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The Veteran Fraud Reimbursement Act of 2025 proposes to change how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) handles cases where a veteran's benefits are misused by a fiduciary. Currently, when a person appointed to manage a veteran's money steals or misuses those funds, the process for the veteran to get that money back can be delayed by administrative reviews. This bill would require the VA to reissue those stolen benefits to the veteran without waiting for a final determination on whether the agency itself was negligent in overseeing the fiduciary.
The bill also aims to ensure that these funds are not lost if a veteran passes away before the reimbursement is processed. If a veteran dies before the VA reissues the misused benefits, the bill would require the agency to pay that amount to a surviving spouse, child, or dependent parent. This aligns the fraud reimbursement process with how other standard VA death benefits are handled, ensuring the family is not financially penalized by the fraud committed against the veteran.
Additionally, the legislation would require the VA to establish clear methods and timelines for investigating fiduciary fraud. By removing the requirement that the VA must prove its own negligence before paying back the veteran, the bill seeks to provide faster financial relief to vulnerable individuals who rely on these payments for their daily needs. It also clarifies that while the VA must investigate these instances, it does not need to make a formal negligence determination for every single case of partial misuse before issuing a refund.
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Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held.
Mar 11, 2025
Mar 11, 2025 · 14:30
The Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs held a hearing on March 11, 2025 to examine 12 bills aimed at improving Department of Veterans Affairs operations and services. The bills covered a broad range of veterans' issues, including VA employee accountability, fraud reimbursement, mental health care quality, healthcare access, telephone communications, and benefits for survivors and specific veteran populations. Key bills examined included S.124, the Restore VA Accountability Act, which would modify disciplinary procedures for VA supervisors and managers while protecting whistleblowers; S.892, the Veteran Fraud Reimbursement Act, which would expedite reimbursement to veterans whose benefits were misused by fiduciaries; S.275, the Veterans' ACCESS Act, which would establish standardized eligibility standards for community care and require the VA to notify veterans of their eligibility within two business days; S.702, which would require a study comparing mental health care quality between VA and non-VA providers; and S.831, the REP VA Act, which would require the VA to use a single telephone number and proper caller identification for outgoing calls to veterans. The hearing also examined bills addressing cancer studies for military aircrew, expanding the VetSuccess on Campus program, improving survivor benefits, protecting veterans' privacy regarding background checks, improving appointment scheduling, establishing an external provider scheduling program, and creating a commission to review Veterans Health Administration operations. The committee heard testimony from VA officials and representatives of veterans service organizations, including the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The hearing represents the committee's initial consideration of these proposals. While the hearing allows the committee to gather information and assess the bills' merits, it does not guarantee that any of the legislation will advance. The committee may choose to mark up, amend, or reject any of these bills in subsequent proceedings.
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held.
Mar 11, 2025
Mar 11, 2025 · 14:30
The Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs held a hearing on March 11, 2025 to examine 12 bills aimed at improving Department of Veterans Affairs operations and services. The bills covered a broad range of veterans' issues, including VA employee accountability, fraud reimbursement, mental health care quality, healthcare access, telephone communications, and benefits for survivors and specific veteran populations. Key bills examined included S.124, the Restore VA Accountability Act, which would modify disciplinary procedures for VA supervisors and managers while protecting whistleblowers; S.892, the Veteran Fraud Reimbursement Act, which would expedite reimbursement to veterans whose benefits were misused by fiduciaries; S.275, the Veterans' ACCESS Act, which would establish standardized eligibility standards for community care and require the VA to notify veterans of their eligibility within two business days; S.702, which would require a study comparing mental health care quality between VA and non-VA providers; and S.831, the REP VA Act, which would require the VA to use a single telephone number and proper caller identification for outgoing calls to veterans. The hearing also examined bills addressing cancer studies for military aircrew, expanding the VetSuccess on Campus program, improving survivor benefits, protecting veterans' privacy regarding background checks, improving appointment scheduling, establishing an external provider scheduling program, and creating a commission to review Veterans Health Administration operations. The committee heard testimony from VA officials and representatives of veterans service organizations, including the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The hearing represents the committee's initial consideration of these proposals. While the hearing allows the committee to gather information and assess the bills' merits, it does not guarantee that any of the legislation will advance. The committee may choose to mark up, amend, or reject any of these bills in subsequent proceedings.
No CBO cost estimate has been published for this bill.