- VeteransLarger maximum grants and performance awards could expand funded suicide-prevention services and reach more veterans.
- Targeted stakeholdersRequired C-SSRS screening and VA training may standardize risk assessment and improve clinical consistency.
- Targeted stakeholdersAuthorization of rideshare and transportation services could reduce missed appointments and improve treatment continuit…
HOPE for Heroes Act of 2025
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
This bill amends and reauthorizes the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant Program within the Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Mental Health Care Improvement Act of 2019.
Key changes include raising maximum base grants to $1,000,000, allowing performance-based additional awards up to $500,000, tighter limits on administrative and food costs, mandatory use of the C-SSRS screening for grantees, new training and coordination requirements, guaranteed emergent care if VA services are not provided within 72 hours, quarterly briefings to nearby VA medical centers, and reauthorization through September 30, 2030.
Several definitional and technical corrections are also made, and transportation/rideshare is explicitly allowed as a grant-funded service.
Focused, bipartisan-leaning veterans mental-health bill with modest fiscal increase and concrete administrative provisions; historically such measures have strong legislative prospects.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive statutory amendment that is well‑integrated into existing law and provides multiple concrete operational changes to an existing veterans suicide prevention grant program. It specifies numerical limits, new requirements (training, briefings, emergent care trigger), and reporting edits, but leaves several implementation details—most notably the precise performance metric, budgetary authorizations/estimates, and detailed enforcement and auditing mechanisms—under-specified.
Liberals emphasize stronger funding and access protections; conservatives worry about cost.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesHigher grant ceilings and performance bonuses will likely increase federal discretionary spending obligations.
- Targeted stakeholdersPerformance payments based on intake counts may incentivize volume over long‑term clinical outcomes.
- Targeted stakeholdersRecordkeeping, coordination, and training requirements add administrative burden for grantees, especially smaller provi…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Liberals emphasize stronger funding and access protections; conservatives worry about cost.
Overall supportive.
The bill increases funding flexibility, mandates evidence-based screening (C-SSRS), improves coordination with VA medical centers, and strengthens emergent-care protections for veterans.
It expands allowable services like rideshare and requires employee training, all aligning with priorities to reduce veteran suicide and improve access.
Generally favorable but cautious.
The bill reauthorizes a successful grant program, increases funding, and adds accountability and training provisions, which are pragmatic.
Centrists will want clearer definitions of the performance metric, fiscal impacts, and evidence that intake-based bonuses improve outcomes.
Mixed to somewhat skeptical.
Supporting veterans is a priority, and reauthorization of suicide-prevention grants may be acceptable.
However, increased federal spending, expanded definitions of eligibility, new VA training mandates, and performance-based top-ups tied to intake raise concerns about cost, federal overreach, and perverse incentives.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Focused, bipartisan-leaning veterans mental-health bill with modest fiscal increase and concrete administrative provisions; historically such measures have strong legislative prospects.
- No cost estimate or budget offset in text
- Specifics of Secretary's performance metric are unspecified
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Liberals emphasize stronger funding and access protections; conservatives worry about cost.
Focused, bipartisan-leaning veterans mental-health bill with modest fiscal increase and concrete administrative provisions; historically su…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive statutory amendment that is well‑integrated into existing law and provides multiple concrete operational changes to an existing veterans suicide prev…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.