On June 23, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the STRONG Veterans Act, sending the bill to the Senate for further debate.
The act, which is officially titled the Support the Resiliency of Our Nation’s Great Veterans Act of 2022, expands mental health care services offered by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The bill, which aims to eliminate veterans suicide, was sponsored by House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Mark Takano (D-Calif.) and advanced by the committee earlier this year.
It is currently unclear if any significant changes to the bill were made before the House vote. Previously the bill, if passed, mandated:
- That all VA medical centers have at least one full-time minority veteran coordinator with proper cultural training to support Native American veterans.
- Increasing full-time staffing at VA Vet Centers and expanding eligibility for treatment.
- Expanding existing scholarship and loan programs for students and mental health providers.
- Updating Veterans Crisis Line responder training.
- Designating a Buddy Check Week to improve mental health outreach.
- Updating the Veterans Justice Outreach program.
- Making the Peer Specialist Support program permanent.
- Funding for new research on veterans mental health and treatment options.
- Improving treatment and the ability to diagnose veterans with sleep disorders.
After the STRONG Veterans Act was passed in the House, Chairman Takano said, “preventing veteran suicide and strengthening veterans’ mental health and wellbeing remains a top priority not only of VA, but also of this Committee. It is our belief that caring for veterans when they return home includes preventing and treating the visible and invisible wounds of service.”
The STRONG Veterans Act will now go to the Senate where it has bipartisan support.
As a combat Veteran who did volunteer work at VA and who regularly supports
Veterans’ organizations, I am leery of the PACT Act.
The real “honey pot burners” are in Congress. They held back because of the $400 Billion rider, but then succumbed to the politicized fear of not being reelected to their ‘lifetime’ positions in congress.
Then American Legion gives extra credit to Jon Steward one of the most notable liberals. I appreciate all that entertainers do for Veterans, but not when it gets politicized and leads to Congressional financial irresponsibility.
Let us not forget transparency as the article states: “It is currently unclear if any significant changes to the bill were made before the House vote.”
Finally, make sure Biden gets credit for a “Whitehouse statement” by virtue of occupying office space after his disastrous “withdrawal” from Afghanistan costing 13 American soldiers lives and countless executions in Afghanistan.
Veteran’s organizations had best learn the lesson of Social Security. Supporting any and all legislation that purports to support Veterans is suspect. When congress raids the funds like they have raided Social Security, Veterans could lose a lot of much needed support. In Camaraderie, Duster