SRES-566-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S8874; text: CR S8874)
Sponsored by Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
What it does
This resolution formally recognizes that VA employees are essential to providing health care to veterans, training medical professionals, conducting research, addressing veteran suicide, and supporting public health and emergency preparedness. It urges the VA to support its workforce and reaffirms a commitment to ensuring veterans have timely access to care through both VA facilities and community care providers. As a resolution, it does not create new law, appropriate funds, or impose any binding legal obligations.
Who benefits
VA employees, whose role and value are formally affirmed by Congress. Veterans who rely on VA health care, as the resolution reaffirms a congressional commitment to their timely access to care. Veterans' service organizations that have advocated for VA staffing and resources. Medical students and residents trained through VA programs, whose training pipeline is implicitly endorsed. Community care providers who are acknowledged as a legitimate part of the veterans' care system.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this resolution, as it is non-binding and creates no legal obligations. Advocates for expanding private-sector or community-based alternatives to VA care may view the resolution's emphasis on VA employees as a symbolic signal against further privatization, though the resolution also explicitly acknowledges community care providers. Taxpayers bear no direct cost, as no funds are appropriated.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that VA employees provide irreplaceable care to millions of veterans, including complex cases involving combat injuries, PTSD, and traumatic brain injury that private-sector providers are less equipped to handle. They contend that formal congressional recognition strengthens workforce morale at a time when VA staffing levels and employee retention have faced documented challenges, and that reaffirming commitment to timely access — through both VA and community care — signals a balanced, veteran-centered approach.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution carries no practical force and does nothing to address the concrete problems veterans face, such as long wait times, staffing shortages, and care quality gaps documented in VA Inspector General reports. They contend that symbolic affirmations without accompanying funding, accountability measures, or structural changes may give the appearance of action while leaving systemic issues unresolved, and that legislative time would be better spent on enforceable policy.