S-610-119
Held at the desk.
Sponsored by Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to expand its VetSuccess on Campus (VSOC) program so that at least one counselor is present in every U.S. state. The VSOC program places VA vocational rehabilitation counselors at college campuses to help student veterans access benefits and support services. The bill would direct the VA Secretary to give priority to schools with the largest populations of students using VA educational assistance benefits.
Who benefits
Student veterans attending colleges in states that currently lack a VSOC counselor would gain direct access to on-campus VA vocational rehabilitation services. Veterans using GI Bill benefits or other VA education programs would have an easier path to counseling and benefits navigation. Colleges and universities in underserved states would gain a federally funded support resource. Veterans with disabilities seeking vocational rehabilitation would particularly benefit from in-person campus access.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers would bear the cost of hiring and deploying additional VA counselors in states not currently served. Colleges in states already served by VSOC may see relatively fewer resources directed their way if the VA reallocates existing counselors to meet the new geographic mandate. VA vocational rehabilitation staff could face increased workload demands during any transition period. Smaller institutions with fewer veteran students may be deprioritized under the bill's preference for schools with larger veteran enrollments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VSOC program has a demonstrated track record — VA data has shown that student veterans with access to on-campus counselors have higher rates of benefit utilization and academic retention. They contend that limiting the program to select states creates an inequitable patchwork where a veteran's access to support depends on geography rather than need, and that guaranteeing at least one counselor per state is a modest, targeted step to close that gap.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a rigid one-per-state geographic mandate may misallocate resources by requiring counselor placement in low-demand states while high-demand states with large veteran student populations remain underserved. They contend that the VA should retain flexibility to deploy counselors based on veteran enrollment data rather than state boundaries, and that the bill's costs — additional federal salaries, benefits, and administrative overhead — are not offset by any identified funding source.