Summary of H.R. 6587 – Veterans Earned Transportation Act (Vets ETA)
Purpose and intent
- The bill aims to make permanent the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) authority to provide transportation to and from VA facilities for veterans engaging in VA-supported vocational rehabilitation or counseling.
- It is framed as ensuring continuous access to VA vocational rehabilitation services by removing the need for future renewal of this transportation authority.
Key provisions
- Title: The act may be cited as the “Veterans Earned Transportation Act” or the “Vets ETA.”
- Permanent authority for transportation: Section 2 amends Section 111A(a) of Title 38, United States Code, to establish a permanent framework for the VA to provide transportation in connection with vocational rehabilitation or counseling.
- Structural changes in the statute:
- Replaces the existing introductory language with a streamlined provision beginning with “The Secretary.”
- Eliminates the separate paragraph (2) within Section 111A(a), effectively consolidating and simplifying the authority.
- Scope: Applies to VA facilities and services related to vocational rehabilitation and counseling, ensuring veterans have reliable transportation support as part of their VR&E (Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment) benefits.
Who is affected
- Primary beneficiaries: Veterans who participate in VA vocational rehabilitation or counseling programs.
- Affected entities: VA, its facilities, and personnel involved in VR&E services, as well as veterans’ transportation providers and partners supporting VA’s logistics for participant services.
Procedural and timeline aspects
- Introduction: December 10, 2025.
- Status: Introduced in the House, referred to the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
- Legislative actions noted:
- 2025-12-10: Introduced and referred to the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
- No explicit appropriations or funding changes are detailed in the bill text provided; the act focuses on codifying the authority’s permanency rather than establishing new funding.
Potential impact and considerations
- Access and equity: By permanentizing transportation support, the bill could reduce barriers to participation in VR&E for veterans who rely on transportation assistance.
- Implementation: With a permanent authority, VA can plan logistics and budgeting more predictively, though any transportation program would still require VA funding and operational resources.
- Oversight: As with any transportation program, considerations include eligibility criteria, funding sources, service reliability, and coordination with other VA services.
If you’d like, I can compare this bill to current 38 U.S.C. provisions on VR&E transportation to highlight what changes are being codified and how it interacts with existing programs.