SCONRES-23-119
Referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Sponsored by Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE)
What it does
This concurrent resolution would formally express Congress's recognition of the historical challenges Black veterans faced upon returning home from military service, their military contributions across all of America's wars, and their role in the civil rights movement. It would also express Congress's view that the Department of Veterans Affairs should continue working to eliminate health and benefit disparities for minority veterans. As a concurrent resolution, it would carry no binding legal force and would not appropriate funds or change any law.
Who benefits
Black veterans and their families, who would receive formal congressional acknowledgment of their service and the discrimination they faced. Veterans' advocacy organizations focused on minority veteran issues, who may use the resolution to support policy arguments. Historians and educators who may cite the resolution as an official record. Minority veteran communities broadly, as the resolution calls attention to ongoing health and benefit disparities.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this resolution, as it carries no binding legal or fiscal effect. Some critics may argue that symbolic resolutions consume legislative time and resources without producing concrete policy outcomes, which could be seen as an indirect cost to taxpayers or to advocates seeking substantive legislative action on veteran health disparities.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that formal congressional recognition is a meaningful and overdue acknowledgment of a documented historical record — Black veterans served in every American war yet returned home to segregation, disenfranchisement, and unequal access to GI Bill benefits. They contend that the resolution's call for the VA to eliminate health and benefit disparities for minority veterans reinforces an existing policy priority with the weight of a congressional statement, and that official recognition of historical injustice is a necessary foundation for addressing present-day disparities in veteran health outcomes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding concurrent resolution produces no enforceable change in law, policy, or VA practice, and that the documented disparities in minority veteran health and benefits require concrete legislative action — such as appropriations or program mandates — rather than symbolic statements. They contend that passing resolutions without accompanying policy mechanisms may give the appearance of action while leaving structural inequities unaddressed, and that congressional time and attention would be better directed toward binding legislation targeting the specific disparities the resolution identifies.