and workload increases to implement the expanded programs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans have earned these benefits through military service and that the existing system contains gaps and outdated rules that leave many veterans without the support they were promised. They contend that expanding education benefits helps veterans successfully transition to civilian careers, that strengthening the home loan program makes homeownership more accessible for those who served, and that improving disability determinations ensures veterans receive accurate and fair compensation for injuries sustained in service. They also argue that adding financial exploitation protections addresses a documented and serious problem, as veterans — particularly elderly ones — are frequently targeted by fraud schemes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that broad, multi-subject benefit expansion bills can lack sufficient fiscal accountability, adding long-term costs to federal programs without clear funding offsets or rigorous cost-benefit analysis. They contend that changes to disability determination rules could make it easier to approve claims that are difficult to verify, potentially straining VA resources and diverting funds from veterans with the most severe and clear-cut needs. They also argue that modifications to the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act and the home loan program could create unintended market distortions or legal complications, and that a more targeted, program-by-program approach would produce better outcomes than a sweeping omnibus package.