Site icon California American Legion

GI Bill fix would ease financial reporting rules for colleges

veterans education

Colleges and universities struggling to meet new reporting requirements on GI Bill benefits would get relief under a bipartisan measure introduced in the House and Senate recently.

The legislation is considered non-controversial but still could take months to wind through Congress because of other priorities and planned summer recesses. But supporters said the move is an important one for lawmakers to complete as soon as possible.

“This bill would simplify the reporting process for colleges and universities to make GI Bill paperwork requirements easier and more straightforward,” Rep. Mike Bost, R-Ill., and ranking member on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, said in a statement.

“This will allow schools to focus on ensuring student veterans get the education they have earned without additional red tape.”

Congressional staff did not have an estimate on how many veterans may be directly impacted by the legislation, but veterans advocates say the problems behind the proposals have been burdensome for numerous schools in recent months.

In 2021, Veterans Affairs officials updated a series of definitions and accounting methods surrounding the 85-15 rule, which requires that institutions of higher education receive at least 15% of their income from non-government sources.

Officials from Student Veterans of America said those changes forced significant reporting increases — “hundreds of hours of extra work” — as administrators combed through details for every field of study and degree program to ensure compliance.

“The potential, unintended consequences of the new requirements to limit student veterans’ access to quality institutions cannot be overstated,” said Lauren Augustine, vice president of government affairs for SVA.

The changes would simplify the rules, ensuring that schools — especially institutions with limited staff and few veteran enrollees — can verify eligibility without overwhelming administrative effort.

Read more at MilitaryTimes.com.

 

Author: Military Times

Published with permission. MilitaryTimes.com is a part of the Sightline Media Group, formerly known as the Army Times Publishing Company, which first published Army Times in 1940. Throughout its history, the company has a strong heritage and tradition of meeting the highest standards of independent journalism and has expanded with publications serving all branches of the U.S. military, the global defense community, the U.S. federal government, and several special interest, defense-oriented industry sectors.

Exit mobile version