Summary#
This bill changes who must sit on the Department of Veterans Affairs Geriatrics and Gerontology Advisory Committee. It adds members with State veterans home experience and a licensed nursing home administrator. The stated goal is to bring more perspective from State veterans homes into VA planning for older veterans.
- Main change: the committee must include at least one person who represents a national veterans service organization, at least one person who has served veterans or families of veterans in a State veterans home, and at least one person who holds a professional license in nursing home administration.
- The bill also says the committee should consult with the National Association of State Veterans Homes on matters that concern that association.
- The change amends current law that sets the committee’s membership rules (the Geriatrics and Gerontology Advisory Committee advises VA on care for older veterans).
What it means for you#
- Veterans in State homes and their families: This could mean their experiences are more likely to be heard when VA develops guidance or recommendations about long-term care and geriatrics.
- State veterans homes and the National Association of State Veterans Homes: They gain a clearer role in VA advisory work and a named channel for consultation on issues that affect State homes.
- Nursing home administrators: A licensed nursing home administrator will be represented on the advisory committee. This could bring more operational and regulatory expertise into committee discussions.
- National veterans service organizations: The bill keeps a slot for a representative of a national veterans service organization and clarifies membership language.
- VA staff and the advisory committee: The committee’s membership list grows or is clarified, so VA will include the added perspectives in meetings, reports, and advice.
Expenses#
No publicly available information.
- The bill text and the provided materials do not include a fiscal note or cost estimate.
- This change could cause small administrative costs for VA (for example, recruitment, travel, meeting support, or staff time) but no estimate is provided.
- If members are paid travel or per‑diem under existing rules for advisory committees, those costs could increase slightly; the bill does not quantify them.
Proponents' View#
- The bill appears intended to increase input from people who run or work in State veterans homes and from licensed nursing home administrators.
- Supporters may argue this brings practical, front‑line experience to VA discussions about geriatrics and long‑term care.
- Including these perspectives could improve VA advice on care standards, facility operations, and coordination with State-run homes.
- The consultation requirement with the National Association of State Veterans Homes could help align VA policies with State home practices and needs.
Opponents' View#
- One concern is that the bill gives few details about selection: it does not say how these new members are chosen, how long they serve, or whether they are voting members.
- The language about “served veterans or families of veterans in a State home” is broad and could be read several ways (staff, volunteers, family caregivers); the bill does not clarify.
- It is unclear how often or in what form the committee must consult the National Association of State Veterans Homes; the requirement is not detailed.
- The change may increase advisory committee costs slightly (travel, meeting support), but no cost estimate is provided.
- Adding more named members may duplicate perspectives already represented on the committee unless the appointments are coordinated.