The Rules Committee on June 22 advanced a rule for H.R.9237, the Take Care of America’s Veterans Act, after an intense exchange over how to pay for the package.
Chairman Rep. Bost described the bill as "the most comprehensive veterans package to be considered in Congress in decades," saying it combines more than 60 bipartisan measures to expand benefits, assist survivors and improve VA services. He urged the committee to report the bill under a rule that preserves pay‑as‑you‑go discipline.
Ranking Member Rep. Takano, veterans service organizations (including the VFW and DAV) and several Democrats said the package’s proposed offsets — notably changes to how tinnitus and sleep apnea are rated and increases to some VA‑loan fees — would amount to benefit cuts for veterans. Takano, and witnesses representing VSOs, argued those offsets would harm currently disabled and future veterans and urged alternative offsets, such as using unspent DOD funds, or advancing the Major Richard Star Act (concurrent receipt) on its own.
The Rules Committee ultimately approved a rule to bring H.R.9237 to the floor (closed rule language was adopted), but the fight over offsets is likely to continue as the bill advances and opponents signal they will press the issue ahead of any floor vote.
What happened next: the committee recorded votes on motions to alter the rule and rejected several Democratic motions to strike pay‑for language. The rule adopted will shape which amendments members may offer on the floor and limits further procedural options during House consideration.