Tester Secures Key Provisions to Support Veterans and Servicemembers in 2023 Government Funding Bill

Chairman Tester helped craft bill that will expand access to health care and deliver key benefits to veterans suffering from toxic exposures, filing disability claims, facing homelessness, living in rural areas; investments for troops and critical military programs

The Senate came to an agreement on an omnibus federal funding package consisting of 12 fiscal year 2023 appropriations bills championed by U.S. Senator Jon Tester, Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense and Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee. The bill, otherwise known as the Fiscal Year 2023 (FY23) Omnibus Appropriations Package to fund the government through September 2023, includes critical funding and provisions to expand medical care and benefits for veterans nationwide and support our military.

“When it comes to our military men and women, we’ve got to deliver the care and benefits they’ve earned—plain and simple,” said Tester. “That’s why I’m proud to have worked with Republicans and Democrats to craft a bill that includes a number of my top priorities including benefits for toxic-exposed vets, streamlining claims filing, supporting veterans facing homelessness, bolstering suicide prevention, and better services for veterans from all walks of life in Montana and across the country. These investments are key to taking care of our servicemembers and their families both during and after their time in uniform, and that’s why we’ve got to get this bill to the President’s desk as soon as possible.” 

As a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Tester plays a key role in crafting the 12 bills that fund the federal government each year. Among the provisions secured, the Senator included critical resources to deliver toxic-exposed veterans their earned care and benefits under his historic Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act. This funding will help aid implementation of the comprehensive law—ensuring the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is able to bolster its workforce, improve resources to support claims processing, and more.

As part of his ongoing effort to end veterans homelessness, support veterans in rural areas, and strengthen oversight of VA’s Information Technology and procurement systems, the Senator successfully secured the following bills he authored:

  • Building Solutions for Veterans Experiencing Homelessness Act of 2021legislation to permanently cut red tape on capital grants provided by VA for organizations assisting veterans experiencing homelessness. It will ensure organizations have many of the necessary flexibilities to continue supporting veterans and avoid derailing their progress toward effectively ending veterans homelessness.
  • Rural Veterans Travel Enhancement Act of 2021—bipartisan legislation to establish a pilot program to provide travel reimbursements for low-income veterans in advance of medical appointments and require the U.S. Government Accountability Office to conduct assessments on how to best support veterans traveling long distances to access essential care.
  • Department of Veterans Affairs Information Technology Reform Act of 2021bipartisan legislation Tester first introduced in 2019 to increase transparency, accountability, and improve performance of information technology systems and projects at VA.
  • Veterans Prostate Cancer Treatment and Research Actbipartisan legislation to expand VA treatment and research of prostate cancer, which is the number one cancer diagnosed by the Veterans Health Administration.
  • VA Supply Chain Resiliency Act—bipartisan legislation to improve VA’s supply chain issues, as highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Tester also secured the following provisions he authored to improve mental health care resources and suicide prevention efforts at VA:

  • Post-9/11 Veterans’ Mental Health Care Improvement Act of 2021bipartisan legislation to strengthen VA’s mental health care workforce, expand care options, and support mental health research at the Department.
  • Revising and Expediting Actions for the Crisis Hotline (REACH) for Veterans Actbipartisan legislation to improve the Veterans Crisis Line’s staff training, management, and response to veteran callers at risk of suicide.
  • American Indian and Alaska Native Veterans Mental Health Actbipartisan legislation requiring VA medical centers to consult with local tribes and deliver tailored outreach and culturally competent mental health care to Native veterans.

Chairman Tester has worked tirelessly to ensure Montana’s veterans and their families have the resources they need and earned. The bill provides VA and related agencies with $135.2 billion in discretionary spending and $168.6 billion in mandatory spending. In addition, the bill provides advanced appropriations for fiscal year 2024, including $128.1 billion for veterans medical care and $155.4 billion for veterans benefits.

Among the veterans investments Tester successfully included are:

  • $118.7 billion for VA medical care including:
    • $13.9 billion for mental health;
    • $5.2 billion to sustain and increase telehealth capacity, including in rural, highly rural, and underserved communities;
    • $12.1 billion for veterans’ long-term care;
    • $2.7 billion for veteran homelessness prevention;
    • $1.9 billion for the Caregivers Program;
    • $840.5 million for women’s health; and
    • $337 million for rural health.
  • $5.8 billion for information technology systems critical for cyber security and delivery of health care and benefits to veterans;
  • $3.9 billion for VBA operating expenses and claims processors;
  • More than $3 billion for VA infrastructure;
    • Including $88.6 million for a Fort Harrison construction project improving infrastructure for better health care delivery and services for veterans
  • $916 million for medical and prosthetics research, including in areas such as toxic exposures, traumatic brain injury, and precision oncology;
  • $273 million for VA’s Office of Inspector General to continue aggressive oversight and investigations of waste, fraud, and abuse in VA programs; and
  • $15 million for the Airborne Hazards and Burn Pits Center of Excellence to assist in better understanding the effects of exposure to open burn pits and airborne hazards on the health of veterans.

Continuing his push to increase oversight over the Electronic Health Record Modernization (EHRM) Program, Tester also secured a provision to withhold 25 percent of VA’s budget for the Program until the VA Secretary reports to Congress on improvements made to the system’s stability, usability, patient safety and related issues to better protect veterans and taxpayers.

Among the military-related investments Tester successfully included are:

  • $19 billion for military construction projects including:
    • $2 billion for family housing;
    • $93.4 million for Arlington National Cemetery and $62.5 million for the southern expansion;
    • $293 million for Child Development Centers;
    • $1.2 billion to support the Pacific Defense Initiative;
    • $500 million for projects that support the European Defense Initiative;
    • $220 million to fund the U.S. cost share of NATO Military Construction projects in the NATO Security Investment Program; and
    • $200 million for perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid cleanup on closed military bases.

A summary of the 2023 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations bill is available HERE.

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