- VeteransIncreases examiner capacity, potentially reducing exam backlogs and shortening veterans' claims processing times.
- StatesAllows exams across state lines, expanding geographic access and enabling remote or traveling contractors.
- Federal agenciesProvides hiring flexibility to obtain specialists for complex examinations faster than hiring federal employees.
A bill to amend title 38, United States Code, to make permanent and codify the pilot program for use of contract physicians for disability examinations, and for other purposes.
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
This bill codifies and makes permanent a program allowing the Veterans Benefits Administration (Under Secretary for Benefits) to contract with non‑Department physicians and health professionals to perform medical disability examinations.
It authorizes those contracted clinicians to conduct exams across State lines regardless of State licensure rules, so long as they meet specified license and appointment-eligibility conditions, and requires reimbursement from VBA operating accounts.
The bill requires a mechanism for contractors to transmit new and material medical evidence introduced during exams and mandates a Congress report within three years on cost, timeliness, and thoroughness.
Technocratic veterans-focused fix with modest fiscal impact and built-in report; main barriers are stakeholder objections to licensure preemption or labor impacts.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a straightforward substantive change that codifies authority for use of contract physicians for disability examinations and integrates cleanly into title 38. It specifies core mechanisms (contract requirement, licensure conditions, funding source, evidence-transmittal duty) and terminates the prior pilot while requiring a 3-year report to Congress.
Progressives emphasize privatization risks; conservatives emphasize efficiency gains.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- StatesPreempts state licensure laws, creating potential legal conflicts with state regulators.
- Targeted stakeholdersContract examinations may produce variable quality without strong standardization and oversight.
- Targeted stakeholdersUsing contractors could increase administrative burden for contracting, monitoring, and IT integration.
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Progressives emphasize privatization risks; conservatives emphasize efficiency gains.
Likely skeptical about permanent expansion of contracted exams and potential privatization of veteran services.
Supports improving timeliness but worries about quality, accountability, and impacts on VA clinicians and unions.
Will look for strong oversight, data on veteran outcomes, and protections for veterans' continuity of care.
Views bill as a pragmatic attempt to address exam capacity and timeliness with built‑in reporting requirements.
Sees merit in contracting where VA capacity is insufficient but wants measurable safeguards and fiscal transparency.
Will weigh reported effects after three years and favor targeted oversight amendments if needed.
Likely supportive as a commonsense efficiency and capacity measure allowing private-sector clinicians to reduce backlogs.
Values federal flexibility to operate across State lines and lower bureaucratic constraints.
Prefers minimal additional regulation, relying instead on contractual terms and reporting to ensure effectiveness.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Technocratic veterans-focused fix with modest fiscal impact and built-in report; main barriers are stakeholder objections to licensure preemption or labor impacts.
- Absence of formal cost estimate in text
- Potential organized opposition from state licensing boards
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Progressives emphasize privatization risks; conservatives emphasize efficiency gains.
Technocratic veterans-focused fix with modest fiscal impact and built-in report; main barriers are stakeholder objections to licensure pree…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a straightforward substantive change that codifies authority for use of contract physicians for disability examinations and integrates cleanly into title 38. It sp…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.