[House Hearing, 119 Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]






                         LEGISLATIVE HEARING ON  
  H.R. 6047, THE ``SHARRI BRILEY AND ERIC EDMUNDSON VETERANS BENEFITS  
                               EXPANSION  
                 ACT OF 2025'', H.R. 4077, THE ``GUARD  
                       VETERANS' HEALTH CARE ACT  

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               before the

                     COMMITTEE ON VETERANS' AFFAIRS

                     U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2025

                               __________

                           Serial No. 119-37

                               __________

       Printed for the use of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs










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                     COMMITTEE ON VETERANS' AFFAIRS

                     MIKE BOST, Illinois, Chairman

AUMUA AMATA COLEMAN RADEWAGEN,       MARK TAKANO, California, Ranking 
    American Samoa, Vice-Chairwoman      Member
JACK BERGMAN, Michigan               JULIA BROWNLEY, California
NANCY MACE, South Carolina           CHRIS PAPPAS, New Hampshire
MARIANNETTE MILLER-MEEKS, Iowa       SHEILA CHERFILUS-MCCORMICK, 
GREGORY F. MURPHY, North Carolina        Florida
DERRICK VAN ORDEN, Wisconsin         MORGAN MCGARVEY, Kentucky
MORGAN LUTTRELL, Texas               DELIA RAMIREZ, Illinois
JUAN CISCOMANI, Arizona              NIKKI BUDZINSKI, Illinois
KEITH SELF, Texas                    TIMOTHY M. KENNEDY, New York
JEN KIGGANS, Virginia                MAXINE DEXTER, Oregon
ABE HAMADEH, Arizona                 HERB CONAWAY, New Jersey
KIMBERLYN KING-HINDS, Northern       KELLY MORRISON, Minnesota
    Mariana Islands
TOM BARRETT, Michigan

                       Jon Clark, Staff Director
                  Matt Reel, Democratic Staff Director

Pursuant to clause 2(e)(4) of Rule XI of the Rules of the House, public 
hearing records of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs are also 
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of converting between various electronic formats may introduce 
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                         C  O  N  T  E  N  T  S

                              ----------                              

                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2025

                                                                   Page

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

The Honorable Mike Bost, Chairman................................     1
The Honorable Mark Takano, Ranking Member........................     4

                         SPEAKING FROM THE DAIS

The Honorable Tom Barrett, U.S. House of Representatives, (MI-07)     7
The Honorable Lloyd Doggett, U.S. House of Representatives, (TX-
  37)............................................................     9

                               WITNESSES
                                Panel I

Mr. Edgar Edmundson, Father of Sgt. (Ret) Eric Edmundson.........    11

Mrs. Sharri Briley, Surviving Spouse of CW3 Donovan "Bull" Briley    12

Mr. Tom Wheaton, National Treasurer, Paralyzed Veterans of 
  America (PVA)..................................................    14

Dr. Brian Miller, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Johns 
  Hopkins University.............................................    15

Ms. Kristina Keenan, Legislative Director, Veterans of Foreign 
  Wars (VFW).....................................................    17

                                Panel II

Ms. Margarita Devlin, Principal Deputy Undersecretary for 
  Benefits, Performing the Delegable Duties of the Undersecretary 
  for Benefits, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs..............    32

        Accompanied by:

    Ms. Stephanie Li, Assistant Director, Regulations, 
        Legislation, Engagement, and Training, Veterans Benefits 
        Administration, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

    Ms. Heather Ford, Acting Chief Financial Officer, Veterans 
        Health Administration, U.S. Department of Veterans 
        Affairs

    Mr. Kevin Johnson, Director, Revenue Operations, and Office 
        of Finance, Veterans Health Administration, U.S. 
        Department of Veterans Affairs

                                APPENDIX
                    Prepared Statements Of Witnesses

Mr. Edgar Edmundson Prepared Statement...........................    45
Mrs. Sharri Briley Prepared Statement............................    47
Mr. Tom Wheaton Prepared Statement...............................    48
Dr. Brian Miller, MD Prepared Statement..........................    53
Ms. Kristina Keenan Prepared Statement...........................    65
Ms. Margarita Devlin Prepared Statement..........................    67

                          APPENDIX--continued
                       Statements For The Record

Disabled American Veterans Prepared Statement....................    71
The Honorable French Hill, U.S. House of Representatives, (AR-
  02), Prepared Statement........................................    73
The American Legion Prepared Statement...........................    75
University School of Public Health Prepared Statement............    84
Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors Prepared Statement......    91
Gold Star Spouses of America, Inc. Prepared Statement............   105

 
                         LEGISLATIVE HEARING ON 
                H.R. 6047, THE ``SHARRI BRILEY AND ERIC 
  EDMUNDSON VETERANS BENEFITS EXPANSION ACT OF 2025'', H.R. 4077, THE 
                   ``GUARD VETERANS' HEALTH CARE ACT 

                              ----------                              


                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2025


                    Committee on Veterans' Affairs,
                             U.S. House of Representatives,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:16 a.m., in 
room 360, Cannon House Office Building, Hon. Mike Bost 
(chairman of the committee) presiding.
    Present: Representatives Bost, Bergman, Murphy, King-Hinds, 
Barrett, Takano, Doggett, Cherfilus-McCormick, Budzinski, 
Dexter, Conaway, and Morrison.

            OPENING STATEMENT OF MIKE BOST, CHAIRMAN

    The Chairman. Good morning, everyone. The committee will 
come to order. The chair may declare a recess at any point.
    The Chairman, in accordance with the committee rules, I am 
asking unanimous consent that Representative Doggett from Texas 
be permitted to participate in today's committee and 
subcommittee hearing today. Without objection, so ordered.
    Before we begin, I want to pause to recognize Sergeant 
Andrew Wolfe, who is recovering, and Specialist Sarah 
Beckstrom, who sadly passed from her injuries. When our 
National Guards are called from their civilian lives to serve 
and they answer without hesitation, that bravery and sense of 
duty is the cornerstone of what makes our military so 
exceptional. We hold their families, their units, and all those 
affected in our thoughts.
    I am glad to be here today to consider the following bills: 
H.R. 6047, the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans 
Benefits Expansion Act of 2025; H.R. 4077, the Guarantee 
Utilization of All Reimbursements for Delivery of Veterans' 
Health Care Act (GUARD) Veterans' Health Care Act. Before I 
discuss the bills before us, I would first like to welcome all 
of our witnesses who are here to testify on the impact that one 
of these bills would have on their veterans' communities.
    Mr. Edmundson, thank you to you and your family for 
traveling to Washington to be here. Ms. Briley, thank you for 
traveling to be here. The institution of Congress and this 
committee is honored to have two great Americans like you both 
sitting before us today.
    Eric, it is good to have you here as well. As a father, I 
know the weight that both you carry each day for your families. 
I just want to say thank you.
    We are here today to discuss H.R. 6047. This landmark bill 
would create a significant increase in benefits for a forgotten 
group of veterans and their families. This bill would 
permanently increase the monthly rate of VA's Dependency and 
Indemnity Compensation, DIC, by an additional 1 percent every 
year for the next 5 years. DIC is a tax-free U.S. Department of 
Veterans Affairs (VA) benefit that survivors, spouses, and 
dependents receive if their veteran or loved one's death has 
Active Duty training-related, service-connected, or if the 
veteran was rated a hundred percent disability for 10 years.
    While DIC is an increase to keep up with inflation, the 
base rate has not been increased since 1993. That is over 30 
years. This bill would change that by adding additional 1 
percent on top of any increase to account for the inflation for 
the next 5 years.
    Surviving families of our Nation's heroes like Sharri 
Briley, who this bill is named after, would benefit from this 
increase. Sharri is a surviving spouse of Donovan Lee ``Bull'' 
Briley, an Army specialist operation helicopter pilot who lost 
his life during the Black Hawk Down Incident in Somalia in 
1993. Sharri and Donovan's daughter was just 5 years old when 
her father came home from the mission in a casket wrapped in 
Stars and Stripes.
    President Lincoln made a promise to the families like 
Riley's and the thousands more like them. In 1865, over 100 
years before Donovan would take the oath to give his life on 
behalf of the United States of America, that if it came to 
that, our Nation would ensure without hesitation that his widow 
and his child were taken care of and treated with dignity. This 
bill will help do that.
    The bill would also permanently increase VA's special 
monthly compensation, or SMC, by $10,000 for catastrophic 
disabled veterans who receive an R1, R2, or a T rating. These 
three tiers are the highest level of surviving connected 
compensation for veterans whose condition go far beyond 100 
percent disability. Veterans at these rates require regular in-
home aid attendance under the supervision of a medical 
professional.
    A veteran like Eric right here before us, who H.R. 6047 is 
proudly named after Eric's parents, his sister, his wife, and 
his children care for him every single day. Their care does not 
stop because it is the weekend or because it is 5 p.m. or 
because they want a break. They are the unsung heroes, the 
great Americans who sacrifice every day, that care for our 
veterans who live, who forever change--whose lives have been 
forever changed by their service and the life--and they live 
with the visible and invisible wounds of war.
    Families like the Edmundsons would never expect you to say 
thank you, but we owe them a debt of gratitude that can never 
fully be repaid. This bill is for them and the thousands of 
families like theirs. It is a step forward and it reminds those 
families that America has their back.
    In order to pay for this bill, we would require any veteran 
rated at 70 percent or less to pay the home loan funding fee on 
their second home. Let me say that again. It would require 
veterans who have a 70 percent or below home loan, their second 
home loan would require a fee, that rate that all veterans 
currently pay. That is an average of $35 a month. No changes 
would be made to a veteran's first home buying experience. This 
ensures that veterans still have access to the American dream 
of owning a home without paying the funding fee on their first 
use regardless of the rating.
    Opening the funding fee is a realistic way to get this 
done. This bill cost over $7 billion and this is a path forward 
to get this across the finish line on behalf of the families it 
would positively impact, all while following Pay-As-You-Go 
(PAYGO). The legislation is the first realistic attempt by 
Congress in years to get something done for over 500,000 
recipients of these VA benefits. This bill represents a 
realistic attempt to increase VA's largest survivor benefit. 
This bill ensures the sacrifices of our military families and 
catastrophically injured veterans are not forgotten.
    I am sure there are many who will try to avoid the reality 
of this situation and try to say that we can make these 
expansions without an offset. Under my leadership, I live in 
the real world and I am focused on getting things done. I am 
focused on working with our Republican conference to make it a 
little easier for our families to make ends meet, especially 
the families of our American heroes.
    I remain concerned by the lack of bipartisanship and the 
rhetoric that continues to come from our friends on the other 
side of the aisle during these debates on a bill that would 
directly address the problems we serve--we try to try to fix on 
this committee and try to get them solved. My staff and I have 
spent months trying to understand what the other side of the 
aisle would need in order to support this very good bill. 
Unfortunately, we have not received that response. This is 
disappointing. I want this bill to be a bipartisan bill. Really 
do.
    Now, this is because Eric and Donovan were not serving 
Republicans or Democrats when they were overseas. They were 
fighting for all of us as American citizens. I took that same 
oath when I joined the Marine Corps and I have carried it with 
me every single day of this committee, especially as chairman.
    There may be some that have concerns about the offset, 
which I understand, but inaction, hand-wringing is a receipt 
for nothing getting done. I have heard that some critics of the 
bill have even told witnesses today that they should hold out 
for a better deal in the next Congress, that somehow our 
attempt to move this bill is somehow some kind of trick or 
partisan game. My message on that remains simple: there is no 
place for partisan politics when it comes to our veterans, 
especially with a bill that helps catastrophic disabled 
veterans and gives survivors an increase that they have been 
waiting for 30 years. That is way overdue. It is fiscally 
irresponsible.
    I look forward to a thorough discussion on this legislation 
before us. I would also like to thank Congressman Baretta--
Barrett. It is a cold medicine. I am sorry. Yes. My friend and 
fellow veteran for his leadership on this issue.
    I want to take a moment, though, to express serious 
concerns with H.R. 4077, the so-called GUARD Veterans' Health 
Care Act. Now, despite its promised title, the bill risks doing 
the exact opposite of what it claims. It could harm veterans. 
The legislation is intended to allow VA to recover cost from 
Medicaid or Medicare Advantage (MA) plans, but, in reality, 
this would function as a punitive tax on Medicare Advantage 
plans that millions of veterans rely on. Over half of eligible 
Medicare beneficiaries, including many veterans, choose these 
plans because they offer robust benefits and broad access. This 
bill would force those plans to absorb new cost, which would 
inevitably lead to fewer benefits, smaller networks, and 
increase premiums for veterans and nonveterans alike. Worse, 
the bill would draw over 1 billion annually from the Hospital 
Insurance Trust Fund, accelerating its depletion and 
threatening Medicare's long-term sustainability.
    Now, I should remind my Democrat colleagues that the 
veterans earned their VA benefits and their Medicare benefits. 
It is wrong to put these two programs at odds with each other. 
If the goal is to better coordination between VA and Medicare, 
there are better ways to do that. This bill is not that. Let us 
not pass a law that punishes veterans while pretending to 
protect them.
    I now yield to Ranking Member Takano for his opening 
remarks.

        OPENING STATEMENT OF MARK TAKANO, RANKING MEMBER

    Mr. Takano. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman. We are going to 
be spending a lot of time talking today about the VA Home Loan 
Guarantee Program. Before I begin my opening remarks, I want to 
take a moment to acknowledge the untimely passing of John Bell. 
Mr. Bell served as the executive director of Loan Guarantee 
Services for many years and testified before this committee on 
a number of occasions. His steady guidance steered VA through 
the COVID-19 pandemic and helped save tens of thousands of 
veterans from foreclosure. His leadership left an indelible 
mark on the VA Home Loan Program. Mr. Chairman, if you would 
indulge me for a moment, I would like to have a brief moment of 
silence for Mr. Bell and for Guardswoman Sarah Beckstrom, the 
recent horrible, tragic shooting of her. If we could take a 
brief moment.
    The Chairman. Without objection, a moment of silence.
    [Moment of silence.]
    Mr. Takano. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Before moving on, I would also like to thank the witnesses 
who are here today to help us understand what is at stake. Ms. 
Briley, thank you for being here and for your courageous 
advocacy on behalf of survivors across this Nation. Your 
husband, Chief Warrant Officer 3 Donovan Lee ``Bull'' Briley, a 
night stalker killed in Mogadishu, is a hero who lived a life 
of service. Your decades of work supporting Gold Star families 
honors his legacy every day. Your testimony reminds us that 
behind every statistic is a home changed forever. Thank you, 
ma'am, for being here.
    Mr. Edmundson, thank you, sir, and your family and your 
son, Eric, Sergeant Eric Edmundson. Thank you, Eric. Thank you 
for sharing the story of your son Eric, who is here with us 
today. I was honored to meet with you, Eric, and your family 
yesterday. Your testimony lays bare what round-the-clock 
caregiving truly requires physically, emotionally, and 
financially, and why additional support for families like yours 
is not optional, but essential.
    Ms. Kristina Keenan of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW). 
Kristina, welcome back to testifying before the committee. I 
want to acknowledge something that is obvious to all of us. You 
are with child, very pregnant, and yet still doing the hard 
work of representing VA's membership. That grit is the 
definition of service. Your long record of advocacy, including 
your work on the Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring 
our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act, 
strengthens this committee's work today. Thank you, Kristina.
    Mr. Tom Wheaton of Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA). Mr. 
Wheaton, thank you for your leadership and your decades of 
service with PVA. Your injury 36 years ago began a lifetime of 
advocacy to ensure veterans with spinal cord injuries receive 
the dignity, opportunity, and support that they have earned. We 
appreciate you lending your expertise and voice in today's 
discussion.
    All of your stories and the lives they represent are the 
very reason this work must be done right. Chairman Bost, just a 
few short weeks ago, you and I stood on the floor of the House 
of Representatives to support the Veterans Compensation Cost of 
Living Adjustment Act, an annual legislative action that you 
and I strongly support. As I said at the time, veterans, their 
dependents, caregivers, and families deserve every penny we as 
a Congress can deliver for them. Any policy idea that seeks to 
increase those benefits commensurate with the sacrifices of 
those we serve deserves to be heard. There is bipartisan 
agreement on that.
    There is also bipartisan agreement that an increase in 
benefits for severely disabled veterans and their survivors is 
long overdue. I am determined that we get it done not next 
Congress, but this Congress. That is why I strongly support the 
Caring for Survivors Act and the Love Lives On Act. That is why 
I support expanded access to care and benefits through new 
presumptions of service-connection. In a more perfect world, 
where once again I sit, where you are sitting today, Mr. 
Chairman, those bills and many more would be among our highest 
priorities. However, it is not the world we are in at present. 
We are left to consider the legislation that you have chosen to 
put before the committee today.
    Now, regarding the majority's bill H.R. 6047, the aims of 
this bill are noble. Its potential to help survivors and 
catastrophically disabled veterans is real. I cannot support 
the mechanism chosen to pay for it. As we all know, Mr. 
Chairman, policymaking is about choices. Nearly every bill we 
move or do not move requires that we make tough choices. In 
this case, Mr. Barrett and the co-sponsors of this bill have 
chosen to pay for much-needed increases in special monthly 
compensation and DIC by charging disabled veterans thousands of 
dollars in new fees to access their earned VA home loan 
benefit. This is a choice I cannot accept.
    Now, you all in the majority could have requested a waiver 
of House PAYGO rules. You could have sought offsets from other 
committees. You could have used offsets already at our disposal 
or you could have advanced this bill without an offset as 
Congress did in a bipartisan basis. We did that on a bipartisan 
basis with the PACT Act, and we figured it out. You all have 
not chosen any of these paths.
    Instead, Mr. Barrett and the authors of this bill have 
chosen to pit one group of disabled veterans against another, 
offering long overdue help to veterans--to survivors and 
catastrophically disabled veterans, but only at the direct 
expense of other disabled veterans. You all did so not as a 
last resort after exhausting every other way to pay for this 
increase, but as a first choice.
    Now, this proposal would create an entirely new, 
unprecedented tax on disabled veterans, specifically a tax on 
disabled veterans with a disability rating of 70 percent or 
below, who will now have to pay a fee to access their earned VA 
home loan benefits. Now, since the home loan program was 
created in 1944, the American people have never asked disabled 
veterans to pay a funding fee or the tax you are trying to 
impose on them now. We should not begin to tax disabled 
veterans now for the home loan program.
    We are clear about how this would play out. Under this 
bill, 3.2 million veterans, 3.2 million veterans, and countless 
more going forward would face higher costs just to use their 
earned home loan benefit. The average cost for the home in the 
United States is about $514,000. A disabled veteran using the 
VA home loan will be forced to pay an extra 17,000. We rounded 
that up, it is 16,968, roughly $17,000 at closing on average. 
That number is far more in higher cost areas.
    Now, without a doubt, Mr. Barrett's bill cuts benefits from 
one group of disabled veterans and taxes them in order to fund 
benefits for another group of disabled veterans. I am sorry, 
but this is a very troubling precedent and one that I simply 
cannot support.
    Well, now I would like to turn our attention to the other 
bill on today's agenda, the GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act. 
This legislation gives VA the authority to seek reimbursement 
from veterans' Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D plans for 
any healthcare services or prescription drugs veterans who are 
enrolled in these plans receive at VA. We have the bill's 
sponsor, Representative Doggett, here with us today to tell us 
more about it. I am not going to steal any of his thunder, so I 
am going to keep my opening remarks on it very brief.
    Before I close, I am just going to--like to point out the 
contrast between Mr. Barrett's bill and Mr. Doggett's bill. One 
bill, Mr. Barrett's, will take money away from disabled 
veterans in order to fund much-needed increases in benefits for 
survivors and severely disabled veterans. The other bill, Mr. 
Doggett's bill, will take money away from insurance companies, 
insurance companies that have been profiting from enrolling 
veterans in Medicare Advantage plans to the tune of as much as 
$23 billion per year for healthcare services their enrollees 
got at VA. It is not as if these insurance companies paid for 
any of these services. VA paid for them, but yet their 
shareholders at the insurance companies pocket the money.
    Unlike Mr. Barrett's bill, the GUARD Veterans' Health Care 
Act is a bipartisan, bicameral measure. I am proud to be co-
leading this bill with Representative Doggett as well as fellow 
Veterans Affairs Committee members Dr. Murphy and Republican 
Representatives David Schweikert and John Joyce. On the other 
hand, Mr. Barrett's bill has attracted only Republican co-
sponsors in the House.
    The GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act has the support of 
numerous veterans service organizations (VSO) and consumer 
advocacy organizations as a result of thoughtful, bipartisan, 
bicameral collaboration and cooperation. Unfortunately, Mr. 
Barrett's bill is not. The divergence between what the majority 
is proposing and what Mr. Doggett is proposing could not be 
more clear.
    As I said earlier, I know how essential these increases to 
SMC and DIC are. They can mean the difference between keeping 
the lights on or buying food for some people, not even to speak 
of the myriad care needs this money would help address. My 
Republican colleagues have engineered an impossible and false 
choice, pitting one group of disabled veterans against another 
group of disabled veterans. We know there are plenty of other 
ways to handle this cost.
    I want everyone here and those of you watching at home to 
know this, we, the Committee Democrats, are working urgently 
and in good faith to find another way to pay for DIC and SMC 
increases that does not tax disabled veterans. Disabled 
veterans already pay taxes just like the rest of us, and 
Americans are overwhelmingly willing to dedicate their tax 
dollars to support severely disabled veterans. We only need to 
ask them. We do not have to accept this false choice. We do not 
have to choose between survivors and disabled veterans. We can 
and must choose a path that honors both.
    I say to my colleagues, reject the cynicism of forcing 
disabled veterans to shoulder this burden. Choose a better way 
forward. Choose a path that will increase benefits for those 
who so urgently need them and protect benefits for those who 
already rely on VA. To the survivors, caregivers, and veterans 
in this room, I see you. We see you. We hear you. We are 
fighting for a solution worthy of your sacrifice.
    With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield back.
    The Chairman. Thank you, Ranking Member.
    I now recognize Mr. Barrett, and I can say it this time 
now, just so you know, to testify about his legislation that we 
are discussing here today. Representative Barrett.

                    STATEMENT OF TOM BARRETT

    Mr. Barrett. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, 
Ranking Member, for holding this hearing today and really 
bringing forward this important issue and this important 
subject and one that has been overlooked for far too long. I 
want to also thank our panelists here today, especially the 
families. I really want you to know how much I appreciated 
spending time and discussing with all of you yesterday just how 
important this was and learning more about your story and the 
sacrifices your families have made, and more about, Sharri, 
your husband, of course, as well, and Eric, your service and 
the missions that you were on and some of the overlapping 
cavalry assignments we had. I really appreciated that. I want 
you to know how much I really thank you for being here and for 
being advocates and for what you are doing.
    I know we have already summarized a great deal about what 
these bills will do, and for you here today, I mean, I can 
explain what a piece of legislation would do with words written 
on a piece of paper. I think your testimony today will really 
convey to this committee just how important this is and why it 
matters so much for you and those that are in situations like 
yours.
    Sharri, one of the things that you said yesterday that 
really stood out to me was you said when your husband died that 
there were a lot of widowed women from previous conflicts, 
Korean war, World War II, that you became connected with, and 
they were trying to really stand in support of opportunities 
because they knew there would be widows that followed behind 
them. For you here today, I think that is a lasting legacy of 
those that are going to come behind you.
    As we know, we are going to face other conflicts that our 
country will face, that we will send men and women into combat 
to endure for us, and that they will tragically leave behind 
families of their own. You know, someday there is going to be a 
spouse that you talk to that will thank you for the work that 
you have done today. Thank you.
    To the Edmundson family, thank you for your advocacy. I 
know you have completely rearranged your entire life to 
accommodate this circumstance that has really fallen on you and 
to your family. To really see the connection and the bond that 
you have to put everything aside to care for your son and for 
his family is really just what makes the best of our country. I 
want you to know that this bill is something that is long 
overdue and one that we are going to continue to work on.
    I have only been in Congress 11 months. I am hardly an 
expert. I have not been here as long as the folks on the top of 
the dais that have much more seniority than I do. One thing I 
have learned while I have been here is that the easiest path in 
Congress is the status quo. It is hard to change anything. It 
is hard to do something that might be a little bit hard or a 
little bit difficult to explain or maybe something that takes a 
little bit of political risk in order to do. When that happens, 
the status quo just perpetuates over and over and over again, 
and families like yours then get left behind longer and longer. 
This bill today represents a shift certainly in that, to try 
and achieve something that has not been done, it is long 
overdue and might require some difficult decisions of 
policymakers. I did not run for office to push the easy button. 
I ran for office because I recognized that we face complicated 
challenges, and it is incumbent on us to really face that and 
do that in the most appropriate way.
    You know, if the ranking member is sincere in his efforts 
to work together to find ways to sculpt this, I am very open to 
that. I do not claim to have a monopoly on decision-making of 
how we go about things the best and most adequate way. I think 
it should not stop us from making ultimately what is in the 
best interest of those that are most severely impacted by the 
call of our country for the sacrifices that your families have 
made.
    I am encouraged by the work that we are doing on this 
committee. I am hopeful that we can move this bill and get this 
done and really accomplish what is long overdue for the 
thousands of other families in similar situations to yours. I 
cannot thank you again, how much it means to me for you to come 
here to testify in front of this committee today and for the 
rest of our panelists to be here and to provide your insight as 
well. We thank you for that.
    Mr. Chair, with that, I will yield back.
    The Chairman. I now recognize Representative Doggett for 
testifying about his legislation that we are also discussing 
here today. Representative.

                   STATEMENT OF LLOYD DOGGETT

    Mr. Doggett. Well, thank you very much, Mr. Chairman and 
Ranking Member. I am pleased to see one of the co-leads on this 
legislation, Dr. Murphy, here, who you know other Republican 
physicians both here in the House and in the Senate, with Dr. 
Cassidy, have made this a truly bipartisan effort. It also is a 
bill seeing those who represent our veterans here from the 
service organizations. I am so pleased that this bipartisan 
legislation has been endorsed now by the Veterans of Foreign 
Wars, by the Paralyzed Veterans, by the American Legion, as 
well as a number of labor unions and Medicare groups.
    For years, private insurers have offered Medicare Advantage 
and Part D plans that have benefited from a loophole that 
allows them to take the premiums that are paid for by taxpayers 
for enrolled veterans while the VA actually provides the care. 
This is a waste of taxpayer dollars and it is drain on VA 
resources that should be invested in delivering more and better 
care to those who served our country and protected our 
freedoms. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that this 
bill will save the Veterans Administration at least $10 billion 
every year.
    When a veteran is duly enrolled in other commercial 
insurance, say a veteran who is now working for a private 
employer, and that veteran prefers to go to the Veterans 
Administration and get their care, the Veterans Administration 
in turn asks the insurer for that private employer to pay the 
bill. Unfortunately, it does not work that way if the same 
veteran is relying on Medicare Advantage or Part D. This 
exemption, this requirement that the Veterans Administration 
cannot get reimbursed for Medicare actually predates as before 
there were ever any Medicare Advantage or Part D plans in 
existence and it just never got corrected.
    Medicare Advantage insurers are definitely advantaged. They 
are advantaged over other health insurers without having to pay 
for the care that they are getting paid premiums for. The 
Veterans Administration is disadvantaged because while any 
private hospital or other healthcare provider to whom a veteran 
would turn for care can be reimbursed, the Veterans 
Administration in this case cannot get a penny.
    This problem was brought to my attention as a result of 
some excellent investigating reports by the Wall Street 
Journal. Christopher Weaver and his colleagues exposed this 
lucrative loophole along with some academic research from Dr. 
David Myers. The Journal found that this loophole incentivizes 
Medicare Advantage insurers to increase their aggressive 
marketing to target veterans, in some cases offering them cash 
rebates to sign up for plans that they know they will never get 
reimbursement on from the Veterans Administration.
    Such dual enrollment has gone up by 63 percent from 2011 to 
2020 thanks to these marketing techniques. In one case, a duly 
enrolled veteran received a $100 per month cash rebate to stay 
on Medicare Advantage, while the plan received a $6,000 
taxpayer payment to cover his cost of care for the year, care 
which he received only through VA at taxpayer expense. Without 
this corrective legislation, the cost to taxpayers will 
continue to soar with insurers already making billions at the 
expense of veterans.
    I heard your objections, Mr. Chairman, and I respect the 
fact that you raised these concerns. Let me assure you that 
there is no tax being placed on Medicare Advantage plans. We 
only ask them to treat the Veterans Administration like they 
would any other private insurer. While I do not share the 
enthusiasm that some folks have for Medicare Advantage myself, 
let me make it clear that you can be as big a cheerleader for 
Medicare Advantage in general and its value as those TV 
promotional ads that are on nonstop right now during the 
enrollment season, but can still recognize that it is just 
plain wrong and not justifiable to deny the Veterans 
Administration the same ability to seek reimbursement from 
Medicare Advantage as it does from every other commercial plan.
    Regarding any cost shift impacting Medicare and the 
Medicare Trust Fund, Dr. Murphy and I, Congressman Schweikert, 
who is the co-sponsor of this bill, we all serve on the Ways 
and Means Committee, and I believe can say that Medicare 
Advantage plans are already generously, perhaps overly 
generously compensated for the care that they provide. I think 
that there is not any need for an increase in benefits out of 
the hospital trust fund or from Medicare for this.
    In short, then, the GUARD Veterans Care Act is simple. It 
allows VA to collect reimbursement for Medicare Advantage and 
Part D plans just as they already do from other insurers. 
Veterans will maintain the same plan choices they already have. 
Access to care at the VA will remain the same. They will not be 
subject to additional prior authorization barriers, copayments, 
or other challenges that a Medicare Advantage plan might try to 
impose beyond the restrictions that the Veterans Administration 
already has.
    I appreciate your consideration and hope you will be able 
to schedule a markup so that we can work together to improve 
veterans' healthcare and save taxpayers $10 billion each year. 
Thank you so much.
    The Chairman. That would help, would not it? Turn on the 
microphone. Thank you again.
    I would like to welcome our first panel to the table. 
Testifying before us today we have our first witness is Mr. Ed 
Edmundson, father and caregiver to a catastrophically disabled 
Army veteran, Sergeant Eric Edmundson. I want to also say a 
special welcome to Eric, who is here with us and the whole 
family is here with us today.
    Our second witness is Sharri Briley, surviving spouse of 
the Chief Warrant Officer 3 Donovan ``Bull'' Briley, testifying 
in her personal capacity.
    Our third witness is Mr. Tom Wheaton, national treasurer at 
Paralyzed Veterans of America.
    Our fourth witness is Brian Miller, a nonresident fellow at 
American Enterprise Institute.
    Our final witness is Ms. Kristina Keenan, national 
legislative service director at Veterans of Foreign Wars of the 
U.S.
    I ask all those witnesses that can please stand and all 
raise your right hand, please.
    [Witnesses sworn.]
    The Chairman. Thank you. You may be seated and let the 
record reflect that witnesses answered in the affirmative.
    Mr. Edmundson, I now recognize you for 5 minutes for your 
testimony.

                  STATEMENT OF EDGAR EDMUNDSON

    Mr. Edmundson. Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, 
members of the committee, thank you for giving me a few minutes 
of your time today.
    Time is something that we all talk about, but very few of 
us truly understand until life forces do. For my family that 
moment came on October 2, 2005, the day my son, Sergeant Eric 
Edmundson, was nearly killed in Iraq when his Striker was hit 
by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED). In one breath our 
lives were split into before and after.
    Eric suffered many injuries, but the one that changed 
everything was the loss of oxygen to his brain. It took away 
his ability to speak, to walk, to live independently. It took 
away the future he had dreamed about. It placed our family on a 
path of 24-hour care that has now lasted for 20 years. I will 
never forget the sight of him at Walter Reed, 25 years old, 
hooked up to machines, his hands lying still in the bed. Just a 
month earlier, those hands had held his newborn daughter.
    In those early days after injury, doctors informed us that 
time was Eric's enemy. I remember standing over him and begging 
time to give us a chance. Give him time to heal. Give us time 
to learn how to care for him. Give us time to build a life 
around injuries no parent imagines for their child. Twenty 
years later, Eric is still battling with time.
    We now know exactly what it takes to succeed sustain a 
severely injured veteran: not luxuries, but life itself, 
basics, the basics of dignity. It means caregivers who truly 
understand his needs and know how to care and know how to 
take--keep him safe. It means a home that will not injure him, 
one that is adapted to support his independence now and as his 
needs change. It means transportation that keeps him connected 
to the world beyond our front door. It means adaptive equipment 
that provides comfort, mobility, and a way to communicate. It 
means opportunities and the support required to stay engaged 
with his community. It means respite care so the people who 
love him most do not collapse under the weight of constant 
vigilance.
    This bill recognizes something families like mine have 
known for a long time: catastrophic injuries do not get easier 
with age. They get harder. The original support well 
appreciated was never designed for 20 years of round-the-clock 
care.
    There is another truth time forces a family like mine to 
face: 1 day the injuries win. When a severely injured veteran 
passes away, the world may move on, but the family does not. 
The home we built around the injury, the equipment we needed, 
the debt, the medical costs, the financial strain of years of 
caregiving, those remain. That is why the proposed increase in 
Dependency Indemnity Compensation is not a small adjustment. It 
is a lifeline to protect the surviving families who gave 
everything year after year alongside their veterans. It allows 
them to keep a roof over their head, maintain the accessible 
home they relied on, to avoid falling into hardship after a 
lifetime of sacrifice. Increasing DIC honors the veteran's 
service by protecting the loved ones who stood by them through 
the worst days of their lives.
    Today my son is 45. He cannot speak for himself anymore, so 
I am here to speak for him. I am asking you to work together 
now to find a mechanism to ensure that the time he has and the 
time all severely injured veterans have is filled with the care 
and support they earned. Thank you for listening and thank you 
for recognizing what this truly means to the families who live 
it every single day because time is the one thing we cannot 
afford to lose.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Edgar Edmundson Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Edmundson. Thank you for being 
the voice. Mr. Edmundson's statement will be entered into the 
hearing record.
    Ms. Briley, I now recognize you for 5 minutes.

                   STATEMENT OF SHARRI BRILEY

    Ms. Briley. Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and 
members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to come 
before you today to speak in support of the Sharri Briley and 
Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefit Expansion Act. I am Sharri 
Briley, the proud surviving spouse of Chief Warrant Officer 3 
Donovan Lee Brawley, also known as his call sign, Bull.
    Donovan was a Special Operations Black Hawk pilot and he 
was larger than life. He was born an aviator, brave, daring, 
and deeply devoted to his family. On one of our first dates he 
took me to was a college event. In the middle of our date he 
disappeared. The next thing I knew I looked up and I saw him 
rappelling head first down the building of a school building--
down the side of the school building. I remember thinking to 
myself, who is this guy? Then of all things, we were married 
just 10 months later.
    Five years later, our daughter Jordan came along. Donovan 
was the dad who made every moment special. When she was little, 
Donovan would get home late from work and sing old hymns and 
patriotic songs with her until she fell asleep. He grew up 
singing in a choir and would constantly surprise me by crooning 
old Elvis songs to me. He loved reading to Jordan using all the 
different character voices. He taught her to ride a bike. One 
Christmas when he was outside her window in the cold, jingling 
bells so that she thought Santa was arriving. Those are the 
memories that mean the most, for far more than medals or 
ceremonies ever could.
    On 3 October 1993, Donovan was killed in Mogadishu, 
Somalia, when his helicopter was struck by a rocket-propelled 
grenade during Operation Gothic Serpent. His courage and his 
sacrifice and those of his comrades were more commonly known as 
Black Hawk Down. For Jordan and me, it was not a movie. It was 
our life and it still is, 32 years later. This month, December 
28th, would have been our 42d wedding anniversary.
    A few years after Donovan's death, I made it my mission to 
make sure families like mine are never forgotten and that the 
Nation that ask our loved ones to serve keeps its promise to 
care for those of us who are left behind. This legislation is 
deeply personal to me, and not because my name is on it, but 
because it acknowledges that survivors deserve more than words 
of sympathy. We deserve tangible support.
    For surviving spouses this bill would finally raise 
Dependency and Indemnity Compensation, DIC, by 1 percent each 
year for 5 years, in addition to the standard cost of living 
adjustment. Right now DIC pays $1,653 per month, an amount that 
has not been meaningfully increased since 1993. Over 500,000 
surviving spouses rely on this benefit, yet it has remained 
essentially stagnant for more than 30 years, even as the cost 
of housing, food, and childcare has continued to climb. A 
modest but consistent increase is a step in the right 
direction. It could help families manage groceries and medical 
expenses. Most importantly, it would signal that our government 
acknowledges and honors the ongoing sacrifices surviving 
spouses live with every day.
    October marked 32 years since Donovan's death. When I think 
of him I remember his laughter, his music, and the way he loved 
his family. I cannot change the fact that he did not come home. 
You, the members of this committee, have the ability to change 
what comes next for the families who live this reality every 
single day. As you consider this bill, I hope you will not only 
think about the numbers or the policy language, but about the 
families and the stories behind them.
    As a military spouse, we serve, too. The military becomes 
our family. There is shared duty and shared sacrifice. 
Servicemembers take care of each other in a way that goes far 
beyond obligation. They check on one another. They carry each 
other through fear and uncertainty, and they stand ready to 
step in before anyone even has--has even had a chance to ask. 
It is an unspoken promise, no one left behind.
    To this day, the men who served with my husband, Donovan, 
they still check on me and my daughter. I am very grateful for 
the friendship and the love that they have for us. As a 
surviving spouse, we learn quickly that our strength does not 
come from individual resilience, but from the trust we place in 
those who stand beside us. Families like mine have waited far 
too long, and this bill is our opportunity to finally act, to 
finally show that those who serve and those who stand beside 
them are valued, recognized, and supported. We will never stop 
fighting to increase DIC for parity with other Federal survivor 
programs.
    However, we believe it would be a betrayal to let this 
important first step, the first in years, pass us without 
lending our voices and elevating this issue to the critical 
position it deserves. We thank the committee for its 
willingness and the commitment to act now. We stand ready to 
continue the fight for the thousands of survivors whose lives 
will be better as a result.
    Thank you for your time, your compassion, and your 
dedication to upholding America's promise to its heroes and the 
loved ones they leave behind.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Sharri Briley Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. The written statement of Ms. Briley will be 
entered into the hearing record.
    Mr. Wheaton, I now recognize you for 5 minutes for your 
testimony.

                    STATEMENT OF TOM WHEATON

    Mr. Wheaton. Chairman, thank you, and Ranking Member. I 
appreciate the opportunity to speak with you today on behalf of 
the Paralyzed Veterans of America about the importance of VA 
benefits to veterans with spinal cord injuries and disorders, 
their families, and survivors. My written statement covers both 
bills being discussed today. In the interest of time, I want to 
focus my comments on the one that has the greatest potential to 
directly affect our members.
    PVA strongly supports the provisions of the Sharri Briley 
and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion Act that would 
increase the rates of SMC for the most severely disabled 
veterans and DIC for their surviving family members. PVA has 
long been a supporter of raising baseline rates for these 
crucial benefits.
    Mr. Chairman, SMC is arguably the most important ancillary 
benefit for veterans with catastrophic disabilities, and the 
benefit is unique in that it is designed to address factors 
such as the profoundness of the disability, personal 
inconvenience, and social inadaptability. Even with additional 
financial support, many of our most severely disabled veterans 
are still struggling. They often spend more on daily home-based 
care and other disability-related needs than they receive in 
SMC, which creates a tremendous financial strain on them. 
Eventually, some are forced to opt for care in an institutional 
setting, which is even more costly to the taxpayer.
    I have found that living with a spinal cord injury creates 
costs that most other individuals do not typically have to 
face. Running into a wall or doorframe with my wheelchair is a 
little more damaging than bumping it with your arm or leg. 
Repairs to drywall and doorframes are just one example of the 
cost of being disabled.
    Also, clothing wears out faster as every point of contact 
between myself and my chair causes rips and worn spots. Plus, 
the need for adaptive and tailored clothes means that VA 
clothing allowance runs out quickly. Traveling is also more 
expensive. Many wheelchair people--many wheelchair users pay 
more in travel in first class on airplanes as the difficulty of 
getting on and off the aircraft is just too much due to their 
physical limitations. Then when we get to our destinations we 
might find that the adaptive hotel rooms only have one bed, so 
if a veteran has a caregiver traveling with them, they might 
need to rent two rooms instead of one.
    Simply completing basic tasks required of home ownership 
often triggers additional costs to those with a significant 
disability. Cleaning the house, mowing the lawn, general care 
of the property, even changing a light bulb, and many other 
things other people take for granted result in an additional 
cost for us because we often have to pay someone to do it. SMC 
is intended to assist veterans with higher costs of living that 
disabled veterans experience, but its baseline rates have not 
been raised for decades, so it is not helping veterans as much 
as it did when it was established.
    We are pleased to support the provision in this bill that 
would increase the rates of SMC, R1, R2, and T. We look forward 
to this increase becoming law.
    Mr. Chairman, my family has allowed me to live a full life. 
They have spent their lives caring for me and helping me enjoy 
mine. When I am gone, the amount that will be provided to my 
spouse will fall well short of what is needed to ensure my 
family's financial security. That is not the life I want to 
leave for them. They have served their Nation in their own way 
and deserve better than to be left impoverished once I am gone. 
Because of this, I have scrimped and saved where I can to 
buildup a tiny amount so that I have something to leave them. 
This is not right.
    I pay close attention to the efforts to increase DIC 
because I know any increase in that benefit is an increase in 
my family's future well-being. DIC is intended to protect the 
livelihood of survivors after the death of their loved one and 
more must be done to ensure this promise is kept.
    PVA supports this bill's plan to increase DIC's base amount 
by 1 percent every year for 5 years. This would be the most 
significant increase in survivor benefits in years and to my 
family and many others, it would offer a ray of hope.
    Thank you again for inviting me to share my story on behalf 
of my fellow PVA members. I look forward to answering 
questions.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Tom Wheaton Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Wheaton. The written statement 
of Mr. Wheaton will be entered into the hearing record.
    Dr. Miller, I now recognize you for 5 minutes for your 
opening testimony.

                   STATEMENT OF BRIAN MILLER

    Dr. Miller. Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and 
distinguished members of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs, 
thank you for allowing me to join you and share my views on VA-
Medicare benefits coordination.
    I am a practicing physician and last week I worked in the 
hospital. I recognize that benefits coordination is just as 
important as care coordination. Today I am here in my personal 
capacity and my views do not represent those of the Johns 
Hopkins University, the American Enterprise Institute, or the 
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission on which I serve.
    I have three points to share with you today. First, 
veterans should be able to access all of their earned benefits. 
This means their veterans' health benefits and their Medicare 
benefits together. Today they cannot, and that is just wrong. 
Veterans have access to two programs, and despite their complex 
health needs, veterans are forced to choose between two 
options. Together, the VA and Medicare could more fully meet 
their needs if we improve benefits coordination.
    If you work and earn Medicare benefits and you serve and 
earn veterans' health benefits, you cannot access them and use 
them together to pay for your care. Compared to other 
Americans, veterans have not received the same respect and 
investment from health policy and improving access to benefits.
    In contrast, the Medicare's program interfaced with other 
health benefits markets has received a lot of attention. For 
example, TRICARE for Life serves as a Medigap plan, allowing 
TRICARE enrollees to fully access their Medicare and TRICARE 
benefits together. Unions and large employers have group MA 
plans so that union retirees can fully access and use their 
Medicare benefits and union retiree healthcare benefits 
together. , Congress has created these coordination mechanisms 
over 20 years ago.
    Second, H.R. 4077, the GUARD Act, is not the right answer 
to the problem of duplicative payment across the VA and 
Medicare, nor is it the solution for the lack of benefits 
coordination. Instead it transfers costs from the VA to 
Medicare. Policymakers are right to be concerned about 
duplicative payment in the VA and Medicare programs. In fact, 
this has been an issue for both formulations of Medicare, both 
fee-for-service Medicare and Medicare Advantage for years, with 
Government Accountability Office reports as far back as 1979, 
before I was born, denoting the lack of benefits coordination 
resulting in duplicative payment. I would note that Medicare 
Advantage did not exist in 1979.
    A decade after the most recent GAO report we have yet to 
fully execute on the GAO's short-term recommendations to help 
solve this problem, specifically implementing permanent data 
sharing between the VA and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid 
Services (CMS) to promote coordination across the VA and 
Medicare. We also have other near-term solutions to address the 
challenge on the MA side that has not been fully explored, such 
as the VA U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) adjuster, which 
modifies the MA benchmarks to account for VA spending, 
rendering such statutory change unnecessary. Yet this 
legislation points out the challenge of benefits coordination, 
an issue from the perspective of the VA in both the Medicare 
Advantage and fee-for-service Medicare arenas. While U.S. 
Department of Health and Human Resources (HHS) Secretary 
Kennedy has used this language in other policy arenas, his 
lessons here are applicable, as solving this problem requires 
long term solutions to address root causes.
    Third, here is what we could do in the near term and long 
term. In the near term, we should fully execute on what is 
already been recommended. We should implement a permanent data-
sharing agreement between the VA and CMS and promote the long-
term creation of technical and operational data sharing for 
enrollment, utilization, diagnosis, and other data and 
necessary information to avoid duplicative payment. We should 
also review and modify the VA DOD adjuster for MA plans as 
appropriate, while also ensuring that CMS implements prepayment 
claims editing and fee-for-service Medicare to avoid 
duplicative payment there, too.
    In the long term, we actually need to address the root 
cause. If you are a veteran, you should be able to access all 
of your fully earned benefits and use them together. You 
cannot. What we could do, one, create coordination offices at 
the VA and CMS using the model of the Medicare-Medicaid 
Coordination Office at CMS, which was actually created as part 
of the Affordable Care Act, and task the VA Community Care 
Office on the VA side. We can also create a Veterans Health 
Benefits Marketplace with an annual enrollment period aligned 
with Medicare enrollment and then apply lessons from TRICARE 
for Life and the Union Group Medicare Advantage Retiree Health 
Plans and authorize these sorts of programs on a 5-year cycle 
to ensure that veterans can fully access their earned VA 
benefits and Medicare benefits simultaneously. These programs 
could ensure that the VA health system forever remains the 
center of the veteran's care.
    There are more details in my submitted written testimony 
and I look forward to your questions. Thank you.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Brian Miller Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. Thank you, Dr. Miller. The written statement 
of Dr. Miller will be entered into the hearing record.
    Ms. Keenan, you are now recognized for 5 minutes for your 
opening testimony.

                  STATEMENT OF KRISTINA KEENAN

    Ms. Keenan. Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and 
members of the committee, on behalf of the men and women of the 
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States and its 
Auxiliary, thank you for the opportunity to prevent the VFW--to 
present the VFW's views on pending legislation. The VFW 
supports H.R. 4077, the GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act, to 
allow VA to recover costs from Medicare Advantage and Medicare 
Part D plans, closing the taxpayer cost duplication loophole 
that results in payments for care that those plans do not 
provide. This would strengthen VA's financial stability. Our 
support is backed by VFW Resolution 603, which affirms the 
organization's commitment to ensuring VA can collect 
appropriate medical reimbursements. The VFW stresses the need 
for careful implementation of this legislation and strong 
oversight to avoid administrative burdens or improper copay 
increases imposed by these insurers on veterans.
    Turning to H.R. 6047, the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson 
Veterans Benefits Expansion Act of 2025. While the VFW 
appreciates the committee's focus on strengthening the benefits 
included, we are very concerned about how this legislation will 
be financed through expanding the VA Home Loan funding fee. The 
VA Home Loan program has been one of the most impactful 
benefits ever created for veterans since World War II. It has 
helped veterans achieve stable, long-term homeownership.
    Through the 80-year history of the program disabled 
veterans have always been exempt from the funding fee. They 
earned that exemption through their service and their injuries. 
H.R. 6047 would break that longstanding promise by opposing a 
funding fee on veterans with a VA disability rating of 70 
percent or below on their second and future uses of the loan. 
That is not a minor adjustment. It makes home purchases more 
expensive and is a fundamental shift in how we treat disabled 
veterans. In accordance with VFW's Resolution 601, the VFW 
opposes reducing benefits of one group of veterans to expand 
those of another.
    The VFW recently testified at a hearing, a Senate hearing, 
and participated in House roundtables in response to numerous 
articles by the Washington Post that have claimed that 
veterans' benefits are too generous. We wholeheartedly disagree 
and urge our leaders to honor the contract. When we joined the 
military, we entered into a service contract that obligated us 
to face dangerous conditions and to train and deploy whenever 
and wherever required. That contract also obligates the Federal 
Government to provide benefits to veterans when they get out. 
For generations, these benefits have been viewed as earned 
rights, not financial levers to be manipulated by offsets.
    This proposal creates a designation where some disabled 
veterans deserve to pay and others do not. The VFW rejects the 
entire premise of that debate. Disabled veterans have already 
paid in service, injury, and hardship. They should not be asked 
to pay again through fees.
    If Congress decides to reduce this benefit, what stops 
future Congresses from going even further? Would VA charge fees 
to file claims or to access voc rehab? Why target disabled 
veterans for this offset at all? Congress has other options 
available, options that do not place the burden on disabled 
veterans.
    Regarding the Dependency and Indemnity Compensation portion 
of the bill, it includes a small increase, but it is nowhere 
near the level the VFW has been advocating. Survivors currently 
receive only 43 percent of what a totally disabled veteran 
receives, compared to the 55 percent in other Federal survivor 
programs. Under this proposal, survivors would only see a 2 
percent increase over 5 years, far short of the 55 percent 
parity the VFW has supported.
    The VFW wants to see increases in support for the most 
severely disabled veterans and we want to see survivor benefits 
strengthened. The people in this room, on this panel deserve 
that. We agree that these are long overdue. If this committee 
finds a different way to pay for these, the VFW would be proud 
to support it. We cannot endorse a precedent that makes 
disabled veterans pay and fundamentally changes how veteran 
benefits are valued, accessed, and protected. Honor the 
contract, protect the integrity of the VA Home Loan program, 
and protect the benefits that veterans have earned.
    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, this concludes my 
remarks. I am prepared to answer any questions you or the 
members of the committee may have.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Kristina Keenan Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. Thank you, Ms. Keenan. The written statement 
of Ms. Keenan will be entered into the hearing record.
    We will now turn to questions, and I yield to myself for 5 
minutes as soon as I can get down to my questions.
    Mr. Edmundson, what do you say to those who are unwilling 
to support this bill because they believe it should be done by 
another Congress? To put it more simply, why should we address 
the issue now?
    Mr. Edmundson. For one reason or another, this issue has 
been bypassed. It is very important for Eric and the hundreds 
of other veterans like him to get this bill passed to ensure 
that there--as they--Eric improves that things that he needs 
are there in place for him as he gets better and moves on with 
life. Eric has earned the right to support his family. He--Eric 
has earned that right. I am sorry. This bill would ensure that 
Eric and the other hundreds of thousands of veterans like him 
will be able to move forward in the future, in the present, 
help his caregivers who are with him 24/7. All the veterans 
have caregivers. It is just very, I apologize, it is very 
important.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Ms. Briley, can you speak more about the experience of the 
aftermath of losing your husband and raising your daughter with 
the help of DIC benefits?
    Ms. Briley. Thank you, Chairman. We have struggled. I have 
held part-time jobs. I wanted to be there for my daughter 
during her school-age years and DIC just was not enough. We, 
through my family and other--my church, I was allowed to work 
as my--the financial secretary's assistant and just offered 
part-time jobs just to make up for the loss of--I mean, my 
husband when he died, three-fourths of his salary was cut. That 
is just not enough to sustain a healthy living or a lifestyle.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Ms. Keenan, and I know you know the answer to this, but I 
want to get it on the record, do you understand that the law, 
Congress is required to have offsets increasing in mandatory 
spending?
    Ms. Keenan. Yes.
    The Chairman. I understand we have concerns about the 
offset that we are looking at and what is being proposed. What 
additional offsets do you have proposed?
    Ms. Keenan. Thank you for the question, Chairman. We are 
absolutely open to being at the table discussing directly with 
you and your team any other options for offsets that do not 
negatively impact disabled veterans.
    The Chairman. Okay. It is pretty important that everyone 
that is listening to this and know and understand that we have 
been asking for offset from the other side of the aisle to help 
with us since August. Since August. We understand that they put 
in a proposed bill, but they did that 2 weeks ago.
    This is not a game. The statement that was made earlier 
about ``The Crying Games,'' which I am not familiar with that 
movie, maybe it is an age thing, I do not know, but I pretty 
well understand what was involved in the movie and that was 
pitting one against the other. No one wants to pit our veterans 
against our veterans. We do not. We need to quit playing--we 
need to be bipartisan in how we achieve what desperately needs 
to be done on this side of the issue with our veterans that 
truly are the most severely disabled. I am more than willing to 
hear and understand, but it is not going to be when we continue 
to waste time while waiting for somebody else to come up with 
an answer.
    Let me tell you all this real quickly on my short time that 
I have left, too. The numbers that were put back here were not 
accurate. Now, anyone that has to pay, there is a concern and I 
know that the VFW does have that concern, but that was the 
numbers of everyone that uses a home loan, not everybody that 
seeks a second home loan. Okay? We will look and we will try to 
find out what the answer is going to be.
    I appreciate everyone for being here, and I now recognize 
Ranking Member for his questions.
    Mr. Takano. Well, Mr. Chairman, you are responsible for 
moving legislation out of this committee and you have the habit 
of trying to put the responsibility on veterans service 
organizations and us in the minority every time we disagree 
with your proposals to cut one set of veterans benefits to pay 
for another, one set of disabled veterans benefits to pay for 
another group of veterans. I am more than willing to have a 
conversation about offsets. It is odd to me that your go-to 
money raiser is to tax disabled veterans in order to pay for 
the benefits of another group of veterans.
    I would be happy to deliver a better bill that fully 
addresses the DIC disparity without taking a benefit from 
disabled veterans or charging them a tax to use their own 
earned benefits, just like I did with the PACT Act. You will 
recall that is what we did.
    Can you tell me who is saying that we should wait? I do not 
want to wait. I want to get this done this Congress.
    The Chairman. Yes, I will be glad to answer that question 
if you will yield.
    Mr. Takano. I will yield.
    The Chairman. We had conversations with people who have met 
with your side of the aisle and one particular person was told 
just wait till the next Congress, just wait till the next 
Congress. I think since 1993, we have waited for enough 
Congresses and we need to find the response now. We have waited 
from your side of the aisle since August.
    Mr. Takano. Reclaiming my time, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Time is reclaimed.
    Mr. Takano. I have cited two other bills that are far more 
generous than the benefits that we would offer both groups of 
severely disabled veterans. You have not brought those bills to 
this committee. I am not willing to wait. I want to get this 
done now. You are bringing a bill before us today that does a 
fraction of what those other two bills do and you know it.
    I would like to just now get to my questions. I would like 
to say to Mr. Edmundson and Ms. Briley that I deeply appreciate 
your being here and your continued advocacy on behalf of 
veterans and survivors. I will reiterate what I said to you in 
my office yesterday. I never said to either--to Mr. Edmundson 
that I want you to wait and that we can wait till next 
Congress. I hear you loud and clear, both of you, that we need 
to get your benefits enhanced now.
    Frankly, Ms. Briley, I am not happy that these benefits are 
temporary. Are temporary. They are a fraction of what they 
should be. We have--I have signed on to bills that would more 
fully close that gap. I will not let politics or self-righteous 
imposed offset rules get in the way.
    Now, Ms. Keenan, I believe that the increases in SMC and 
DIC are very much needed. In fact, especially with DIC, I think 
the increases should be even greater. Does VFW agree that these 
increases are warranted?
    Ms. Keenan. Yes, we do.
    Mr. Takano. In fact, in your conversations, is there anyone 
you know who does not want to see catastrophically injured 
veterans and survivors receive more money?
    Ms. Keenan. No.
    Mr. Takano. Well, thank you for that. I think there is 
universal agreement that SMC and DIC are long overdue for 
increases. We all want to see those benefits increase. The 
policy disagreements come when we are presented with the minor 
increases in benefits and ask other disabled veterans to pay 
for them. Personally, I do not think veterans benefits should 
have to be paid for by cuts from anywhere else at all. We made 
a promise to those who volunteered to serve that we would take 
care of them when their services were done.
    There is another way to address the cost of this bill aside 
from cutting veterans' benefits. The majority could ask for a 
waiver of House rules. They could ask other committees for 
help. They could use the committee's existing offsets. Yet they 
chose this.
    I have been trying to find an alternative way to pay for 
these increases and maybe even expand them even more. The idea 
I have landed on is the transferability of the home loan 
benefit. That is a veteran who has not used their VA home loan 
could transfer it to a dependent and, in some cases, 
descendants. I have asked this language to be drafted and we 
should have--and we should have it before the markup in the 
next few days. We would VFW support a concept like 
transferability?
    Ms. Keenan. Thank you for the question. The VFW has a 
current resolution passed at our national convention to support 
the transferability of the home loan benefit, particularly to 
descendants of veterans who were unable to use the Home Loan 
Program while they were alive. It is something that we would 
definitely take a look at and likely support.
    Mr. Takano. Mr. Chairman, I would submit, you know, the 
majority pushed through a reconciliation bill that made 
hundreds of billions of dollars, trillions of dollars in tax 
cuts permanent to billionaires and the richest corporations of 
America. Yet we are quibbling over whether or not we can afford 
this DIC and SMC increase. That does not sit square with me. We 
can find a way to do this without taxing disabled veterans.
    Thank you, and I yield back.
    The Chairman. The gentlemen yields back.
    General Bergman, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Bergman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to all 
of our witnesses. You have all been very articulate, 
passionate, and I did not see emotion. I saw the passion for 
what you have been through, how you deal with it on a daily 
basis. I share that passion with you completely. Just know we 
may have different ideas about how things should be done here, 
but I believe deep down all of the members of this committee 
are committed to doing the right thing for all of you going 
forward. Okay?
    I would like to use my time to focus a bit on H.R. 4077, 
the GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act. I believe the intent here 
is good, aiming to allow VA to recoup costs for care delivered 
to veterans who are dually enrolled in VA and insurance through 
Medicare Advantage. I am concerned that the bill may address 
the problem on the back end by billing Medicare after care is 
already delivered rather than addressing the front-end issues 
that actually create potentially duplicative costs. The right 
hand does not know what the left hand is doing, so let us kind 
of sequence them in a way that minimizes that. In doing so, 
that the way it is being done now, it could unintentionally 
shift billions into new of new expenses onto Medicare, raising 
costs for all seniors and potentially worsening care 
coordination for the very veterans that we are trying to help.
    Dr. Miller, given that nearly all veterans over 65 are 
enrolled in Medicare, could allowing VA to bill Medicare 
Advantage for virtually all care, including care that Medicare 
Advantage plans currently adjust for, could that shift 
financial burdens onto Medicare?
    Dr. Miller. Absolutely, and it does not help the veteran.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. What would happen to Medicare Advantage, 
the premiums, benefits, and networks, if plans were required to 
absorb these added costs?
    Dr. Miller. It would result in higher premiums, decreased 
supplemental benefits, and narrower networks for all seniors.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. Dr. Miller, does H.R. 4077 actually 
reduce overall Federal spending or does it simply just move 
billions in VA costs onto mandatory Medicare spending, 
ultimately worsening Medicare's fiscal situation?
    Dr. Miller. That is exactly what it does.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. Dr. Miller, if the stated problem is 
plan overpayments for veterans enrolled in Medicare Advantage, 
is not it true that CMS already adjusts benchmarks to account 
for that?
    Dr. Miller. That is correct. That was part of the 2003 
Medicare Modernization Act.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. Could VA and CMS take administrative 
action to address any remaining concerns?
    Dr. Miller. Absolutely. No statutory change is required.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. That is within their power. Okay.
    Ms. Keenan, by the way, as a father and grandfather, 
congratulations. I am excited for you. We just had the newest 
addition to our team. Our deputy chief is a new mom as of about 
a month ago. I have got pictures literally from 2 minutes ago 
of this new little bundle of joy, so congratulations. Send 
pictures when the time is right. Okay?
    Now, on a serious note, would VFW support legislation aimed 
at strengthening front end coordination between VA and Medicare 
Advantage, such as date sharing, better care integration, et 
cetera, rather than only after care is provided to a veteran? 
Can we get this going on the front end?
    Ms. Keenan. Thank you for the question. I think that is a 
great way to look at this. We would be open to having those 
discussions to make that coordination go more smoothly. We do 
have a resolution to support the reimbursement process as well, 
but we are looking for commonsense solutions. Happy to work 
more with you on some of those options.
    Mr. Bergman. Thank you. The simple version is let us be 
proactive rather than reactive. As the old saying goes, when 
you are in a hole, put the shovel down, quit digging, because 
the hole gets deeper. Crawl out, take a look at, you know, what 
is going on out there and figure out a way to do what you are 
doing.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back.
    The Chairman. Representative Dexter.
    Ms. Dexter. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you to our 
witnesses for being here. Ms. Briley and Mr. Edmundson, thank 
you for your passionate and very compelling testimony and for 
your service to our country and caring for your family members. 
Eric, you cannot imagine what your honored service means to us 
and what we need to do to take care of you and your family. 
Thank you.
    There is no question that this committee must come together 
and raise Dependency and Indemnity Compensation and Special 
Monthly Compensation. Our veteran families deserve care, and we 
must honor our commitment, our contract with them and their 
service and their families.
    What you have shared mirrors what I have heard from 
veterans across my district. It is clear we are not doing 
enough to ensure disabled veterans, caregivers, and surviving 
families have what they need to get by, let alone thrive. I 
fully support increasing these benefits and I am committed to 
working with my colleagues to make sure that we have a 
responsible and workable way to pay for them.
    However, placing a new fee on disabled veterans who are 
trying to buy a home to pay for these benefits is not an 
acceptable solution for the people I represent. If money can be 
found to give tax breaks to billionaires, we certainly should 
be able to find the money to honor the service of our disabled 
veterans.
    In Hood River, a rural county in my district, the median 
home price is now more than $800,000. Under the current 
proposal in H.R. 6047, a disabled veteran would face a funding 
fee of more than $26,000. Twenty-six thousand dollars. As Mr. 
Wheaton noted, veterans with disabilities face higher daily 
costs for everything from travel to home repairs to clothing. 
Are we really prepared to add another major expense to their 
household budgets? If a veteran cannot pay that 26,000 up front 
and it is rolled into their mortgage, the interest brings the 
total estimated cost to $162 more each month. That is $162 less 
for groceries, medication, and basic needs. For someone living 
on a fixed income, that is a serious strain.
    Mr. Keenan, can you speak to what this new fee would mean 
for veterans day to day and what it would mean for their long-
term financial stability? Sorry I said ``Mr.'' and I am looking 
at Mr. Wheaton and said Mr. Keenan, I am so sorry. It is for 
Ms. Keenan.
    Ms. Keenan. No problem. Imposing this fee on disabled 
veterans makes home ownership less affordable. You gave some 
statistics. The average VA home loan would give at least 13 to 
$15,000 more on the cost of their home. That is across the 
board, 2025 numbers from the VA. As you said, even if this gets 
rolled into the loan itself, it will take them several years 
longer just to break that equity break-even point to where it 
would make sense for them to sell their home in the future.
    It is a significant shift in the benefit. It is a reduction 
of the benefit for disabled veterans. It is very concerning 
that we would even look at that as a way to finance other 
legislation.
    Ms. Dexter. I absolutely agree. There are clearly other 
ways that we can responsibly pay for these long overdue 
increases.
    Ranking Member Takano has been developing a proposal that 
would allow loan transference to dependents, potentially 
widening the loan pool and supporting intergenerational living. 
Ms. Keenan, can you speak to what it would mean for a veteran 
to transfer their loan to a dependent and how that could 
support intergenerational wealth-building and more stable 
living arrangements?
    Ms. Keenan. I will give the example of my own mother. She 
was a Vietnam era veteran and as a woman did not even know 
while she was alive that she was entitled to the home loan 
benefit and a variety of other benefits. Women were not really 
looked at as real veterans at that time, and she struggled a 
lot in life and that home loan could have given her some 
stability, especially after she got in the military and was a 
single mother. These have real life generational impacts. I, as 
a veteran, because I served, I used the VA home loan, but this 
was decades after her period of service and after she was 
actually alive.
    We strongly support transferability to right some of these 
historic wrongs. The folks that would use this are not disabled 
veterans. They would pay the funding fee and, in fact, 
strengthen the program over time.
    Ms. Dexter. Thank you. I just also want to quickly voice my 
support for the GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act. As a physician 
who has cared for patients for over 20 years, I am laser-
focused on transformation of our healthcare system that 
recenters patients, not consolidated corporate power, and puts 
physicians who know how to serve their patients back in the 
driver's seat. Our veterans deserve to receive accessible, 
high-quality care and their benefits are meant to cover the 
services they receive, not to drive further profit for for-
profit companies. We have to get serious about fixing the 
inefficiencies that lead to these overpayments. If we do not, 
we will continue to drain VA of the resources it needs to 
improve and expand care for those who have served this country.
    I take your points, Dr. Miller, about the need for improved 
data collection and care coordination, and do not disagree. 
Those reforms alone are not enough to fix what is broken here.
    I want to thank Dr. Murphy on the other side of the aisle 
for his leadership on this bill. I hope there are ways we can 
continue to work together in a bipartisan manner to fortify the 
VA system and do right by our patients.
    Thank you so much, Mr. Chair. I yield back.
    The Chairman. The gentlewoman yields back.
    Representative King-Hinds, your recognized.
    Mr. Edmundson. Chairman Bost. Chairman Bost. I apologize. 
May I have a moment to address something that the ranking 
member brought up earlier?
    The Chairman. It is not common to be recognized from the--
when we are in the questions, but I will grant you that.
    Mr. Edmundson. Thank you, sir.
    The Chairman. Okay. Yes, I will grant you that with leave 
of the ranking member.
    Mr. Edmundson. The ranking member brought up more money. I 
appreciate that. I am all for it. Bring it on. We can sit here 
and take the easy road and come up with a number of reasons why 
not to pass this bill today. The mechanism that needs to be 
developed to ensure the offset is not the veteran's problem, it 
is this committee's problem. We can come up with a number of 
reasons to not pass this. This needs to be passed.
    If you are wanting to add more money to this bill, add it, 
but do it at a later date. I am all for that. This committee 
needs to come together in a bipartisan way and come up with a 
mechanism to get this bill passed. It has been ignored for too 
long.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Mr. Edmundson. Thank you, sir.
    The Chairman. Representative King-Hinds, you are recognized 
for 5 minutes.
    Ms. King-Hinds. Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, 
colleagues, thank you for the opportunity to speak today on two 
pieces of legislation.
    I had prepared remarks, but I was sitting here listening to 
the debate and it reminded me of a visit that I made while I 
was home to a Marine veteran, Ambrosio Ogumoro. He is a 
paraplegic, served his country, and as I was driving to his 
house, he built a flagpole and there is a flagpole waving 
there, right? You get into his house, it is his wife and 
daughter who is now taking care of him.
    I am sitting here, Mr. Edmundson, I am seeing the 
frustration on your face with regards to the manner in which we 
are debating this issue. I have to say this honestly. I come 
from a district where we have nothing. No full service VA 
facility, no nearby specialized care, no easy access to 
benefits that veterans here take for granted. When I hear these 
arguments about preserving a waiver for a second home loan, it 
feels like we are having a First World conversation while my 
district and the veterans who live there is living in a 
nonworld reality, right? We are not talking about whether 
someone can get a break on their second mortgage. We are 
talking about surviving spouses like Mrs. Briley who need the 
support, severely disabled veterans like Eric who need 24-hour 
care, families who are doing everything alone because the 
system never reaches them.
    Most people in my district, they do not even have a first 
home. Right? These conversations seem to me like First World 
arguments. When I see your frustration, I am frustrated because 
how do I honor your son's service? How do I honor you? How do I 
honor you, Mrs. Briley, for the service? Right? How do I honor 
you, Ms. Keenan?
    These are tough debates, but they are about priorities. My 
priority right now is Eric, Ambrosio, who is lying there in his 
house, paraplegic, does not have a vehicle to get to the 
hospital, which requires him, you know, a special type of, you 
know, vehicle. Right?
    I just want to say I am sorry, and I also want to say that 
I support this bill and I hope that my colleagues across the 
aisle could put the people who really need this help first. I, 
you know, I want to close by giving you, Mr. Edmundson, the 
opportunity to maybe just flesh out what your day looks like in 
terms of providing care for your very own hero.
    Mr. Edmundson. Our day is very fulfilled. Everyone in the 
home wears different hats. My wife and I came together with 
Stephanie to help with Eric's care. We took our retirement, 
burned down our debt load, so we could come on board with 
Stephanie and help take care of Eric. That came with a cost to 
us. It was a decision that my wife and I made. At the time, it 
was necessary. Today, it is not.
    Eric's care is a 24-hour-a-day task, if you want to call it 
that. Eric's disabilities, you know, from the day he gets up in 
the morning till the time he goes to bed, someone is with him 
at all times, help him with just getting dressed in the 
morning, helping him brush his teeth, help him eat his food, 
and to ensure that his life is moving forward in a positive way 
and in a safe environment.
    I cannot express enough that--the importance of getting the 
bill passed. You know, I am just a father. I am not a--but, you 
know, Eric and the hundreds like him went to--they put their 
uniform on, they did not complain. They went to war, they did 
not complain. They did what was expected of them, and they did 
not complain. They came home with catastrophic injuries. The 
hundreds of veterans that I visited with dealing with those 
injuries do not complain. They do not complain about the 
injuries or the way they--whatever happened to them to get 
those injuries. They did what was expected of them. I think 
they were--they have earned the right to come here today and 
ask this committee to do what is expected of them to get this 
bill passed to help them. Thank you.
    The Chairman. The gentlewoman's time has expired.
    Representative Budzinski, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Budzinski. Thank you very much, Chairman Bost and to 
Ranking Member Takano, for convening this hearing, and to each 
of the witnesses for being here today. I do want to give a 
special, specific thank you to Mrs. Briley and to Mr. Edmundson 
for testifying and sharing your very personal, deep stories. A 
thank you to Eric Edmundson for your service to our country. It 
is very, very appreciated.
    I 1,100 percent support expanding DIC and SMC benefits to 
help surviving families and the severely disabled veterans, 
without a question. Clearly, your stories highlight the 
affordability challenges facing veteran and Gold Star 
families--who have already sacrificed so much in their daily 
lives.
    What is hard today is I do agree with you, Mr. Edmundson, 
this committee needs to come together. We do need to find 
bipartisan solutions. We do have to find a way to pay for this 
legislation, though, as well. It is really deeply disappointing 
to me that it feels like a partisan pay-for solution here, to 
pay for something that is just so desperately needed.
    Without a question, I support the increasing of these 
benefits. The debate that we are having in this committee is 
the lack of a consensus with Republicans and Democrats coming 
together on how to pay for this. Why I cannot support the bill 
is because I cannot allow for those benefits to be paid for on 
the backs of other disabled veterans. I just personally cannot 
get past that, even though I completely agree that there is a 
fierce urgency of now to getting these benefits that are long 
overdue from getting done today. I share that.
    You know, Ms. Keenan pointed out in her testimony the bills 
pay for would hurt home-buying disabled veterans at a time when 
housing is historically unaffordable. I do want to address what 
the majority in this committee has been talking about, the 
second mortgage. I think it is a mischaracterization of what 
this is about. This is not about a veteran's lake home not 
being--you know, receiving a fee or, you know, them trying to 
prevent themselves from having to pay a fee on a second home. 
This is about mortgages of primary residences of veterans as 
well. It is not just really about vacation homes. I think when 
they talk about second mortgages, it implies that these 
veterans are people with primary residences just looking to buy 
a second home. That is a mischaracterization of what this fee 
that they are trying to impose on disabled veterans is really 
all about. I just wanted to make that clarification point 
because a number of my colleagues have made it on the other 
side.
    3.2 million veterans in our Nation have a service-connected 
disability rating of 70 percent or below. Section 3 of this 
bill would make veterans pay a funding fee if using the VA Home 
Loan Program a second or later time, so when they buy another 
home and they move to another location. These veterans would 
have to pay an average fee of $13,000 to $17,000 when getting a 
new VA home loan. That is a big jump in a cost of a mortgage 
and it is a major policy change for the worse.
    I do not think that this committee should be in the 
business of cutting benefits from for disabled veterans. With a 
very heavy heart that is what weighs on me as it relates to 
this bill and why I cannot support it.
    I just want to point out as well that we cannot forget the 
reconciliation package while we are talking about looking for a 
pay-for. The reconciliation the majority passed last summer, 
what I refer to as the Big Ugly Bill, cuts taxes for the top 1 
percent of earners by $2.3 trillion over the next 10 years. 
This bill we are looking for a $7 billion pay-for to cover the 
cost. It also imposes new Supplemental Nutrition Assistance 
Program (SNAP) work requirements on veterans.
    On top of that, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will let 
corporations claim some $16 billion in retroactive tax breaks 
this year. Again, this bill is looking for $7 billion to pay 
for this, and $362.7 billion over the next 10 years from this 
one retroactive tax break for corporations. I am at a loss on 
how we got to this place. How can we fund these giveaways to 
the wealthiest, but cut home loan benefits for disabled 
veterans?
    With that, I am going to yield back. I do want to say a 
thank you to those that have participated today and I look 
forward to working together to hopefully finding alternative 
pay-fors to get this bill done. Thank you.
    The Chairman. The gentlewoman's time has expired.
    Dr. Murphy, you are recognized.
    Mr. Murphy. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. A special thank you to 
all our witnesses today, especially to Ms. Briley and Mr. 
Edmundson and Eric. I enjoyed meeting you guys via Zoom. Thank 
you for your testimony.
    I tell you, you know, sometimes in Congress it is always 
good to get a nice little reminder. We get so damn partisan 
here sometimes and we split hairs for the sake of splitting 
hairs. Thank you for the reminder that why we are here, we 
sometimes need that a nice swift kick in the butt to remember 
these things that we immediately do not have to have a guttural 
response just because it is on the other side. I thank you for 
the reminder.
    Thank you for your service, Eric. My heart goes out to you 
and to the 7,000 other veterans who are severely disabled. My 
heart goes out to the families that care for them. Just very 
similar to families that care for those who need long-term care 
for dementia or any other things, it is oftentimes not only 
traumatic to the recipient, but also traumatic to the family. 
Seen that many, many times and I know it is crushing. It is 
life-changing. It is always a good constant reminder for us for 
people to come in front of this committee who are not 
representing special interests, who are just representing 
themselves, and special folks who have, through no fault of 
their own, been injured, traumatized, et cetera, that this is 
our duty to help.
    H.R. 6047 will increase survival benefits for half a 
million military families on the DIC program as well as Special 
Monthly Compensation benefits for which Sergeant Edmundson 
receives financial assistance and 7,000 other military heroes 
who suffered these tragic injuries. The DIC program has not 
been increased since 1993. That is unbelievable to believe. 
Legislation will increase this by 5 percent over the next 5 
years. Truth be told, it is a pittance. You guys have changed 
your lives to be able to do this, as would any parents do, but 
we should not have to ask this from you. We have to figure out 
a way to how to pay for this. Not partisan ranting one way or 
the other. We have to figure out a way to pay for this. That 
does not do justice to the problem.
    I hope, you know, after this testimony we can actually sit 
down like adults and figure out how to pay for it because the 
means is easy. The end is what we need to be worrying about. 
Thank you for your service.
    Now I am going to ping poor Dr. Brian Miller, who had to 
remind us that even as a physician he was born after 1979. 
Seriously? You know, I mean seriously? You know, I learned more 
about medicine than you ever even dreamed of by that date, so 
do not even talk to me about that. Anyway, thanks for the 
reminder.
    Going back to the GUARD Act, I want to ping you on some, 
you know, hard questions because the devil is always in the 
details. We always want great things, but the devil is always 
in the details. Thank you for bringing them up because I think 
that is important. One thing, again, we do not do enough of, we 
do not have the time for rather, sometimes we do not do enough 
of.
    Describe to me--I would love to--if you can re-flesh out 
again the short-term, long-term problems with the legislation. 
I think we want what to happen to happen. We want coordination. 
As we have learned with Obamacare, the absolute ridiculousness 
of bureaucracy that it has created, we do not need to create 
that same model in the VA.
    Dr. Miller. Simply put, data sharing between the VA and 
CMS, so that CMS for fee-for-service, Medicare and also for 
Medicare Advantage, which they can then give to the MA plans, 
data about what services veterans are using, what diagnoses 
they have, just as with the VA DOD adjuster for fixing the 
Medicare Advantage benchmark, do that way MA plans are not 
overpaid for services that the VA has paid for. With data 
sharing, you can address duplicative payment for fee-for-
service and then also address some of the diagnosis coding, 
harvesting practices by MA plans because they will not have an 
incentive to do that because they already have that data, and 
then that adjustment of the Medicare Advantage benchmark. That 
way the plan does not get extra money for services that the VA 
has already paid for.
    Mr. Murphy. Right. All right. Well, thank you. I believe 
the streamlining approach.
    Look, I think MA in its original inception was a good idea. 
We have had insurance companies that have abused their position 
of authority and responsibility. We know the big bad offenders 
who have done this have taken a good program and ruined it. We 
do not need to come in and pollute and ruin the VA and benefits 
and cost the American taxpayer more with less benefits for our 
veterans.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Time is up. Yield back.
    The Chairman. The gentleman yields back.
    Dr. Morrison, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
    Ms. Morrison. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you, Ranking 
Member Takano. Thank you so much to our witnesses for being 
here today. I especially want to thank you, Ms. Briley, and 
you, Mr. Edmundson, for your moving testimony. Thank you, 
Sergeant Edmundson, for your service to our country and your 
sacrifice.
    My husband was deployed to the same theater that yours was, 
Ms. Briley. I feel your loss really deeply. I recognize how 
profoundly unfair life can be. I want to thank you all for your 
immense sacrifice and it is admirable that you are here 
testifying today for all the others.
    I want to start by just taking a moment to talk about a 
member--another member of my family and one of my personal 
heroes who served in uniform, my late father-in-law, Bill 
Willoughby. He was a remarkable man. A proud West Point 
graduate and Airborne Army Ranger. He served two tours in 
Vietnam. During his second tour, he was wounded in combat. His 
elbow was exploded and he lost use of that arm for the rest of 
his life. He continued to command operations on the battlefield 
on that fateful day and he received a Silver Star and a Purple 
Heart for his brave actions. He is certainly a hero in our 
family.
    As we consider the bill before us today, H.R. 6047, I 
cannot help but think about our obligation on this committee to 
honor the contract with those who sacrifice so much for our 
country. The promise we make to them is that when they come 
home, they will get the care and benefits that we owe them. If 
you do not come home, we will do everything in our power to 
take care of their loved ones.
    I think most of us here would agree that increases To 
Special Monthly Compensation, that is SMC, and Dependency and 
Indemnity Compensation, DIC, are long overdue. When it comes to 
strengthening survivor benefits specifically, I have proudly 
worked across the aisle on legislation like Love Lives On. The 
Love Lives On Act, which would ensure that survivors can still 
access their benefits if they remarry before age 55, and we 
need to get that legislation across the finish line.
    As we talk about H.R. 6047 today, I have to agree with many 
of my colleagues that boosting certain benefits at the expense 
of another pool of benefits is a nonstarter. I would be remiss 
if I did not mention that my late father-in-law's disability 
rating was 50 percent. Despite all that he went through and 
sacrificed in his military service, he would not have met the 
threshold that our Republican colleagues have set to remain 
exempt for the home loan fees. We know this would be the case 
for many others as well.
    The last point I want to make before jumping into my 
questioning is just that it has been said already, but I think 
it is worth repeating, it is astonishing to me that my 
Republican colleagues have proposed that we take away certain 
benefits for disabled veterans as an offset when exactly 6 
months ago today they voted to explode the deficit by $4 
trillion in the cruelly named One Big Beautiful Bill. If we can 
find the money to pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest among us, 
surely we can find another way to pay for much needed increase 
in the SMC and DIC benefits.
    Ms. Keenan, I want to turn to you. Contrary to President 
Trump's claim that affordability is a hoax that was started by 
the Democrats, the cost of living is a top concern for the 
American people right now, including our veterans. By the way, 
let us not forget that the President and congressional 
Republicans just cut $1 trillion in Medicaid and nearly 200,000 
billion in food assistance, which 1.6 million and 1.2 million 
veterans rely on, respectively.
    At a time when housing costs are exorbitant and home 
ownership is becoming increasingly unattainable for far too 
many Americans, I am concerned by this proposal to chip away at 
the VA loan program for disabled veterans. The median price of 
a home in Hennepin County, Minnesota, where I am from, is about 
$400,000. For a veteran in my district who does not meet the 
required 80 percent disability rating proposed under H.R. 6047, 
that is as much as an additional $13,000 coming out of their 
pocket.
    Ms. Keenan, I would argue that it is never a good time to 
slash benefits for veterans, but can you talk about why this 
moment in particular is such a harmful time to be restricting 
the fee waiver for VA home loans?
    Ms. Keenan. Thank you for that question. We often talk a 
lot about the importance of housing stability for veterans. Any 
instability when it comes to housing can be an increased risk 
of veteran suicide. While this is not a compensation benefit 
for disabilities, it is still a very important benefit for 
veterans. As housing prices increase, we do not want to see 
this benefit reduced. Frankly, we cannot support any reduction 
in earned benefits. We want to see expansions in benefits 
primarily because cost of living keeps going up. We want to 
address those without cutting what we have already fought to 
earn. Thank you.
    Ms. Morrison. Thank you. I see that my time has elapsed, 
Mr. Chair. I just wanted to make a plea that we find a 
bipartisan solution so that we can increase these benefits.
    The Chairman. The gentlewoman's time has expired.
    Dr. Conaway, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Conaway. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, Ranking 
Member Takano, for bringing us together. Certainly heartfelt 
thanks to the witnesses who presented themselves here today.
    I cannot imagine. Well, I am a physician and certainly have 
taken care of people in extremis and have had long discussions 
with them about how they manage their life, facing such 
difficult hardships with their health. It is particularly 
poignant when you understand that you are talking about a 
veteran who has given so much to our country and what our 
responsibility is as a Nation to honor that commitment and that 
service and that sacrifice, not only by the veteran, but by the 
families who care for them and love them. We should be a 
grateful Nation for what has been done on our behalf and on 
behalf of freedom. It is arguable that we have not met that 
commitment over multiple administrations and for far too long.
    We can all agree on this committee that we want to see 
increases in the Special Monthly Compensation and in the 
Dependency and Indemnity Compensation. At a time when the cost 
of groceries, healthcare, housing has increased significantly, 
our veterans need and deserve more. I am a veteran myself. I 
used the VA loan for my own primary residence. I understand how 
important--I have served on the base locally where I am from, 
and taken care of veterans for much of my career, and so 
certainly have understood my parents, my uncles, all certainly 
also involved, as it turns out, also involved in the military.
    It is important that we find ways to increase the 
compensation without further burdening other veterans. Mr. 
Edmundson, I appreciate your call that we need to take on our 
responsibilities and do what we need to do. I agree with that 
wholeheartedly. I would say to you that is what we are 
attempting to do here and that we can do this very important 
responsibility without moving money from a program that 
supports veterans while we do what we should do for the Special 
Monthly Compensation, the Dependency and Indemnity Compensation 
programs. We can do both of those things and we have time to do 
it.
    Hopefully, we can come up with an agreement that will allow 
us to avoid the very regrettable situation where we are can I 
say robbing Peter to pay Paul? We should not do that. As has 
been mentioned repeatedly, we did find ways to offer an 
enormous tax, and I do not think it is a partisan statement, I 
think it is a statement of fact, to offer enormous benefits to 
the wealthiest people in the world and we are burdening future 
generations with enormous debt while we are doing that and to 
find a relatively small amount of money. Of course, you could 
say that here in Washington, I guess we are talking about $7 
billion. That is a lot of money to the American people. When 
you recognize, however, how much money has been spent to enrich 
the wealthiest people in the world and the generational cost of 
that, we can do better than that. We can certainly take care of 
all we need to do in this program without costing other 
disabled veterans to pay for that program.
    Ms. Keenan, disabled veterans have never paid a VA home 
funding fee. Yet this bill we are taking up today for 
discussion imposes a funding fee for veterans with a disability 
rating of up to and including 70 percent. What message would 
imposing such a fee have on these heroes, these disabled 
veterans?
    Ms. Keenan. Thank you for the question. The VFW feels very 
strongly about this. I represent 1.4 million veterans and their 
families who wholeheartedly believe that veterans' benefits 
should not be reduced. By making this--even having this 
discussion makes veterans believe that other benefits could be 
at risk. Will we see education benefits reduced? Will we see 
disability benefits reduced? Will we see fees on other things? 
It is the starting point of a discussion to reduce benefits and 
we simply do not support that.
    Mr. Conaway. I will just ask this question. Perhaps we will 
have time to answer it. This bill does not include a 
grandfather clause for individuals already serving in the 
military or veterans who have already utilize the program. Why 
would a grandfather clause be important for both individuals 
already in the military and veterans who have already utilized 
the program once? How costly would it be for a veteran with a 
disability rating that I have already mentioned, who already 
has this benefit, to have to pay a second full funding fee the 
second time that you utilize the Home Loan Program?
    With that, I will end and yield back.
    The Chairman. Thank you. All questions are completed. I 
want to say thank you to the first panel for being here today. 
I think it has been an enlightening talk to say the least. Now 
you are excused from this panel and we want to invite our 
second panel to come up.
    I would like to welcome our second panel today. With us 
today we have Ms. Margarita Devlin. She is principal deputy 
secretary to benefit--performing the delegable duties of the 
undersecretary for benefits for the Department of Veterans 
Affairs. She is accompanied by Ms. Stephanie Li, assistant 
director for regulations, legislation, engagement, and training 
at the Veterans Benefits Administration for the Department of 
Veterans Affairs; Ms. Heather Ford, acting chief financial 
officer at the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) for the 
Department of Veterans Affairs; and Mr. Kevin Johnson, director 
of revenue operations for the Office of Finances at the 
Veterans Health Administration for the Department of Veterans 
Affairs.
    I would appreciate you all being here today. If you would, 
can you please rise and raise your right hand?
    [Witnesses sworn.]
    The Chairman. You may be seated. Thank you all and let the 
record reflect that the witnesses have answered in the 
affirmative.
    Ms. Devlin, you are recognized for 5 minutes for your 
testimony.

                 STATEMENT OF MARGARITA DEVLIN

    Ms. Devlin. Good morning, Chairman Bost, Ranking Member 
Takano, and members of the committee. Thank you for the 
opportunity to discuss the impacts of pending legislation. I 
appreciate the committee's ongoing commitment to improving the 
lives of our Nation's veterans, their families and survivors. I 
also want to thank Sergeant Eric Edmundson for his service and 
sacrifice and the sacrifices of the Briley and Edmundson 
families. Appreciated their testimonies.
    Joining me today from the Veterans Health Administration 
are Ms. Heather Ford, acting chief financial officer, and Mr. 
Kevin Johnson, director of revenue operations, Office of 
Finance, and from the Veterans Benefits Administration, Ms. 
Stephanie Li, assistant director for regulations, legislation, 
engagement, and training.
    VA supports the intent of Sections 2A and B of the Sharri 
Briley and Eric Edmundson Veteran Benefits Expansion Act of 
2025, and we look forward to working with the Congress to 
provide additional details and adjustments to the language. 
Section 2A would increase certain allowances payable under 
Special Monthly Compensation, or SMC. These SMC allowances 
provide critical support who--for veterans who, due to severe 
service-connected disabilities, require regular aid and 
attendance or who experience significant loss such as blindness 
or loss of limb.
    This bill proposes increasing these rates by $833.33 
beginning December 1, 2026, which would bring standard aid in 
attendance up to approximately $3,702 and the higher level to 
about $5,108. VA recommends rounding these rates down to the 
nearest whole dollar to maintain consistency with the other 
rates in 38 USC 1114 and to simplify claims processing. VA also 
recommends building an automatic annual cost of living 
adjustments, which we call COLA, by amending 38 USC 5312 to 
align with other Federal entitlement programs and improve 
efficiencies and ensure more timely adjustments.
    Section 2B would authorize automatic annual increases to 
the basic rates of Dependency and Indemnity Compensation, or 
DIC, for surviving spouses equal to the Social Security cost of 
living adjustment plus 1 percentage point for 5 consecutive 
years. The DIC rates for surviving spouses with dependent 
children and surviving parents would continue to receive an 
annual COLA equal to the COLA under Title 2 of the Social 
Security Act. The additional amounts for surviving spouses who 
are housebound or in need of aid of attendance would not 
receive a COLA. As drafted, this exacerbates different COLA 
treatment across DIC categories.
    Section 3 would amend the Home Loan Program to eliminate 
the current waiver of certain fees for veterans with service-
connected disabilities through September 30, 2035. The 
Department is reviewing this section and looks forward to 
working with Congress on further refinement.
    VA supports the goal of H.R. 4077, Guarantee Utilization of 
All Reimbursements for Delivery of Veterans' Health Care Act. 
The objective of this bill is to enhance cost recovery efforts 
and improve fiscal responsibility across the government. 
Section 2A stipulates that if VA furnishes any healthcare item 
or service covered under Medicare or Title 18 of the Social 
Security Act to persons enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans or 
Medicare Part D prescription drug plans, the organization or 
sponsor of these plans would be required to reimburse VA for 
such items or services. VA supports these efforts.
    Under current law, VA is prohibited from billing Medicare 
Advantage plans resulting in duplicative costs to taxpayers. 
Current law also prevents VA from recovering costs from any 
payer for service-connected care. Section 2 would end this 
practice by requiring private insurers to reimburse VA for the 
cost of care. Section 3 of the bill would amend cost recovery 
to enhance and clarify VA's authority to recover reasonable 
charges for certain care or services furnished to veterans for 
non-service-connected disabilities from third parties, 
including private health insurers, employer sponsored plans, 
automobile insurers, and parties subject to civil liability. VA 
supports Section 3 of the bill, subject to amendments, 
including the enhancement of its cost recovery authorities, but 
recommends technical edits to ensure these provisions have 
maximum effect.
    Mr. Chairman, this concludes my statement. I thank you 
again for your leadership and for your attention to the needs 
of our veterans, their families, and survivors. My colleagues 
and I would be pleased to answer any questions the committee 
may have.

    [The Prepared Statement Of Margarita Devlin Appears In The 
Appendix]

    The Chairman. Thank you. The written statement of Ms. 
Devlin will be entered into the hearing record.
    We will now turn to questions and I will recognize myself 
for 5 minutes.
    Ms. Devlin, currently, how many surviving spouses receive 
DIC payments?
    Ms. Devlin. Thank you for the question. As of the end of 
November, we have 12,000 pending claims. I do not have the 
active--oh, sorry. I do have the active number, 552,505 active.
    The Chairman. Thank you. Do you think the size of the 
program has made it difficult to increase those payments?
    Ms. Devlin. Yes, sir.
    The Chairman. Do you believe DIC is at a reasonable rate 
for helping survivors today?
    Ms. Devlin. Thank you for that question. I believe after--
especially after hearing the testimonies earlier of the panel, 
it is clear that there are significant expenses for disabled 
veterans and those expenses and those debts can be passed down. 
The Department does not have an opinion at this time. We are 
still analyzing the impacts of the proposed legislation.
    The Chairman. What is the average age of a DIC recipient?
    Ms. Devlin. The average age, I believe, is over 55, if I 
remember correctly.
    The Chairman. The administration has, shifting over to 
something else here, the administration has prioritized 
survivors. It has moved the Office of Survivors Assistance back 
into the Office of the Secretary. How do you think this is 
helping the survivors?
    Ms. Devlin. Yes, sir. Secretary Collins is very interested 
in taking care of our survivors and that places the right level 
of emphasis on that office.
    The Chairman. I think the original agreement, if you were 
around when that came about a couple administrations ago, was 
so that they could actually have input close by and their 
beliefs. I think that is a very good thing.
    You heard, obviously, Mr. Edmundson testifying about the 
cost associated with providing Eric with the most normal life 
possible. Does not this $10,000 increase help? Would not it 
help provide to make sure that they were compensated for 
further--that heavy load burden?
    Ms. Devlin. We are still analyzing the impacts of the bill.
    The Chairman. Okay.
    Ms. Devlin. I have no--I can tell you, though, that having 
been a rehabilitation counselor and working with severely 
disabled veterans, I do recognize the needs, the extra needs 
that they have. That comes with a cost for sure.
    The Chairman. Yes. I have no further questions, and I 
recognize the ranking member.
    Mr. Takano. Thank you. My Republican colleague seems to be 
implying that the pay-for, or what I would call a tax, on 
subsequent home loans for disabled veterans only impacts a 
small population of the overall veteran population. Ms. Devlin, 
in your estimate, how many veterans and servicemembers would 
the newly would be newly subject to the funding fee or tax in 
this bill?
    Ms. Devlin. We are still finalizing the numbers on that. I 
do not have those numbers for you today.
    Mr. Takano. Thank you. Can you describe who typically uses 
a subsequent VA home loan and why?
    Ms. Devlin. I have got Ms. Stephanie Li here who works in 
our Home Loan Guarantee program. I am going to ask her to 
elaborate on that.
    Mr. Takano. Sure.
    Ms. Li. Thank you, Ms. Devlin. Subsequent use, what it 
really means is, it is just the use after your initial use. 
That could be an Active Duty servicemember who used the benefit 
and due to a change in duty station, now is being asked to move 
and is looking to purchase a home.
    Mr. Takano. It is not about a vacation home.
    Ms. Li. No. We have a requirement in statute that veterans 
certify to their intent to occupy the residence as a home.
    Mr. Takano. It is actually required by statute?
    Ms. Li. Correct.
    Mr. Takano. It is common for servicemembers or their 
veteran spouses who face multiple deployments or are forced to 
move Expiration Term of Service (ETS) to have more than one 
simultaneous home loan, is not that right?
    Ms. Li. I cannot speak to how common it is, but, yes, we do 
have veterans and Active Duty servicemembers in our program 
with multiple active guarantee loans.
    Mr. Takano. There is a really good explanation for why they 
might have multiple homes, you know, given the nature of how 
they have to move around.
    Ms. Li. Sure. I mean, just servicemembers, like any other 
individual, oftentimes, you know, change homes.
    Mr. Takano. Yes. A disabled veteran who is now a military 
spouse and is forced to move to support their Active Duty 
spouse could now be subject to a new home loan fee under this 
legislation?
    Ms. Li. For an Active Duty servicemember, most Active Duty 
servicemembers would not be exempt. We do have exemption for 
those that have a Purple Heart, but most Active Duty 
servicemembers, unless they previously served a period----
    Mr. Takano. A disabled veteran who is now a military 
spouse.
    Ms. Li. Oh, a military spouse, I apologize. Military 
spouses are--have their own exemption if they are in receipt of 
Dependency and Indemnity Compensation.
    Mr. Takano. Depending on their service--their disability 
rating. Is that right?
    Ms. Li. Are you----
    Mr. Takano. We are talking about the spouse, a military 
veteran who is a spouse.
    Ms. Li. Oh. Yes.
    Mr. Takano. Yes. I just wanted to clarify.
    Ms. Devlin, Secretary Collins has claimed that savings from 
staff cuts and contract cancellations instigated by Department 
of Government Efficiency (DOGE) would be used for veterans 
benefits. Do you know how much these savings amount to?
    Ms. Devlin. I do not have an exact number for you here.
    Mr. Takano. There is not an exact number you have?
    Ms. Devlin. I do not.
    Mr. Takano. Okay. Could those savings be applied for the 
bill before us today to increase SMC and DIC benefits?
    Ms. Devlin. Again, we are still analyzing the impacts and 
costs for these bills, so I cannot respond to what the exact--
--
    Mr. Takano. Even if it is partial. I mean, theoretically, 
these--so these savings that the Secretary is claiming could be 
used for this. Right?
    Ms. Devlin. Any savings that have been achieved, have--will 
be and have been invested in two programs.
    Mr. Takano. You are not able to opine on whether or not 
they are enough to pay this bill. You are still analyzing, is 
that right?
    Ms. Devlin. Cannot opine. That is correct.
    Mr. Takano. Okay. Ms. Devlin, we are focused on survivor 
benefits programs today. I understand that Chapter 35 education 
benefits for survivors are in your purview. Is that right?
    Ms. Devlin. That is correct.
    Mr. Takano. Seventy-five thousand survivors and veteran 
families experience months of delays in receiving their VA 
education payments, impacting their finance and putting them at 
greater risk of food and housing insecurity. I have been 
pushing the VA to publicly address the problem, but veterans, 
their families, their survivors, and Congress have been left in 
the dark. Nobody in the VA hierarchy between you and the 
Secretary have responded to my multiple inquiries and letters 
on the issue. Can you tell me why that is?
    Ms. Devlin. We are working on responses to your inquiries. 
I will tell you when we are--we have been working very hard on 
taking care of those beneficiaries who are receiving Chapter 35 
benefits. We have reduced the backlog dramatically. Our average 
days to complete is currently at 24.7 days for those and our 
backlog, the average wait time is about 58 days.
    Mr. Takano. Well, thank you. When will all the 
beneficiaries in my district and nationwide receive those 
overdue payments?
    Ms. Devlin. They have been receiving them already. We are 
down to the last bit of trying to get through this backlog, 
which will be resolved, we are estimating, no later than the 
middle of this month.
    Mr. Takano. All right. Well, you mentioned that the 
Department is still analyzing Section 3 of the bill, which 
would be for the first time--which would for the first time 
ever make disabled veterans subject to a home loan funding fee 
or tax. What is the Department's position on the reduction of 
disability benefits in general? Is that something the 
Department feels is warranted?
    Ms. Devlin. We are not considering reduction in disability 
benefits at this point, no.
    Mr. Takano. Well, how then would you justify the effort you 
led to cut presumptions of service connection under the PACT 
Act, as you did with male breast cancer?
    Ms. Devlin. The issue--thank you for that question. The 
issue of male breast cancer is that the previous administration 
had characterized that condition as a reproductive cancer. The 
PACT Act specifically calls out reproductive cancers and other 
cancers, but male breast cancer is not a reproductive cancer. 
It can be service-connected and we do provide service-
connection disability benefits for male breast cancer.
    Mr. Takano. Well, at least conceptually, does the 
Department support cutting one veteran's benefits to pay for 
another?
    Ms. Devlin. I do not have a position on that currently.
    Mr. Takano. Well, can you tell me other presumptions of 
service connection that the Department is thinking of cutting?
    Ms. Devlin. I do not have anything to share with you at 
this moment.
    Mr. Takano. Well, thank you. I yield back.
    The Chairman. The gentleman's time has expired.
    General Bergman, you are recognized.
    Mr. Bergman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you all for 
what you do every day.
    Ms. Devlin, I am just going to focus a few questions right 
to you. Okay. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 
H.R. 4077 would cause VA to collect $10 billion, billion with a 
B, annually from Medicare Advantage plans for services those 
plans would otherwise pay to providers other than VA. Is not it 
true that these VA collections are discretionary and do not 
reduce Federal mandatory spending while Medicare's costs would 
rise on the mandatory side?
    Ms. Devlin. I am going to defer to my VHA colleagues on 
that question, sir, if you do not mind.
    Ms. Ford. Thank you for that question. I am going to ask 
Mr. Johnson, who is the director of revenue operations.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. Yes or no? My time is clicking here. 
Give me an answer. I do not care who it is.
    Mr. Johnson. I do not know the answer whether or not it is 
a discretionary, whether or not it would impact CMS budgets. I 
think we would have to check with CMS.
    Mr. Bergman. Well, Okay. Then take it for the record. I 
would like an answer.
    Number two. Okay. Ms. Devlin, if you could just defer to 
whoever it is right away if it is not your call to make. I just 
had your name on the top of the list. An unintended consequence 
of requiring Medicare Advantage plans to reimburse VA could be 
to discourage plans from enrolling veterans, limiting their 
healthcare choices. Has VA considered this possibility and how 
could it negatively, potentially negatively affect veterans? 
You guys considered that?
    Ms. Ford. At this time we are still analyzing the bill and 
we have not looked at that specific piece.
    Mr. Bergman. Okay. You are going to consider that as a 
possibility as you analyze the bill?
    Ms. Ford. We can certainly take a look at that.
    Mr. Bergman. I would appreciate that very much.
    Okay, last question. If the goal of H.R. 4077 is to ensure 
that VA bears responsibility for costs it should appropriately 
cover, would not improved front end coordination between VA, 
CMS, and Medicare Advantage plans be more effective than 
billing Medicare Advantage plans after the fact.
    Ms. Ford. Thank you for that question. Improved 
collaboration with our Federal partners is always a positive. 
However, that does not necessarily fix the challenge--or the 
opportunities there are with this bill in terms of closing the 
tax----
    Mr. Bergman. Advance planning, usually to the 80 percent 
level, most cases, there is going to be 20 percent that you 
just could not advance plan for the. That is kind of what we do 
in the military, you know, advance planning for operations so, 
you know, we win and minimize casualties. Anyway, I would 
suggest that the advanced planning, the advanced thoughtfulness 
is going to better the outcome for the veterans, save time in 
the end, and, most importantly, I think, make sure that the 
funds that are spent are wisely spent. You can always do an 
after action afterwards to see where you did not quite get it, 
but let us work it on the front end.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back.
    The Chairman. Representative Cherfilus-McCormick recognized 
for 5 minutes.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I wanted 
to talk about the VA home loans. Many of our constituents have 
asked several questions. I think everyone here agrees that the 
Special Monthly Compensation and the Dependency and Indemnity 
Compensation for disabled veterans and the survivors of 
disabled veterans must be increased to reflect the economic 
realities these individuals face. However, both of these bills 
only enact a modest increase to DIC and SMC, while 
simultaneously increasing home loan fees on other veterans with 
service-connected disabilities. At a time of skyrocketing home 
prices, disabled veterans cannot afford to foot another 
surprise bill.
    Ms. Devlin, in your testimony the VA submitted to the 
committee, your Department was quiet on the proposed home loan 
fee offset in H.R. 6047. Specifically, you wrote, ``The 
Department is reviewing Section 3 of the bill and looks forward 
to working with Congress on further refinement.'' My question 
is for you. What further refinement you would like to work on 
and when we receive your comments on the bill?
    Ms. Devlin. Thank you for the question. We are working on 
looking at the impact of the bill and looking at the numbers. 
We do not have that information for you today, but we will 
share that as soon as we have it.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Do you have a timeline, because we 
are trying to meet the needs, that you think that you will be 
able to give it to us? Are----
    Ms. Devlin. We are working----
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. I am sorry, go ahead.
    Ms. Devlin. We are working through it as quickly as we can, 
though.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Are there any things that you want 
to talk about now that you want to specifically work on or will 
we find that out when you submit the comments?
    Ms. Devlin. We will provide that.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Thank you. The median home price 
today is over 400,000 according to recent analysts by Forbes. 
That means a veteran could be paying between 2,000 to 14,000 
extra. For disabled veterans living on a fixed income, these 
fees are not sustainable, especially if they are looking to 
downsize or move.
    Ms. Devlin, has your Department analyzed the impact of 
increased home loan fees on the solvency of the VA Home Loan 
Program?
    Ms. Devlin. That is the information we are still 
evaluating. The home loan fees do help sustain the Home Loan 
Program, but we are still analyzing the impacts of the bill.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Could you give any kind of 
preliminary estimate on that at this moment?
    Ms. Devlin. No, ma'am. Sorry, not at this time.
    Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick. Thank you. I yield back.
    The Chairman. Having no one else that is seeking 
recognition, Ranking Member, do you have any closing statement?
    Mr. Takano. I do, Mr. Chairman.
    As we bring this hearing to a close, I think we need to put 
this conversation into context. I felt that this committee 
examined the issues before us with intensity and with 
sincerity. Costs are rising across the country and populations 
fixed on incomes--on fixed incomes, like the many service-
connected disabled veterans, are particularly impacted by those 
rising costs. They very much need additional assistance and we 
must find a way to deliver.
    Earlier this year, Congress passed a bill cutting taxes for 
the uber wealthy and did not offset the cost. Moreover, 
Congress added $100 billion for U.S. Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (ICE) and $150 billion for DOD just for the coming 
year. Yet we are here today asking disabled veterans to fork 
over $7 billion to cover benefits for other disabled veterans 
and their families over the next 10 years when these veterans 
have already paid the cost, they have already paid their taxes. 
Chairman Bost and Mr. Barrett and this majority have set up a 
false choice between taking care of our most severely injured 
veterans and survivors and keeping disabled veterans benefits 
intact.
    When this administration and the majority wants to move a 
priority, they have accepted literally hundreds of billions of 
dollars of deficit spending. Yet here they are trying to force 
disabled veterans to pay for these $7 billion in benefits? This 
is false scarcity at its finest.
    Let me quote the statement for the record submitted by the 
Disabled American Veterans (DAV) today, quote, ``We cannot 
support the provision of funding fees on disabled veterans and 
urge the committee to remove that provision. Furthermore, DAV 
firmly opposes all rules or statutes that require veterans 
benefit increases to be, quote, 'paid for,' end quote, by cuts 
to other veterans benefits. Cut-As-You-Go (CutGo) and all 
similar PAYGO rules and laws essentially require veterans to 
pay for their own benefits. Whereas we all believe that all 
Americans should be paying for the benefits and services 
veterans have earned in defending our freedom,'' end quote.
    In March 1982, 43-1/2 years ago, DAV also testified to this 
very committee on this very topic, saying at the same time, 
quote, ``Frankly, Mr. Chairman, the DAV is opposed to the 
concept of charging veterans for the benefits they have earned. 
It seems to us at least that service-connected disabled 
veterans have already paid the price,'' end quote. I could not 
agree more.
    Back then, this committee agreed, stating in a report to 
the Budget Committee that the original funding fee proposal 
required an amendment to, quote, ``exempt service-connected 
disabled veterans from payment as the committee believes these 
veterans must receive priority and preferential treatment in 
view of the disabilities incurred in service to their Nation,'' 
end quote.
    This committee further made its position clear in the 
committee's report on the Fiscal Year 1983 Reconciliation Bill, 
stating, quote, ``During the deliberation, the committee felt 
that the proposals were too heavily weighted against service-
connected disabled veterans, veterans the committee has always 
given the highest priority,'' end quote.
    I ask what has changed since then, Mr. Chairman? Mr. 
Barrett's bill very plainly cuts benefits from one group of 
veterans in order to fund benefits for another. Cuts benefits 
from one group of disabled veterans in order to fund benefits 
for another group of disabled veterans. This is a very 
troubling precedent and one that I simply cannot support.
    Unto Mr. Edmundson and Ms. Briley, I hear you, and if they 
are not in the room, I hear--I want them to know that I hear 
them loud and clear. We must get DIC increase and SMC increases 
done. We need to do it this year, not wait for the next 
Congress. We need to do it this Congress and we need it done as 
soon as possible.
    A bill addressing the full benefits disparity needs to come 
to markup as scheduled in 2 weeks, and it needs to pass this 
committee. It cannot force one group of veterans to pay for the 
benefits of another, one group of disabled veterans to pay for 
the benefits of another group of disabled veterans. Congress 
needs to do its job and find a bipartisan way to pay for both 
the DIC and SMC increases and also pay for veterans to use 
their earned VA home loan benefit.
    Mr. Edmundson is right. It is not his job to figure this 
out. It is our job, Mr. Chairman. As I said, the American 
people are willing to pay for this. If catastrophically 
disabled veterans and survivors of fallen servicemembers are 
not worthy of American tax dollars tell me who or what is.
    Now, Mr. Chairman, I am thankful for the relationship we 
have. We do not always agree and we go toe to toe and we always 
shake hands after we do so. I appreciate that and you. I have 
made it clear I am willing to do what we need to do for a bill 
to move forward, but that means it must be paid for in a 
different way. Will you commit to removing the provision that 
cuts veteran benefits and work in a true bipartisan manner to 
find an acceptable pay-for that does not charge one group of 
veterans to use their own earned benefits? Would you work with 
me on figuring out an alternative?
    The Chairman. I will commit that we are going to make sure 
this bill gets across the finish line somehow. I will, also, in 
my closing, explain a lot of things that I think we can do. The 
concerns I have is not--you are asking on record, and I want to 
give an answer on record that I would be glad to do that if 
when we asked for you to come forward to help us on something, 
you would not wait until we actually start to move the bill 
before you come up and say, no, we need to now work on this. 
That is what I have seen.
    Mr. Takano. Well, Mr. Chairman, I would beg to differ that 
we wait till the last minute. We have responded. In fact, many 
elements of the bill you brought forward have been changed in 
response to our input. We have not waited till last minute. You 
know, we are working vigorously on, you know, the ability--the 
flexibility in transferring our, you know, our proposal to 
transfer the home loan benefit to descendants. Hopefully that 
can be a part of our discussion. I hear in your response some 
openness to trying to come to a resolution before we bring this 
to markup.
    You know, I just want to say, I will ignore the fact that 
this bill was only introduced a few days ago, just before we 
left for the Thanksgiving holiday. Instead, I will focus on 
what we can control and which, for these purposes, is how 
seriously we are going to take this task and how thoroughly we 
are vetting our ideas. Instead of running with the first idea 
that sounded plausible, we have been working hard to ensure 
that the ideas we are putting forward to pay for legislation 
are sound, supported by the community, and do not disadvantage 
one group of veterans in service of another.
    I do not think the majority can say the same, but I will 
point out that the majority, as the majority, has pointed out, 
that the original draft of the bill is different than from what 
was introduced because of the feedback we gave. Now, you cannot 
have it both ways.
    I want to--I want everyone in this room to know and 
understand that no one is playing games here and that no one is 
trying to derail this legislation. Instead, we are trying to 
improve it in measured and thoughtful ways so that it best 
serves all veterans, their families, and survivors. That takes 
effort. It takes some time, but we are working as quickly as we 
can as we can to get this done. We want to see these benefits 
increased as much as anyone, we want to see it done in this 
Congress.
    As I close, I would like to thank you, Mr. Chairman, for 
your willingness to engage with us. I would like to end with a 
quote from the American Legion's statement for the record of 
this hearing, quote, ``Until veterans' benefits are exempt from 
austerity measures, all VSOs will be required to choose between 
interests that conflict with one another,'' end quote. I will 
add that we in Congress must do whatever we can to avoid that 
conflict. Our veterans, their families, and their survivors 
deserve no less.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I yield back.
    The Chairman. Thank you, Ranking Member. Let me tell you 
that it is a fact that our staff has been asking, begging since 
August for you to participate. Let me give you some responses 
that came up during that time. October 1st, pouring over 
different permutations. Yes. Chewed over initially on September 
19th. Put out heads--put our heads together and send over 
something as soon as we can. Worst-case scenario, next week, 
that was September 4th.
    You cannot--I mean, I think it is kind of neat, you can 
come in the committee and claim that, oh, yes, you were more 
than willing to work when, no, actually, that has not been the 
case. Now, I hope that it will be the case from here on out.
    Also let me say this because there has been some things 
said in this committee today. Many of the people in there 
talking about this particular offset said that it was a--made 
it sound like we were not going to have veteran home loans 
covered at all. That is not the case at all. It was a case 
where we looked at a lesser disability and a second loan, which 
the idea is it allows the veteran to get their equity built so 
that the second loan--because we did have to have a pay-for. I 
was not in Congress when paygo was passed, but it is the law 
and it is something that we have to deal with. I will work and 
look forward to addressing the problems that these bills 
would--that we can fix and provide a solution for the veterans 
and their families.
    My message is simple. Understand my leadership will 
continue to work to get veterans the support and benefits they 
need. There is a statement around here that says if you are in 
the minority, you communicate. If you are in the majority, you 
legislate. We are moving forward with the bill so that we can 
legislate. If we have to drag your side of the aisle kicking 
and screaming, we are going to do it.
    As chairman, I will always put veterans first. I am a 
veteran. I am a father of veterans. I am a grandson of 
veterans. I am a son of veterans. This has always been my 
priority in this position and it will continue to be so. I look 
forward to working with you. I look forward to the fact that, 
hopefully, our staffs will then look forward to working to try 
to get this done.
    With that, I ask unanimous consent that all members shall 
have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks and 
include any extenuous materials. Hearing no objection, so 
ordered.
    The hearing now is adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 12:51 p.m., the Committee was adjourned.]

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                         A  P  P  E  N  D  I  X

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                    Prepared Statements of Witnesses

                              ----------                              


                 Prepared Statement of Edgar Edmundson

    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, Members of the Committee, 
thank you for inviting me to testify today and thank you for your time.
    Time... it is assumed to be unlimited by the young, and spoken of 
as passing too quickly by the older and wiser--like myself, and, I 
suspect, a few of you fine folks on this committee. For my family, 
every day since October 2d, 2005 has been lived with a different 
understanding of time. We do not take a single hour for granted.
    My son, Sgt. (Ret.) Eric Edmundson, was serving in Iraq when the 
Stryker vehicle he was driving was struck by an IED. In an instant, our 
lives were split into ``before'' and ``after.'' Eric sustained multiple 
traumatic injuries that day, but it was the loss of oxygen to his 
brain--the anoxic brain injury--that changed the course of his life 
most dramatically. It robbed him of his ability to speak, to walk, and 
to live independently. It requires him to have care and assistance 24 
hours a day, 7 days a week.
    Twenty years ago, around this very time of year, I was standing 
beside Eric's bed at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital. My 25-year-old 
son--strong, driven, optimistic--lay hooked to machines that were 
keeping him alive. I remember looking at his hands, the hands that had 
held his daughter for the first time just months before he deployed. I 
kept thinking, ``Time. Give him more time. Give us time to learn how to 
help him, how to care for him, how to rebuild a life around injuries no 
family ever expects.''
    Two decades later, I am here because time has taught us a great 
deal. We have learned what it truly takes--physically, financially, and 
emotionally--to support a catastrophically injured veteran over the 
long term.
    When I speak about ``quality of life needs,'' I'm not talking about 
luxuries. I'm talking about the basics of living with dignity, safety, 
comfort, and human connection. The additional funds proposed in this 
legislation would go directly toward:

      Specialized caregivers and increased caregiving hours
    Eric requires constant supervision--not because he is unsafe, but 
because the environment around him can become unsafe for someone with 
his impairments. Trained caregivers prevent falls, prevent choking or 
aspiration, ensure proper transfers, assist with personal care, monitor 
health changes, and provide engagement that keeps him connected to the 
world. While I am enrolled in the VA's Program of Comprehensive 
Assistance for Family Caregivers, these hours add up, and families 
cannot shoulder them alone forever.

      Home modifications and maintenance of an accessible 
environment
    A home adapted for someone with severe disabilities requires 
constant upkeep as needs change over time--wider doorways, accessible 
bathrooms, safe flooring, reinforced entryways, and space that can 
accommodate medical equipment and wheelchairs. These demands often 
increase as the veteran ages and the injury evolves. While the VA SAH 
(Specially Adapted Housing) and SHA (Special Housing Adaptation) grants 
can help fund needed modifications, the process is complex and slow, 
making it difficult to find contractors willing to navigate the VA's 
requirements. Even with a strong contractor, the administrative hurdles 
can be so burdensome that many consider walking away, as we personally 
experienced.

      Transportation and mobility support
    Accessible vehicles and medical transport are essential for 
veterans to stay mobile, attend therapy, and remain connected to their 
communities, yet the costs are often prohibitive. VA Form 4502 allows 
eligible 100 percent service-connected disabled veterans to access the 
current $27,074.99 automobile grant, and in limited cases a second 
allowance may be available--either after 30 years or if a previously 
funded vehicle was destroyed in a natural disaster. Even with this 
support, accessible vehicles remain expensive, with new wheelchair-
accessible vans ranging from about $65,000 to $98,000 and used options 
typically running $18,000 to $75,000.

      Adaptive equipment and assistive technology
    Adaptive equipment for hobbies, exercise equipment, adjustable 
beds--these items are not one-time purchases. They wear out. They need 
upgrades. Technology evolves, and what worked 5 years ago is now 
obsolete. The additional funding would allow veterans like Eric to have 
tools that give them independence and comfort.

      Therapeutic and quality-of-life activities
    Activities like gym sessions with a personal trainer, painting 
classes, music therapy, adaptive recreation, community programs, and 
church or personal enrichment may not be ``medical'' on paper, but they 
are essential for quality of life--they transform mere existence into 
true living, yet are often not covered by the VA. For veterans like 
Eric, who require 24/7 care, participating in these activities involves 
significant support: organizing and scheduling outings, one or two 
caregivers assisting with physical preparation, transportation, and 
ongoing help to ensure full engagement and participation in the 
activity.

      Respite care for families
    Spouses, parents, and children who become full-time caregivers burn 
out--physically, emotionally, financially. Respite care is not a break 
from duty; it is a critical component of sustaining long-term 
caregiving and benefits the caregiver AND the veteran.

      Out of pocket expenses related to VA programs
    The Federal Government provides many benefits and services for 
veterans like Eric, but sometimes agencies like the VA are so difficult 
to navigate that families like ours end up paying out of pocket for 
needed services like: wet wipes, 4x4 gauze for stomach tube, catheters, 
dental appointments. In addition, arbitrary caps, misaligned programs, 
and increased costs of living mean that available programs don't cover 
Eric's needs. And sometimes, Eric, who will never be able to work 
again, needs to simply have cash on hand to be able to support his 
family.
    These are the things additional funding supports. These are the 
things that allow my son--and others like him--to experience life with 
dignity, purpose, and comfort.
    We have stretched every dollar, we have fought every battle, and we 
have advocated at every stage because time continues to move forward. 
Veterans like Eric do not stop needing care just because the years 
pass. In fact, as they age with catastrophic injuries, their needs 
increase.
    This legislation recognizes that reality. It acknowledges that the 
original support--while deeply appreciated--was never designed to cover 
two decades of round-the-clock care. It gives families the ability to 
adapt, to adjust, and to ensure that veterans are not simply surviving, 
but living.
    And just as importantly, this legislation addresses what happens 
when time finally catches up--when a severely injured veteran passes 
away from the very injuries they sustained in service. The proposed 
increase in Dependency and Indemnity Compensation is not a symbolic 
gesture. It is a lifeline. Families who have spent years, often 
decades, caring for their veteran do not suddenly stop carrying the 
financial and emotional weight of those injuries upon the loss of the 
veteran. The medical equipment, the home modifications, the vehicle 
payments, the caregiving expenses, the loss of income and retirement 
wages--those responsibilities don't disappear after the funeral. The 
current DIC rate simply does not reflect the reality of those 
continuing costs. An increase would allow surviving spouses to maintain 
stability, preserve the homes and systems built over a lifetime, and 
avoid financial hardship after years of sacrifice. However, in addition 
to this change, we suggest that parent caregivers enrolled in the VA's 
Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) be 
treated as spouses for the purposes of DIC eligibility. This would 
remove an inequity for a relatively small, but highly vulnerable 
population of survivors who often left their employment and lost their 
retirement to serve as caregivers, but, due to an outdated income 
threshold, do not qualify for DIC payments. Together, these changes 
honor the service member's sacrifice by protecting the family they 
leave behind.
    When I look at my son today, at 45 years old, I see a man who gave 
everything he had in service to his country. He cannot speak for 
himself anymore--so I am here to speak for him. And I am asking you to 
work together now to find a mechanism to ensure that the time he has, 
and the time all severely injured veterans have, is filled with the 
care and support they earned.
    Thank you for your time, and for considering what this support 
truly means to families like mine.

                  Prepared Statement of Sharri Briley

    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and distinguished members of 
the House Veterans Affairs Committee:

    Thank you for the opportunity to submit testimony in support of the 
Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion Act, 
legislation that will finally bring meaningful increases to benefits 
for survivors and catastrophically disabled veterans.
    My name is Sharri Briley, and I am the proud surviving spouse of 
Chief Warrant Officer Three Donovan Lee ``Bull'' Briley, an Army 
Special Operations Blackhawk helicopter pilot.
    My husband Donovan had always been larger than life. We met at a 
blood donation drive at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. On 
one of our earliest dates, he invited me to a community event at his 
junior high school. Mid-conversation, I looked up to see him sprinting 
headfirst down the side of the building, performing an Australian 
rappel with the kind of fearless energy that came to define him. At 
that moment, I remember thinking, ``Who is this guy?''
    From then on, he never ceased to surprise me, sweeping me off my 
feet and taking my breath away. It wasn't long before his bold spirit 
drew me into a love story I would never forget. We married just 10 
months after we began dating, and this December 28th would have marked 
our 42d wedding anniversary.
    Donovan was a born aviator--brave, daring, and deeply devoted to 
his family. We were blessed to welcome our daughter, Jordan, 5 years 
into our marriage. From an early age, she adapted her world around her 
father's flight schedule: sleeping in late so she could stay up at 
night to sing with him when he returned from missions. We would lie in 
bed together, singing old hymns and patriotic songs until she knew 
every word by heart. Donovan, who grew up singing in church, would 
often croon Elvis to me, and I would melt like butter every time. He 
made it a point to always fill our home with music, laughter, and love.
    He read to Jordan with theatrical flair, igniting her love of 
learning. He taught her to climb trees before she turned two, to ride 
her bike, and even pulled her first tooth. One Christmas, he jingled 
bells outside her window so she would believe Santa was arriving. It is 
these small, cherished moments that defined him far more than any medal 
ever could.
    On October 3, 1993, my husband was killed in Mogadishu, Somalia, 
while flying a mission in support of American ground forces during 
Operation Gothic Serpent. His Blackhawk helicopter was struck by a 
rocket-propelled grenade. Donovan's actions, and those of his comrades, 
were later memorialized in the book and movie Black Hawk Down. But for 
me and our daughter, Jordan, who was just 5 years old at the time, 
Donovan's sacrifice has never been a story on a screen. It has been our 
lived reality every day for thirty-two years.
    For his courage, Donovan was awarded the Distinguished Flying 
Cross, later upgraded to the Silver Star following years of advocacy 
from myself and his fellow soldiers. He also received the Purple Heart 
and two Air Medals. Yet no medal can replace the empty chair at 
birthdays, graduations, and family milestones. No decoration can fill 
the silence left by his absence. The families of America's fallen live 
with this reality for the rest of our lives.
    After Donovan's death, I made it my mission to ensure that families 
like mine are never forgotten, that the Nation that asked our loved 
ones to serve also keeps its promise to care for those left behind. I 
have worked with organizations like Hearts of Our Heroes and, as a 
proud member of Gold Star Spouses of America, I continue to advocate 
for the survivors who too often feel invisible in the aftermath of war.
    This legislation is deeply personal to me, because it acknowledges 
that survivors deserve more than words of sympathy; we deserve tangible 
support. For surviving spouses, the bill increases Dependency and 
Indemnity Compensation (DIC) by 1 percent each year for 5 years, in 
addition to the annual cost-of-living adjustment. Today, roughly half a 
million survivors receive DIC, which currently amounts to about $1,653 
per month.
    Survivors have not received a real increase in over 30 years. 
During that time, the cost of food, housing, childcare, and medical 
care has grown dramatically. A modest but meaningful DIC increase will 
help surviving spouses put food on the table, cover rent, and provide 
stability for their children. It will send a clear message that our 
government recognizes the ongoing sacrifice made by surviving families.
    The bill also strengthens support for catastrophically disabled 
veterans and their caregivers. Families like that of Sergeant Eric 
Edmundson, who sustained devastating injuries in Iraq and now requires 
daily, round-the-clock care, represent the enduring costs of war. His 
wife and parents provide that care out of love, but the financial and 
emotional burden is immense. This bill provides over $10,000 more each 
year in Special Monthly Compensation for these families. That increase 
will not erase their hardships, but it will give them greater resources 
to continue providing the dignity, independence, and quality of life 
their loved ones deserve.
    In total, more than 520,000 survivors, caregivers, and veterans 
will benefit from this legislation. This is the most significant 
expansion of survivor and caregiver benefits in decades.
    For too long, survivors and catastrophically disabled veterans have 
waited for Congress to act. This bill answers that call. It represents 
a long overdue acknowledgment that families like mine, and like the 
Edmundsons, should not have to worry whether they can make ends meet 
while carrying the invisible burdens of service and sacrifice.
    As we marked the thirty-second anniversary of Donovan's death this 
October, I reflected on his courage, his love for his family, and his 
devotion to his country. I cannot change that he did not come home. But 
you, the Members of this Committee, can change the future for the 
families who walk in my shoes today and for generations to come.
    When I think about Donovan--singing Elvis in our living room, 
reading stories to Jordan, jingling Santa's bells--I'm reminded that 
behind every legislative and policy debate are real families, real 
love, and real sacrifices.
    I urge you to pass the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans 
Benefits Expansion Act, and in doing so, deliver on the sacred promise 
that our Nation makes to its heroes and the loved ones they leave 
behind.
    Thank you for your consideration.

                                 

                   Prepared Statement of Tom Wheaton

    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and members of the committee, 
Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA) would like to thank you for the 
opportunity to submit our views on the bills being examined by the 
committee today. No group of veterans understand the full scope of 
benefits and care provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) 
better than PVA members--veterans who have incurred a spinal cord 
injury or disorder (SCI/D).

H.R. 4077, the GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act

    In recent years, there has been a noticeable uptick in the 
marketing of Medicare Advantage affinity plans to veterans, including 
those dually covered by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). 
Insurers are often able to offer incentives to attract veterans to 
these plans (e.g., $0 premiums or supplemental benefits), which 
typically do not include prescription benefits under Medicare Part D. 
Many of these veterans already receive much of their care and 
prescriptions through the VHA, so their participation in a Medicare 
Advantage plan is likely a redundant effort. Meanwhile, insurers of 
these Advantage plans receive full monthly capitated rates for their 
veteran enrollees from the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid 
Services, but they do not reimburse the VHA system for any Medicare-
covered service that occurs in VHA facilities, since the VHA is not 
allowed to bill Medicare for reimbursement.
    This legislation seeks to amend title 38, United States Code, and 
the Social Security Act to allow the VA to recover from Medicare 
Advantage and Medicare prescription drug plans part of the cost of care 
or services furnished to veterans enrolled in these Medicare benefits 
for both service--connected and non-service-connected disabilities. 
Because Medicare Advantage plans receive fixed per-patient payments for 
health care services without having payments reduced when veterans 
receive care through the VHA, it's a reasonable assumption that the 
department should have the ability to recoup some of those costs. This 
would be, in essence, a form of Medicare subvention, which PVA has 
generally supported for decades.
    The delivery of health care has changed dramatically in recent 
years, and the intense pressure to control costs, coupled with the 
rapid spread of managed care, has had an impact on every health 
delivery system in this country, including VA. We believe Congress 
should consider legislation like this which could be beneficial in a 
couple of ways. First, VA would be reimbursed by Medicare Advantage 
plans for the high-quality care it provides to veterans who had the 
opportunity to seek it elsewhere. Second, and perhaps most importantly, 
it helps preserve veteran access to VA's direct care system.
    VA's SCI/D system of care is the crown jewel of the VA's health 
care system. It is unequaled in the care it provides to paralyzed 
veterans. There are no comparable systems of such care in either the 
private sector or the world. PVA's number one priority is to protect 
this system of care. Access to the care it provides is the difference 
between life and death for our members. PVA members want to receive 
their care at the VA because it is the best care available for them. 
Allowing VA to receive payment from certain Medicare plans for care and 
services it provides these veterans is a commonsense use of taxpayer 
funds.

H.R. 6047, the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits 
Expansion Act of 2025

    PVA strongly supports provisions in this bill that would increase 
the amount of Special Monthly Compensation (SMC) for the most severely 
disabled veterans and raise VA Dependency and Indemnity Compensation 
(DIC) rates for the surviving family members of deceased servicemembers 
and veterans. PVA has long advocated for increasing these critical 
benefits. Unfortunately, little attention has been paid in recent years 
to the ongoing financial needs of these veterans and their survivors.

Increase in Special Monthly Compensation

    SMC is arguably the most important ancillary benefit for veterans 
with severe, service-connected disabilities. The benefit is unique in 
that it is dependent on non-economic factors such as the profoundness 
of the disability, personal inconvenience, and social inadaptability. 
For example, a veteran who lost the use of their lower extremities in 
service to their country is compensated not just for the loss in their 
future earnings potential, but also all future hardships and costs 
associated with the disability. VA considers entitlement to SMC based 
on the medical evidence when adjudicating a claim for service 
connection or an increase in an evaluation. VA considers it an 
``inferred issue.'' To be clear, given the extreme nature of the 
disabilities incurred by most veterans in receipt of SMC, we do not 
believe that the impact on quality of life can be totally compensated 
for; however, SMC does at least offset some of its loss.
    Some of the most seriously disabled veterans who, because of their 
disability, can no longer take care of themselves without aid, may be 
eligible for aid and attendance (A&A). There are three rates for A&A 
within special monthly compensation. If the veteran has a single 100 
percent schedular-evaluated disability and requires the aid of another 
person to perform the personal functions required in everyday living, 
the veteran would be considered for A&A under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1114 (r). 
If the veteran is entitled to the maximum rate under either 38 U.S.C. 
Sec.  1114 (o) or (p), and needs regular A&A, the veteran would be 
considered for A&A under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1114 (r)(1) or SMC R1. If the 
veteran meets the requirements for R1, and then clearly establishes the 
need for supervised, daily, skilled health care on a continuing basis, 
the veteran would be considered for a higher A&A benefit under 38 
U.S.C. Sec.  1114 (r)(2) or SMC R2. These veterans live with the most 
severely disabling conditions and might be bedridden due to a traumatic 
spinal cord injury or a disease such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 
(ALS). Currently, the SMC rates of R1, and R2 are $9,559.22 and 
$10,964.66, respectively. Meanwhile, SMC T is provided to veterans with 
severe medical residuals related to a service-connected traumatic brain 
injury (TBI). These veterans often need additional care, and SMC T is 
provided at the SMC R2 rate for additional financial support.
    Even with additional financial support, many of our most severely 
disabled veterans are struggling. They often spend more on daily home-
based care and other disability-related needs than they receive in SMC 
benefits, which generates a tremendous financial strain on them. 
Eventually, some are forced to opt for care in an institutional 
setting, which is even more costly to the taxpayer. This problem is due 
in part to SMC's baseline rates, which haven't been adjusted in 
decades, so they are inadequate to offset the burden placed on veterans 
by their disabilities.
    Most veterans receiving SMC are spending it directly on their care. 
Some veterans are fortunate to have parents or family members who can 
provide for many of their care needs. It may cost $30-$35 an hour for a 
veteran to hire someone to attend to such needs. If the veteran needed 
skilled care nursing, the cost would be much higher. Even veterans who 
have family members to help provide daily care, or receive home-based 
supports from the VHA, often need to hire additional assistance. 
Bringing someone in for just 6 hours a day could cost $180 per day or 
$5,400 a month. That's about half of the SMC a veteran with R2 
receives. In addition, many veterans who have received their R1 or R2 
rating earlier in their lives due to a training accident or wounds 
received on the battlefield, might not realize how much more aid will 
be needed as they get older. SCI/D ages with the veteran, and like any 
injury or medical condition, as the body ages the conditions get worse 
and the costs that used to be covered by their compensation are no 
longer adequate for their new needs. For those catastrophically 
disabled veterans who don't have family members close by to support 
them, it's not uncommon for them to use the bulk of their SMC for 
needed care, especially later in life.
    The higher direct and indirect costs of living with a disability 
are well documented. A 2020 study determined a household containing an 
adult with a disability that limits their ability to work requires, on 
average, 28 percent more income (or an additional $17,690 a year) to 
obtain the same standard of living as a similar household without a 
member with a disability.\1\ Many PVA members have examples of 
additional costs for daily living due to their disability that many of 
us take for granted. They run the gamut from the mundane to life 
threatening.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ The Extra Costs of Living with a Disability in the U.S.--
Resetting the Policy Table.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In my own life, I have found that living with my condition creates 
costs that many would normally not have to face. Wheelchairs are not 
sports cars that can ease through turns or whip around bends. I have 
found that drywall repairs and repairing or replacing damaged door 
frames is a constant strain on the budget. Vehicles suffer similar 
damage that need constant attention. My clothing wears out faster than 
most, as every point of contact between myself and my chair causes 
rips, tears, and worn spots. Couple that with the need for adapted and 
tailored clothes, made especially for my situation, means that the 
clothing allowance provided by the VA runs out quickly, and I find 
myself going deeper into my own pocket just to keep myself properly 
clothed. As an advocate for paralyzed veterans, I need to keep and 
maintain suits so I can participate in events like this hearing. I may 
look dapper, but maintaining this image is more costly than you might 
realize.
    Traveling is also more expensive. First, many veterans who utilize 
a wheelchair and choose to fly must travel first class, as the 
difficulty boarding and deboarding a plane is just too much due to 
their physical limitations. When we get to our destinations, we find 
many hotels whose ``accessible rooms'' aren't, because there isn't 
enough room to accommodate a large wheelchair. The accessible room with 
the roll in shower may only have a king bed. So, if a veteran has a 
caregiver traveling with them, two rooms may have to be rented instead 
of one. This makes it more expensive for travel and many of us who are 
living off the SMC we receive find it impossible to take even a small 
vacation with our families. Living with paralysis leads to added costs 
in all aspects of my life, whether it is hiring someone to do regular 
home upkeep or shovel show, or purchasing necessary items like shower 
benches; they all put a strain on the budget.
    A fellow PVA member who also lives in Colorado is housebound 
because of their service-connected condition. It is extremely difficult 
for them to do things that most of us take for granted. For a person 
with SCI/D, a trip to the grocery store can be daunting, so this 
veteran must have needed items delivered, which adds an additional $20-
$30 a trip, not including the additional markup of 15 percent, in her 
case, of the in-store items. Additionally, she incurs charges on some 
very basic errands that the average American wouldn't give a second 
thought to, such as dropping off or picking up dry cleaning, going to 
the pharmacy or post office. She utilizes an online service to help 
mitigate costs, but it is not free, and it adds up quickly.
    Another example of higher expenses is the cost of renting an 
accessible vehicle. PVA's Senior Vice President, who uses a power 
wheelchair, relayed her experience renting an accessible van for a PVA 
business trip earlier this year. She knew of two companies in the large 
metropolitan area she was visiting on the west coast that rented 
accessible vans. The first one she called told her that they didn't 
work weekends and didn't deliver vehicles to the airport. They also 
won't pick up customers who are renting vehicles. Renters must arrange 
with another company for transportation from the airport to the 
company's pickup location. She then called the other company, which was 
willing to deliver a vehicle to the airport. The delivery fee was 
nearly $200. Then the daily rental fee was over $100 a day. This was 
the cost borne by our organization, but it could just as easily have 
been the cost to a veteran visiting the area to see family. In that 
case, the cost would be borne solely by the veteran.
    Owning an accessible vehicle is also costly despite the amount 
offered through the VA's auto grant program. A PVA member in West 
Virginia lives in a rural area, and air travel is challenging and 
potentially even dangerous for him. So, he relies extensively on his 
adapted vehicle. It's easy to think that an eligible veteran receives 
their auto grant and then the issue is resolved, but that isn't the 
case. The auto grant amount is currently $27,000, which might sound 
like a lot, until you realize an adapted vehicle can cost anywhere 
between $50,000 for a sedan to upwards of $90,000 for a van.
    Adapted vehicles are usually larger and heavier which causes them 
to consume more fuel and require additional maintenance. To maintain an 
adapted vehicle means to acquire unique costs that the average vehicle 
owner does not encounter. Our member in West Virginia says the increase 
in his SMC over the past few years was erased by a single purchase of 
new tires for his vehicle because of increased costs. These are just a 
few examples of the costs associated with living with physical 
disabilities.
    Damage to the spinal cord or nerves often makes veterans more 
susceptible to temperature. For those with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), 
inflammation in the nervous system causes damage to the myelin sheath, 
a fatty coating around nerve fibers that helps them send electrical 
signals. This damage and myelin loss (demyelination) impairs the 
nerves' ability to send electrical signals and makes it harder for them 
to regulate their body temperature. Roughly three-fourths of all 
veterans with MS find their symptoms get worse in response to heat, so 
they rely heavily on air conditioning to help manage their condition. 
In similar fashion, many veterans with high level spinal cord injuries 
(above T-6) experience difficulties because their heat dissipating and 
heat conserving mechanisms are interrupted. This can trigger 
Dysautonomia, a nervous system disorder that disrupts autonomic body 
processes, and in the severest cases, Autonomic Dysreflexia, a 
dangerous situation that requires immediate medical attention.
    While SMC receives a modest annual cost-of-living adjustment, it 
does not account for actual increases in the types of services our 
members require. For example, retail electricity prices have increased 
faster than the rate of inflation since 2022, and the U.S. Energy 
Information Administration expects this trend to continue for at least 
another year. Some veterans who are kept alive by a ventilator have 
reported electricity bills of more than $1,000! \2\ Another veteran has 
had modifications made to their very rural house to include electrical 
door openers, electrical sinks, adapted lights, etc. However, due to 
the unreliable power grid in the area, VA also installed generators to 
ensure the veteran is not put in a life-threatening situation. These 
generators need maintenance and fuel, which are costly and not covered 
by the VA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \2\ U.S. electricity prices continue steady increase--U.S. Energy 
Information Administration (EIA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In 2007, after studying veterans' benefits for two and a half 
years, the Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission, which was 
established by Public Law 108-136, the National Defense Authorization 
Act of 2004, released its long-awaited report that addressed the 
benefits and services available to veterans, servicemembers, and their 
families. In their concluding recommendations, they stated succinctly 
that, ``Congress should review the profound impact of disabilities on a 
veteran's quality of life and consider increasing SMC payments and 
determine if additional ancillary benefits are warranted.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \3\ Honoring the Call to Duty: Veterans' Disability Benefits in the 
21st Century (2007), Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I want to stress that being disabled is costly, both financially 
and otherwise. A basic task for most people often results in an 
additional cost to those with an SCI/D. Cleaning the house, mowing the 
lawn, or general care of the property--even changing a light bulb--can 
require a catastrophically disabled veteran to pay someone to perform 
these services. Just maintaining life impacts their finances. They 
don't often have the choice to perform these tasks themselves. These 
injuries were incurred serving this Nation, and we as a nation should 
be able to do more to ensure that a disabled veteran never has to be 
institutionalized because they can no longer afford, even at a young 
age, to live in the community.
    We are pleased to support the provision in this bill that would 
increase the amount of R1, R2, and T, SMC rates by $10,000 annually. 
The veterans with these ratings are living with the most disabling 
conditions and therefore incur the most costs associated with them. We 
thank the supporters of this bill for seeking to address this issue and 
we look forward to this increase becoming law.

Increase in Dependency and Indemnity Compensation

    Losing a spouse is never easy, but knowing that financial help will 
be available following the death of a loved one can ease this burden. 
DIC is intended to protect against survivor impoverishment after the 
death of a service-disabled veteran. In 2025, this compensation starts 
at $1,653.07 per month and increases if the surviving spouse has 
eligible children who are under the age of 18. DIC benefits typically 
last the entire life of the surviving spouse, except in the case of 
remarriage before reaching 55.
    For surviving children, DIC benefits last until the age of 18. If 
the child is still in school, these benefits might go until age 23. The 
DIC program was established in 1993 and has been minimally adjusted 
since then. In contrast, monthly benefits for survivors of Federal 
civil service retirees are calculated as a percentage of the civil 
service retiree's Federal Employees Retirement System or Civil Service 
Retirement System benefits, up to 55 percent. This difference presents 
an inequity for survivors of our Nation's heroes compared to survivors 
of Federal employees. DIC payments were intended to provide surviving 
spouses with the means to maintain some semblance of economic stability 
after the loss of their loved one.
    Our oldest veterans are passing away, and in the case of many of 
our members, their surviving spouses were their primary caregivers for 
40 years or more. Many of them could not work outside of the home. When 
a service-connected SCI/D veteran passes away, monthly compensation 
that may have been upwards of $10,000 a month stops, and their 
surviving spouse receives roughly a fifth of that per month in DIC, 
creating a tremendous hardship on those left behind. Adjusting to this 
precipitous drop of revenue into the household can be too difficult for 
some surviving spouses who may be forced to sell their homes and move 
in with friends or family members. In addition, that spouse may have 
been receiving caregiver benefits and the loss of that compensation is 
economically catastrophic. Having to handle this along with the death 
of a loved one can leave the survivor in a precarious mental and 
financial position.
    For me personally, the livelihood of my loved ones is a paramount 
concern to me. They have spent a good portion of their lives caring for 
me and helping me enjoy mine. I am very aware that when I am gone, the 
amount that will be provided to them falls far short of the amount 
needed to give them financial security. That is not the life I want to 
leave for them. They have served their nation in their own way and 
deserve better than to be left impoverished once I am gone. Because of 
this, I have scrimped and saved where I can, to build up a tiny amount 
so I have something additional to leave them. This is not right. I pay 
close attention to efforts to increase DIC because I know any increase 
in the benefit is an increase in my family's future well-being.
    PVA supports this bill's provision increasing the DIC amount by 1 
percent every year for 5 years in addition to the yearly cost-of-living 
adjustment. This would be the most significant increase in veteran 
survivors' benefits in years. It also represents a major step toward 
our goal of ending the disparity between DIC and all other Federal 
survivor benefit programs.
    PVA would once again like to thank the committee for the 
opportunity to present our views on the legislation being considered 
today. We look forward to working with you on this legislation and 
would be happy to answer any questions.

  Information Required by Rule XI 2(g) of the House of Representatives

Pursuant to Rule XI 2(g) of the House of Representatives, the following 
information is provided regarding Federal grants and contracts.

                            Fiscal Year 2026

Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of National Veterans Sports 
Programs & Special Events--Grant to support rehabilitation sports 
activities--$368,500.

                            Fiscal Year 2025

Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of National Veterans Sports 
Programs & Special Events--Grant to support rehabilitation sports 
activities--$502,000.

                            Fiscal Year 2023

Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of National Veterans Sports 
Programs & Special Events--Grant to support rehabilitation sports 
activities--$479,000.

                     Disclosure of Foreign Payments

Paralyzed Veterans of America is largely supported by donations from 
the general public. However, in some very rare cases we receive direct 
donations from foreign nationals. In addition, we receive funding from 
corporations and foundations which in some cases are U.S. subsidiaries 
of non-U.S. companies.

    [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

                 Prepared Statement of Kristina Keenan

    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and members of the committee, 
on behalf of the men and women of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the 
United States (VFW) and its Auxiliary, thank you for the opportunity to 
provide testimony regarding this pending legislation.

H.R. 4077, GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act

    The VFW supports this legislation to allow the Department of 
Veterans Affairs (VA) to recover costs from Medicare Advantage and 
Medicare Part D plans. This would significantly enhance and clarify 
VA's authority to recover costs directly from Medicare Advantage plans, 
helping to offset the expenses of care provided to veterans. Currently, 
a problem arises with the duplication of Medicare payments for veterans 
enrolled in both VA and Medicare Advantage or Part D plans. Under 
existing law, VA is prohibited from billing Medicare for services 
provided to veterans, which results in private insurers receiving 
payments from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services without 
actually covering veterans' care. This loophole leads to taxpayers 
effectively paying twice for the same services.
    Resolution No. 603 (VA Medicare and TRICARE Reimbursement) approved 
in 2024 at the 125th VFW National Convention acknowledges the 
significant role that medical care collections can play in 
supplementing the appropriations that VA receives from Congress. Given 
the increased demand on VA health care due to the enactment of the PACT 
Act, it is crucial to ensure that the Veterans Health Administration 
has adequate funding.
    These changes would significantly improve VA's financial 
flexibility and efficiency. However, careful implementation is 
essential to avoid unintended consequences. Strengthening VA's 
authority to recover costs from Medicare Advantage and Part D plans 
must not create new administrative barriers, delays in care, or 
confusion for veterans about what services are covered and by whom. VA 
must ensure that expanded billing authority is paired with modernized 
claims systems, clear guidance to insurers, and adequate training for 
VA staff so that reimbursement processes do not slow access to non-
service-connected care or generate disputes between VA and private 
plans. Additionally, rigorous oversight is needed to prevent insurers 
from shifting liabilities, denying claims inappropriately, or altering 
provider networks in response to VA's new authority. With strong 
coordination, transparency, and implementation safeguards, H.R. 4077 
can close long-standing payment gaps, protect taxpayers, strengthen 
VA's financial stability, and maintain or even enhance the quality and 
timeliness of care veterans receive.

H.R. 6047, Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion 
Act of 2025

    While this legislation proposes increases to Special Monthly 
Compensation and enhancements to Dependency and Indemnity Compensation 
(DIC), these gains would come at the expense of disabled veterans. 
Specifically, the proposal would impose the VA home loan funding fee on 
veterans with disability ratings of 70 percent and below, who are 
currently and have always been exempt from this fee. Consistent with 
Resolution No. 601 (Protecting Health Care and Benefits) approved this 
year at the 126th VFW National Convention to safeguard the full suite 
of veterans' benefits and services, the VFW opposes reducing the 
benefits of one group of veterans to expand those of another.
    The VA Home Loan Guaranty program is one of the most enduring and 
historically significant benefits earned through military service, 
rooted in the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 that helped 
veterans prosper after service, creating America's middle class. 
However, this proposal to impose a funding fee on disabled veterans, 
even on the second and any subsequent uses of the loan, would 
fundamentally alter that legacy and represents a significant step in 
the wrong direction. Funding fees have traditionally been used as 
budgetary offset tools, but applying them to disabled veterans is 
unprecedented and undermines the foundational belief that these 
benefits are earned through service, not bought with fees.
    This policy shift would disproportionately affect veterans who, 
while not totally incapacitated, often face underemployment, physical 
limitations, and reduced earning potential due to their disabilities. 
Charging them a fee for attempting to access secure, stable housing 
punishes them for trying to reintegrate and build a life after service. 
Further, while veterans rated at 80-100 percent would continue to 
receive full fee exemptions, as they should, imposing fees on those 
below that threshold would create a two-tiered system of worthiness 
based on disability percentage. Yet all disabled veterans earned their 
benefits. This sends the message to veterans with lower ratings that 
they are not disabled enough to qualify for this exemption. Disability 
ratings reflect medical impairment, not merit, and should not determine 
financial penalty or access.
    Additionally, VA funding fee reduces veterans' homebuying power and 
increases their long-term housing costs at a time when affordability is 
already at historic lows. For the average VA loan in 2025 of 
approximately $398,000, adding a 3.3 percent fee increases the starting 
loan balance by more than $13,000. It also raises monthly payments, and 
adds roughly $27,000 in total costs over the life of the loan, much of 
which is interest on the fee itself. Because most non-exempt veterans 
finance the fee, they begin their mortgage more than 3 percent 
underwater and need nearly two more years to reach a break-even equity 
position. Higher balances, higher payments, and longer periods of 
negative equity increase the risk of default for veterans.
    There are broader consequences, too. This change may create 
perverse incentives, driving more veterans to pursue higher disability 
ratings just to avoid the fee, further burdening the VA claims system. 
For example, bad public policy on the concurrent receipt of Department 
of Defense retirement and VA disability compensation pay has already 
created a situation for military retirees to seek disability ratings of 
50 percent or higher. The proposed change to the VA home loan policy 
would once again raise the stakes for veterans now to 80 percent or 
higher. Moreover, the VFW has warned the House and Senate Committees on 
Veterans' Affairs 15 times through testimony over the last 3 years 
about the exaggerated and fraudulent disability ratings perpetuated by 
unaccredited and unregulated pay-to-play Claim Sharks. VA's Office of 
Inspector General issued multiple fraud warnings over these schemes to 
maximize benefits. With one recent Department of Justice indictment in 
Puerto Rico and another fraud lawsuit in North Carolina, this kind of 
policy would likely exacerbate this scourge.
    Most importantly, disabled veterans have never paid the VA home 
loan funding fee in the history of the program. This proposal would 
represent a deeply concerning shift in how our Nation honors and repays 
the sacrifices of its disabled service members. Congress must not allow 
budgetary expediency to come at the expense of those who have already 
paid a high price in service to their country. The VFW strongly 
discourages rhetoric like recent The Washington Post articles claiming 
that veteran benefits are too generous. We call on our leaders to 
``Honor the Contract'' by honoring their side of the military service 
contract to provide veterans with benefits and services as directed by 
law. If the committee changes the funding mechanism for this 
legislation, the VFW would be proud to lend our support to this overdue 
expansion of benefits.
    Special Monthly Compensation provides added disability compensation 
beyond the standard VA schedule rates for veterans with particularly 
severe disabilities. This proposal would provide eligible veterans a 
supplemental monthly allowance of $833.33. Veterans eligible for this 
supplement require 24-hour medical aid and attendance from either a 
trained layperson or a health care professional, depending on the 
severity of their injuries. Other than routine cost-of-living 
adjustments (COLAs) that track Social Security benefits, these severely 
disabled veterans have not received additional compensation increases 
in recent years.
    For survivors, the proposal would increase DIC by an additional 1 
percent every time Social Security benefits receive a COLA. This would 
take place each year for 5 years unless another piece of legislation 
were to extend it. After 5 years, DIC would revert to receiving 
increases only when Congress approved a COLA for this benefit, which is 
approved through legislation each year and is not automatic. If there 
were a year with no COLA increase, the DIC rate would not change.
    DIC currently lags behind other Federal survivor programs by 
approximately 12 percent and has not received a non-inflationary 
increase since the establishment of the current program in 1993. 
Presently, DIC pays 43 percent of the compensation of a veteran rated 
100 percent permanently and totally disabled, while other Federal 
survivor programs pay 55 percent. This proposed legislation would raise 
that percentage to only about 45 percent by the end of the 5-year 
period. While an increase in DIC is desirable, the VFW has been 
actively advocating for ways to reach the 55 percent rate to achieve 
parity with other Federal survivor programs. We suggest looking at ways 
to increase the base rate of this benefit annually, separately from 
COLA. Improvements to Special Monthly Compensation and DIC are well 
overdue, and the VFW is eager to work with the committee to find a 
better mechanism to fund these expansions.
    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, this concludes my testimony. 
I welcome any questions from you or members of the committee.

Information Required by Rule XI2(g)(4) of the House of Representatives

Pursuant to Rule XI2(g)(4) of the House of Representatives, the VFW has 
not received any Federal grants in Fiscal Year 2025, nor has it 
received any Federal grants in the two previous Fiscal Years.

The VFW has not received payments or contracts from any foreign 
governments in the current year or preceding two calendar years.

                                 

                 Prepared Statement of Margarita Devlin

    Good afternoon, Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano, and Members 
of the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to appear before you 
today to discuss pending legislation, including bills pertaining to 
disability compensation, dependency and indemnity compensation, 
education benefits, and home loan guaranty. Joining me today are Ms. 
Heather Ford, Acting Chief Financial Officer, Veterans Health 
Administration; Mr. Kevin Johnson, Director, Revenue Operations, Office 
of Finance, Veterans Health Administration; and Ms. Stephanie Li, 
Assistant Director, Regulations, Legislation, Engagement, and Training, 
Veterans Benefits Administration.

H.R. XXXX - ``Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits 
Expansion Act of 2025''

    The Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion 
Act of 2025 provides targeted increases in compensation for the most 
severely disabled veterans and for surviving spouses receiving 
Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC), while modifying VA home-
loan funding fee waivers.
    Section 2(a) of the bill would impact service-connected disability 
compensation benefits. VA disability compensation is typically paid 
based on the assignment of a percentage of disability rating ranging 
from 0 to 100 percent. In the early 1960's Congress acknowledged that 
certain injuries require additional compensation beyond the monetary 
values that the 1945 rating schedule percentages did not adequately 
address by creating special monthly compensation (SMC). SMC provides 
additional benefit payments to compensate severely disabled veterans 
for the permanent loss of independence, mobility, bodily function, and 
daily living capability resulting from additional functional and 
independence-loss caused by catastrophic disability. The tiered SMC 
system addresses injuries considered catastrophic by nature (i.e., loss 
of limbs, blindness, paralysis, loss of sphincter controls, or 
combinations thereof). The hierarchical design formalized those certain 
injuries that permanently eliminate autonomy and require a different 
category of compensation not just a higher percentage.
    Section 2(a) increases the statutory aid-and-attendance amounts 
payable to veterans already entitled under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1114(r) or 
Sec.  1114(t) by creating a new subsection (u). Effective December 1, 
2026, this subsection adds a flat supplemental payment of $833.33 per 
month to both the standard aid-and-attendance rate and the higher-level 
care rate--raising those amounts to $3,702.74 and $5,108.18, 
respectively, based on the December 1, 2024 COLA-adjusted levels.

    VA supports the intent of section 2(a) and looks forward to working 
with Congress to provide additional detail and adjustments to the 
proposed language.

    VA recommends that the amounts be rounded down to the nearest whole 
dollar. This change would maintain consistency with the other rates 
codified in 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1114 and simplify claims processing.
    Additionally, VA recommends amending 38 U.S.C. Sec.  5312 to align 
with other Federal entitlement programs that have built-in automatic 
annual cost-of-living adjustments to improve administrative 
efficiencies and ensure more timely adjustments.
    Section 2(b) increases the basic DIC payment for surviving spouses 
under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1311(a)(1) and (a)(3) by providing an enhanced 
COLA equal to the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment plus 1 
percentage point, for five COLA cycles beginning December 1, 2026. 
After the fifth adjustment, legislation would be needed for future 
COLAs.
    The bill would also require VA to publish the increased rates in 
the Federal Register.

    VA supports the intent of section 2(b) and looks forward to further 
engagement with Congress to refine the language.

    Section 2(b) would amend 38 U.S.C. Sec.  5312 to only authorize an 
enhanced cost-of-living adjustment solely for the basic rate of DIC 
payable to a surviving spouse under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1311(a)(1) and 
(a)(3). Under this provision, for five COLA cycles beginning December 
1, 2026, those rates would increase by the Social Security COLA plus an 
additional 1 percentage point. The DIC rates for surviving spouses with 
dependent children under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1311(f) and for parents under 
Sec.  1315 would continue to receive an annual COLA equal to the COLA 
under title II of the Social Security Act. The additional amounts for 
surviving spouses who are housebound or in need of aid and attendance 
would not receive a COLA. As drafted, this exacerbates different COLA 
treatment across DIC categories.
    Section 3 of the bill would amend 38 U.S.C. Sec.  3729(c) to 
temporarily narrow current VA home-loan funding fee waivers, for 
certain disabled veterans through September 30, 2035.

    The Department is reviewing section 3 of this bill and looks 
forward to working with Congress on further refinement.

H.R. 4077     ``Guarantee Utilization of All Reimbursements for 
Delivery of Veterans' Health Care Act,'' or the ``GUARD Veterans' 
Health Care Act''

    Section 2(a) would add a new 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1729C(a) to require, 
notwithstanding sections 1814(c), 1835(d), and 1862(a)(3) of the Social 
Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. Sec.  1395f(c), 1395n(d), and 
1395y(a)(3)), that if VA furnishes any health care item or service that 
is covered under the Medicare program under title XVIII of the Social 
Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.  1395 et seq.) to any individual who is 
enrolled in Medicare Advantage (MA) plans or Medicare Part D 
prescription drug plans, the MA organization or Part D sponsor of such 
plan would be required to reimburse VA for such item or service for 
both service connected and non-service connected care regardless of any 
additional documentation, utilization management, or other 
administrative requirement the plan may impose on the item or service. 
Proposed section 1729C(b) would provide that VA would have to recover 
amounts required to be reimbursed through the procedures under 38 
U.S.C. Sec.  1729 to the same extent as those procedures are used to 
recover amounts authorized to be recovered under that section. Recovery 
of amounts reimbursed would have to be in such an amount, and occur in 
accordance with such procedures, as VA would prescribe. Proposed 
section 1729C(c) would state that subsection (a) would apply to MA and 
prescription drug plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2026. 
Proposed section 1729C(d) would state that amounts reimbursed to VA 
under subsection (a) would be deposited in the VA Medical Care 
Collections Fund (MCCF) under 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1729A.
    Section 2(b) would amend sections 1814(c), 1835(d), and 1862(a)(3) 
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.  1395 et seq.) to conform 
these laws with the proposed section 1729C.

    VA supports the goal of enhancing cost recovery efforts and 
improving fiscal responsibility across the Federal Government.

    Under current law, VA is prohibited from billing MA plans. This can 
result in duplicative costs to taxpayers when MA plans are paid for 
Veteran-enrollees who receive taxpayer-funded care from VA at no 
expense to the MA plans. Current law also prevents VA from recovering 
costs, from any payer, for service-connected care. Section 2 would seek 
to end this practice when billing MA and Medicare Part D plans by 
requiring MA organizations and Part D sponsors to reimburse VA for cost 
of both service connected and non-service connected items or services 
provided to veterans. This reimbursement obligation would apply 
regardless of any plan documentation or utilization management rules 
that the MA or Part D plan might otherwise impose.
    We would welcome the opportunity for additional dialog with the 
Committee and the Department of Health and Human Services to understand 
Federal budget impacts as well as any potential benefits or costs to 
Veterans currently utilizing both VA furnished care and Medicare 
programs. We look forward to engaging the Committee for further 
discussions.
    VA does not have a cost estimate for this section at this time.
    Section 3 of the bill would amend 38 U.S.C. Sec.  1729 to enhance 
and clarify VA's authority to recover reasonable charges for care or 
services furnished to Veterans for non-service-connected disabilities 
from third parties, including private health insurers, employer-
sponsored plans, automobile insurers, and parties subject to tort 
liability. The statutory revisions would broaden VA's recovery rights 
to encompass tort, contract, and other coverage circumstances in which 
a third party is financially responsible for the care necessitated by 
the non-service-connected disability.
    This section would require third-party payers to timely respond to 
VA reimbursement claims. Specifically, a third party receiving a claim 
for the cost of care would be required, within 45 days, to either: (A) 
pay the claim; (B) pay an alternative amount that VA has agreed in 
writing to accept; or (C) if the claim is disputed, provide written 
notice of the claim's receipt, stating with specificity either the 
reason for refusal to pay or the additional information required to 
substantiate the claim. If additional information were requested, VA 
would be required to respond within 45 days, and upon receipt of VA's 
response, third parties would have 15 days to pay the claim or provide 
a written denial with a clearly articulated reason for the denial.
    Interest would accrue at the rate set by the Department of the 
Treasury for any portion of the claim that remained unpaid after the 
applicable deadline. These requirements would impose statutory 
timeframes and documentation requirements for claim resolution, 
minimize the potential for delayed or disputed payments, and compensate 
VA for payment delays.

    VA supports section 3 of the bill, subject to amendments.

    VA supports the enhancement of its recovery authorities proposed in 
section 3 but has technical edits it recommends be included to ensure 
these provisions have maximum effect. These provisions would improve 
cost recoupment from third parties, assign payment responsibility more 
fairly, and provide additional resources for Veteran care.
    VA does not have a cost estimate for this section at this time.

                               Conclusion

    Mr. Chairman, this concludes my testimony. We would be happy to 
answer any questions you or other Members of the Committee may have.

                       Statements for the Record

                              ----------                              


            Prepared Statement of Disabled American Veterans

    Chairman Bost, Ranking Member Takano and Members of the Committee:

    DAV (Disabled American Veterans) appreciates the opportunity to 
provide testimony for the record of this legislative hearing 
considering H.R. 4077, the ``GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act'' and H.R: 
6047, the ``Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits 
Expansion Act of 2025''. DAV is a congressionally chartered non-profit 
veterans service organization with nearly one million wartime service-
disabled veterans dedicated to ensuring our promise is kept to 
America's veterans.

               H.R. 4077, GUARD Veterans' Health Care Act

    DAV understands and greatly appreciates the intention of H.R. 4077, 
the Guard Veterans' Health Care Act, to strengthen funding for the 
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system and to reduce 
duplicative, unnecessary Federal spending on health care through the 
Medicare Advantage (MA) program. These are both worthy goals we share 
with the bill's sponsors and DAV applauds their continuing efforts to 
ensure veterans have timely and convenient access to VA's high-quality, 
veteran-centric care. However, looking at the history of VA budget 
requests and congressional appropriations, we have concerns about 
whether this legislation would be able to achieve these laudable goals.
    Medicare Advantage companies are compensated by the Medicare 
program on a fixed price per enrollee basis intended to cover the cost 
of their enrollees Medicare-covered health care expenses. However, when 
a veteran who is dual enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan and the VA 
health care system uses VA for their care, the insurance company is 
effectively receiving Federal funding for care being provided by VA. In 
recent years, private insurance companies have been aggressively 
marketing their Medicare Advantage plans to veterans because, on 
average, veteran enrollees yield greater profits.
    Currently, VA has the authority to seek reimbursement from private 
insurance companies for the non-service-connected care VA provides to a 
veteran who is also enrolled in a private health care plan, such as 
through their employer. VA can bill these insurance companies for care 
received at a VA facility or through VA's community care program with 
the resulting reimbursement deposited into VA's Medical Care 
Collections Fund (MCCF) and subsequently appropriated back to the VA 
health care system to pay for veterans' health care services. However, 
Federal law prohibits VA from seeking reimbursement from other Federal 
health care programs, including Medicare and Medicare Advantage plans 
operated by private insurance companies.
    H.R. 4077 would remove this statutory prohibition and allow VA to 
seek reimbursement from private companies operating Medicare Advantage 
plans. The goal of the legislation is to use this new source of revenue 
to increase the overall level of funding available for VA's health care 
programs. The bill also aims to reduce overall Federal health care 
spending by preventing Medicare Advantage companies from receiving 
payment for medical care provided by VA.
    Although the legislation would create a new funding stream for VA, 
there is nothing in the legislation that would prevent VA or Congress 
from offsetting this new funding by reducing other sources of funding, 
principally VA's annual discretionary appropriations. In fact, this is 
exactly what happened with the MCCF, which was originally designed to 
provide additional new funding for VA to extend its health care 
services to more veterans. However, when VA and the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) prepare VA's annual budget request, they 
begin by estimating how much total funding is required for the next 
Fiscal Year and then build a total budget request based on all sources 
of funding available. VA's budget request now includes anticipated 
funding from the MCCF, the Recurring Expenses Transformational Fund 
(RETF) and the Toxic Exposures Fund (TEF), and those additional sources 
become offsets for new discretionary appropriations.
    For example, if VA estimates collecting $4 billion from the MCCF in 
a fiscal year, it reduces its request for new discretionary 
appropriations by $4 billion. Similarly, if VA anticipates having $25 
billion in mandatory funding from the TEF, it similarly reduces its 
discretionary appropriations request by $25 billion. There is no reason 
to believe, and no provision in the legislation to guarantee, that VA 
would not use the new Medicare Advantage reimbursement revenue in the 
same manner - as an offset against future discretionary appropriations 
requests - rather than as extra funding above what would have otherwise 
been available. While we fully respect the sponsors' intention to 
increase overall funding for VA health care, based on the history of 
the MCCF and other alternate sources of funding, we have concerns about 
whether this would actually occur.

H.R. 6047, Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion 
                                  Act

    H.R. 6047, the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits 
Expansion Act of 2025, would increase the amount of Special Monthly 
Compensation (SMC) for the most severely disabled veterans, increase 
the amount of Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for survivors 
of disabled veterans, and require disabled veterans rated 70 percent or 
less to pay funding fees for using the VA home loan guaranty program 
more than once. While DAV strongly supports the two benefit increases 
included in the legislation, we cannot support the provision of funding 
fees on disabled veterans and urge the Committee to remove that 
provision.
    DAV greatly appreciates the efforts of the Committee and the bill's 
sponsors to provide a long overdue increase in benefit levels for some 
of the most deserving veterans and their survivors. We have 
consistently advocated to increase rates of disability compensation, 
DIC and other critical supports that veterans have earned through their 
sacrifice and service. We recognize that the Committee operates under a 
House fiscal responsibility rule adopted in January, known as CUTGO 
(``cut-as-you-go''), that requires any legislation that would increase 
mandatory spending on veterans benefits to include commensurate 
mandatory spending reductions in other veterans benefit programs. 
Because increasing the home loan funding fee would effectively reduce 
this benefit for disabled veterans, we oppose this provision based on 
DAV's longstanding and fundamental opposition to any reduction in 
earned benefits for disabled veterans, particularly large ones such as 
the funding fee imposition.
    The VA home loan guaranty program has enabled millions of veterans 
to purchase homes, and especially those who do not have long credit 
histories or are unable to make large down payments. For disabled 
veterans, these funding fees have been waived in recognition of the 
circumstances and sacrifices of these American heroes. H.R. 6047 would 
eliminate the current fee waiver and apply the funding fees for 
service-connected disabled veterans rated 70 percent or less who use 
the loan guaranty more than once. Currently, the funding fee rate for a 
second or subsequent use, based on a down payment of 5 percent or less, 
is 3.3 percent of the total loan amount. On a typical $400,000 loan, 
the new funding fee would be more than $12,000 if paid upfront, or more 
than $25,000 if financed over the course of a 30-year mortgage. To put 
that in context, that is about the same cost as if the veteran wanted 
to purchase a home with one more bedroom or bathroom for their family.
    Furthermore, DAV firmly opposes all rules or statutes that require 
veterans benefit increases to be ``paid for'' by cuts to other veterans 
benefits. CUTGO and all similar PAYGO (``pay-as-you-go'') rules and 
laws essentially require veterans to pay for their own benefits, 
whereas we believe that ALL Americans should be paying for the benefits 
and services veterans have earned in defending our freedom. For these 
reasons, we urge Congress to exempt all veterans' programs, benefits 
and services from House CUTGO and Senate PAYGO rules adopted for the 
119th Congress, as well as the requirements of the Statutory Pay-As-
You-Go Act requirements.
    We look forward to continuing our work with this Committee and 
Congress to enact legislation and appropriations that will ensure all 
disabled veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors receive 
the benefits and services they have earned and deserve.

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