S-831-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
Sponsored by Dan Sullivan (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to ensure that all outgoing calls to veterans from VA employees or contractors display a single, recognizable phone number and caller ID branding identifying the call as coming from the VA. It would also require the Veterans Health Administration to operate at least one call center in each of six U.S. time zones — Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific, Alaska, and Hawaii — to handle questions about health care appointments and referrals. Both requirements would take effect by January 1, 2026.
Who benefits
Veterans across the country who currently miss or distrust calls from unrecognized VA numbers, particularly those managing ongoing health care appointments or benefits claims. Veterans in Alaska and Hawaii time zones who may currently lack same-time-zone call center access. Veterans who have been targeted by scammers impersonating VA callers, who would benefit from clearer official identification. VA employees who would have clearer communication protocols.
Who is hurt
VA contractors who currently use their own phone systems and would need to update their outbound calling infrastructure to comply. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of establishing or expanding call centers in up to six time zones. Existing VA call center staff in regions that may be consolidated or restructured to meet the new geographic requirements. Small VA contractors with limited technical capacity to implement caller ID branding changes by the 2026 deadline.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that veterans frequently miss important VA calls because they appear as unknown or unrecognized numbers, leading to delayed care and missed benefits — a problem documented in VA Inspector General reports on appointment no-shows and communication failures. They contend that requiring consistent caller ID branding and time-zone-appropriate call centers would reduce confusion, improve health care access, and help veterans distinguish legitimate VA contact from the scam calls that disproportionately target this population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill imposes a rigid infrastructure mandate — requiring call centers in all six time zones — without accounting for whether demand in smaller time zones like Alaska and Hawaii justifies the operational cost, and without providing dedicated funding to meet the January 2026 deadline. They contend that the VA's existing communication problems stem from deeper staffing and IT system deficiencies that a phone labeling requirement alone cannot fix, and that unfunded mandates risk diverting VA resources from direct patient care.