S-711-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 538.
What it does
This bill would authorize the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to provide behavioral health counseling directly to members of the military reserve components — without requiring a referral first. It would also allow the VA to furnish broader mental health services to reservists, and would expand two existing VA programs — comprehensive suicide prevention and mental health treatment for veterans of classified missions — to explicitly include reservists.
Who benefits
Members of the Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, Air Force Reserve, Coast Guard Reserve, and National Guard who have a behavioral health condition or psychological trauma would gain direct access to VA counseling and mental health services without needing a referral. Reservists who served in classified missions and those at risk of suicide would benefit from expanded program eligibility. Family members of reservists may indirectly benefit from improved mental health outcomes for their loved ones.
Who is hurt
Private-sector mental health providers and referral networks that currently serve reservists may see reduced patient volume if reservists shift to VA-provided care. VA facilities and staff could face increased demand for services, potentially straining existing resources and affecting wait times for currently eligible veterans. Taxpayers would bear the cost of expanded VA service delivery, though no specific cost estimate is cited in the bill text.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that reservists face unique mental health challenges — they deploy alongside active-duty troops, experience the same combat-related trauma, and then return to civilian life without the same institutional support structure. Requiring a referral before accessing counseling creates a bureaucratic barrier that delays care at the most critical moment. Removing that barrier and explicitly including reservists in suicide prevention and classified-mission mental health programs would close a gap in coverage that has no logical justification given the risks reservists share with full-time service members. Early, direct access to behavioral health care is widely associated with better outcomes and lower long-term costs to both individuals and the health care system.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding VA eligibility to reservists without a clear funding mechanism risks degrading care for fully eligible veterans who already face documented wait-time and capacity problems at VA facilities. They contend that reservists, who serve part-time and maintain civilian employment and private insurance, have access to non-VA mental health resources that active-duty veterans and fully disabled veterans do not, making this expansion a lower priority use of limited VA resources. Critics may also question whether the VA has the staffing and infrastructure to absorb a new patient population effectively, and whether the absence of a referral requirement could reduce coordination of care and lead to fragmented treatment outcomes.