SRES-492-119
Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S8874; text: CR S8874)
Sponsored by Marsha Blackburn (R-TN)
What it does
This resolution recognizes community care — meaning health care provided by non-VA doctors and facilities — as an essential part of meeting veterans' health needs. It urges the VA to fully implement the Veterans Community Care Program established by the VA Mission Act of 2018, which allows veterans to seek care from outside providers when the VA cannot meet their needs in a timely way. The resolution also reaffirms the Senate's commitment to timely, quality, affordable, veteran-centered care.
Who benefits
Veterans who live far from VA facilities or face long wait times for VA appointments, and who would benefit from easier access to community (non-VA) providers. Veterans in rural and underserved areas stand to benefit most. Private and community-based health care providers who serve veterans under the Community Care Program would gain symbolic congressional backing for program expansion. Veterans service organizations that have advocated for broader community care access would see their position affirmed.
Who is hurt
VA employees and VA-affiliated health care workers could face reduced patient volume if community care expands significantly, though this resolution carries no binding force. VA-operated facilities in areas with low patient utilization could face indirect pressure. Taxpayers and budget watchdogs who are concerned about the higher per-visit cost of community care compared to VA-direct care may view even symbolic endorsement of expansion as a step toward costlier policy. Veterans who prefer VA-integrated care — which coordinates records, benefits, and specialized services — may be indirectly affected if resources shift toward community providers.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA Mission Act of 2018 was passed with broad bipartisan support precisely because the VA system alone cannot meet all veterans' needs — particularly in rural areas where VA facilities are scarce and wait times are long. They contend that reaffirming the law's intent sends a clear signal to the VA to prioritize timely access, pointing to documented cases where veterans waited months for appointments while community care slots went underutilized.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that resolutions like this, while symbolic, can create political pressure to expand community care in ways that fragment veterans' care and increase costs without improving outcomes. They contend that studies — including VA Office of Inspector General reports — have found community care coordination gaps that lead to duplicated services and missed follow-ups, and that urging broader implementation without addressing those gaps may prioritize access over care quality.