VA halts taking away gun rights from veterans who require help managing their benefits — but only for 6 months

A new ban that has stopped the Department of Veterans Affairs from taking away the gun rights of veterans who are found to be incapable of managing their own financial affairs will expire in six months, VA officials said.

Discounted internet access for millions of veterans will end June 1

A $14 billion internet subsidy program used by millions of veterans and their families will end June 1 unless lawmakers vote for its renewal.

VA secretary: ‘We’re at a critical moment for shaping and securing veteran health care’

The $369 billion spending plan that the Department of Veterans Affairs proposes for fiscal 2025 is “a maintenance budget” that tightens the workforce and pulls back on construction but continues to prioritize disability and health care benefits for veterans.

Increasing payments for survivors of military members, cutting red tape for veterans’ disability claims pushed in new bills

The House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs subpanel on disability assistance and memorial affairs examined several pieces of legislation that would modify existing regulations for determining disability and indemnity payments for veterans and their survivors.

‘Cost estimate is stratospheric’: House lawmaker blasts VA’s plan for multibillion-dollar supply management system

Lawmakers sharply criticized the Department of Veterans Affairs for failing to provide a budget or keep them informed about a plan to modernize its supply chain management system that is projected to cost as much as $15 billion.

Eligible veterans facing foreclosure to be offered ‘last resort’ VA plan to lower mortgage payments

The Department of Veterans Affairs plans to begin offering up to 40,000 veterans and troops who own a home and face foreclosure a VA-backed loan — a “last resort” refinancing tool to bring down their interest rates.

Housing, child care, good schools help military readiness, advocates contend during defense summit

During a panel discussion Tuesday at the American Defense Communities’ national summit, advocates described how access to affordable housing, reliable child care and top public schools in communities near bases where military families reside contribute to readiness and retention.

Army veteran’s delayed lung cancer diagnosis leads to VA court settlement for his widow

The widow of an Army veteran whose lung cancer was not diagnosed for nearly two years after a “suspicious finding” turned up on a chest scan has received an $880,000 court settlement from a VA hospital.

Proposed legislation would provide troops with one-on-one counseling as they prepare to leave the military

A bill before Congress would jumpstart benefits for separating troops by authorizing accredited veterans organizations to place counselors in Defense Department transition assistance programs designed for service members preparing to leave the military.

Disabled veterans who own small businesses target lucrative government contracts

Government contracts are big business to private companies offering goods and services. The federal government plans to award $38 billion exclusively in contracts to small businesses certified as owned and operated by service-disabled veterans.