Veterans & Service Members

AACRAO recognizes and honors the sacrifices these men and women have made and its members are proud to assist them and meet their educational needs. Veterans and students on active military duty and their families face special circumstances and challenges.

Changes in federal statute and executive actions have greatly promoted the expansion of services toward veterans and their families. Since the Post-9/11 GI Bill was passed in 2009, close to 1 million veterans, service members, and eligible dependents have taken advantage of the educational benefits available to them. With the passage of more recent legislation, such as the Forever GI Bill in 2017 and the Isakson Roe and THRIVE Acts in 2021, there will be significant changes to military education benefits over the coming years.

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AACRAO recently hosted a webinar to discuss the implementation of veteran legislation passed in December 2020, also known as the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvement Act. This law will have a transformative effect on the mission of Education Service to provide ready access to, and timely and accurate delivery of, education benefits to Veterans, Service members, and their families, as well as further enable the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to empower GI Bill beneficiaries to achieve their vocational and career goals.

Other recent legislation introduced in both the House and Senate include important provisions to help ensure veterans can continue to receive their education benefits as well as technical corrections to the legislation passed last year.

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Veteran Affairs Committee Advances GI Bill Update

Jul 20, 2017, 17:44 PM
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The House Veterans Affairs Committee on Wednesday unanimously approved a package of legislation to update the Post-9/11 GI Bill. The measure would extend veterans education benefits from the current 15-year window through a veteran's lifetime and restore aid for veterans affected by closures of for-profit colleges, among other provisions.

Lawmakers adopted three amendments to the so-called "forever" GI bill (H.R. 3218), including a substitute amendment from Committee Chairman Phil Roe (R-TN), which changed the effective date of certain provisions to ensure the bill did not add to the deficit within five and 10-year windows. Another amendment relates to benefits for veterans affected by the shutdowns of higher education schools, such as was the case with ITT Technical Institute in 2016, to ensure their credits are restored for GI eligibility.

Roe added that for future students, the bill as amended would give back the education entitlement for "the semester that they were enrolled when the school closes, as well as a bridge payment for up to four additional months of living stipends."

Republican leaders aim to move the bill to the full House for consideration later this month.

The legislation received broad praise from members of both parties and veterans' groups at a Monday night hearing, but some called for the bill to do more for veterans affected by the sudden closures of for-profits such as ITT Tech and Corinthian Colleges since 2015, Inside Higher Ed reported. The bill's original language restored one semester's worth of benefits for those veterans. A third amendment—introduced by Representatives Mark Takano (D-CA) and Luke Messer (R-IN)—would restore benefits used to earn credits at those institutions that could not be transferred elsewhere. The bill would restore one semester's worth of eligibility for GI Bill benefits for veterans affected by school closures in the future.

 

Related Links

Inside Higher Ed

https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2017/07/20/veterans-affairs-panel-approves-update-gi-bill

Michelle Mott
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