SAVE America Act Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act

Engrossed on 12/19/25

Overview

The Veterans Accessibility Advisory Committee Act of 2025 establishes a comprehensive framework for addressing accessibility barriers faced by veterans with disabilities in their interactions with the Department of Veterans Affairs. The legislation creates a formal advisory body tasked with systematically evaluating the Department's compliance with federal accessibility laws and providing expert recommendations for improvement. This bill represents a targeted effort to ensure that veterans with disabilities can fully access the benefits, services, and facilities they have earned through their service. The Advisory Committee will serve as a bridge between veterans with lived experience of disability, accessibility experts, and Department leadership, creating an institutional mechanism for ongoing assessment and improvement of accessibility across all VA operations. The legislation also includes a provision requiring the Secretary to eliminate an inactive advisory committee, demonstrating a commitment to efficient governance while establishing this new body.

Core Provisions

The bill establishes the Veterans Advisory Committee on Equal Access within the Department of Veterans Affairs as a formal advisory body with a defined membership structure and specific responsibilities. The Committee comprises nineteen total members, including fifteen voting members and four ex officio members. The voting membership is carefully balanced to include four veterans with disabilities who can provide firsthand perspective on accessibility challenges, four recognized experts on accessibility issues who bring technical knowledge, two Department employees who understand internal operations, and five representatives from national veterans service organizations who can articulate the needs of the broader veteran community. The ex officio members include the Under Secretaries for Health, Benefits, and Memorial Affairs, along with the chairperson of the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, ensuring coordination across major VA functions and with the federal accessibility compliance authority. Members serve two-year terms with the possibility of reappointment, and the Secretary must fill vacancies within one hundred eighty days to maintain continuity. The Committee's substantive duties encompass assessing disability access needs and barriers faced by veterans, evaluating the Department's accessibility and compliance with federal disability laws, and developing recommendations for improving accessibility across VA programs and facilities. The Committee must meet at least twice annually and submit comprehensive reports to both the Secretary and the congressional Veterans' Affairs Committees. These reports must be delivered no later than two years after the Committee's first meeting and then at least biennially thereafter. The Secretary must respond to Congress within ninety days of receiving each report, detailing actions taken or planned in response to the Committee's recommendations. The Advisory Committee operates under a ten-year authorization, after which it automatically terminates unless reauthorized by Congress. Section 3 of the bill requires the Secretary to abolish an inactive advisory committee within one hundred eighty days of enactment, offsetting the administrative burden of the new Committee.

Key Points

  • Fifteen voting members: 4 veterans with disabilities, 4 accessibility experts, 2 VA employees, 5 veterans service organization representatives
  • Four ex officio members: Under Secretaries for Health, Benefits, Memorial Affairs, and Access Board chairperson
  • Two-year member terms with reappointment eligibility
  • Minimum of two meetings per year required
  • Initial report due within 2 years of first meeting, then biennially
  • Secretary must respond to reports within 90 days
  • Ten-year sunset provision with automatic termination
  • Requirement to abolish one inactive advisory committee within 180 days

Legal References

  • Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12184 et seq.)
  • Sections 504 and 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 791, 794, and 794d)
  • Plain Writing Act of 2010 (5 U.S.C. 301 note)
  • 21st Century Integrated Digital Experience Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 note)
  • Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 (Public Law 90-480)

Implementation

The Department of Veterans Affairs bears primary responsibility for implementing this legislation, with the Secretary serving as the appointing authority for Committee members and the entity responsible for providing necessary resources and support. The Secretary must ensure that the Advisory Committee has access to all information it requests to fulfill its duties, creating a transparency obligation that enables thorough assessment of accessibility issues. The Department must provide staff support, meeting facilities, and administrative resources to enable the Committee to function effectively. Travel expenses for Committee members are authorized and must be reimbursed in accordance with standard federal travel regulations, ensuring that participation is not limited by financial constraints. The reporting requirements create a structured accountability mechanism, with the Committee submitting formal assessments to both the Secretary and Congress, and the Secretary required to provide written responses detailing specific actions taken or planned in response to recommendations. This creates a feedback loop designed to translate advisory recommendations into concrete policy changes. The requirement to abolish an inactive committee within one hundred eighty days establishes a clear implementation deadline for administrative restructuring. The legislation does not specify a dedicated appropriation but implicitly requires the Department to allocate existing resources to support Committee operations, including staff time, meeting costs, and member travel expenses.

Impact

The primary beneficiaries of this legislation are veterans with disabilities who interact with the Department of Veterans Affairs across its health care, benefits, and memorial services operations. By creating a formal mechanism for identifying and addressing accessibility barriers, the bill aims to improve the ability of disabled veterans to access earned benefits and services without encountering physical, technological, or procedural obstacles. The broader veteran community also benefits from enhanced accessibility standards that may improve service delivery generally. The Department of Veterans Affairs faces increased administrative responsibilities through the establishment and support of the Advisory Committee, including staff time for coordination, meeting facilitation, and response to recommendations. However, the requirement to eliminate an inactive committee partially offsets this burden. The bill does not include specific cost estimates or appropriations, suggesting that implementation costs are expected to be absorbed within existing departmental budgets. The expected outcomes include systematic identification of accessibility gaps, enhanced compliance with federal disability laws, improved veteran satisfaction with VA services, and potential reduction in legal challenges related to accessibility violations. The ten-year sunset provision creates a natural evaluation point for assessing whether the Committee has achieved its objectives and whether continued operation is warranted, preventing indefinite expansion of advisory bodies without demonstrated value.

Key Points

  • Direct beneficiaries: Veterans with disabilities accessing VA services and facilities
  • Secondary beneficiaries: All veterans through improved service delivery standards
  • Administrative burden on VA: Committee support, reporting, and response requirements
  • Partial offset through elimination of one inactive advisory committee
  • Expected outcomes: Improved accessibility compliance, reduced barriers, enhanced veteran satisfaction
  • Ten-year sunset provision enables evaluation of Committee effectiveness

Legal Framework

The bill operates within the constitutional framework of Congress's authority to provide for the general welfare and to make rules for the government and regulation of the armed forces, which extends to providing for veterans' care and benefits. The legislation explicitly references multiple statutory authorities that establish federal accessibility standards, including the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in public accommodations and services; Sections 504 and 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, which require accessibility in federally funded programs and federal electronic information technology; the Plain Writing Act, which mandates clear communication in government documents; the 21st Century Integrated Digital Experience Act, which requires accessible digital services; and the Architectural Barriers Act, which mandates accessible design in federally funded facilities. The Advisory Committee's role is to assess compliance with these existing legal requirements rather than to create new regulatory obligations. The bill does not establish private rights of action or judicial review provisions, positioning the Committee as an advisory rather than enforcement body. The legislation does not preempt state or local accessibility laws, which may provide additional protections beyond federal minimums. The Secretary's obligation to respond to Committee recommendations within ninety days creates an administrative accountability mechanism but does not mandate adoption of specific recommendations, preserving executive discretion in policy implementation while ensuring that recommendations receive formal consideration.

Legal References

  • Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12184 et seq.)
  • Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Sections 504 and 508 (29 U.S.C. 791, 794, and 794d)
  • Plain Writing Act of 2010 (5 U.S.C. 301 note)
  • 21st Century Integrated Digital Experience Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 note)
  • Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 (Public Law 90-480)

Critical Issues

The legislation faces several implementation challenges that may affect its effectiveness. The requirement to appoint fifteen voting members with specific qualifications within one hundred eighty days may prove difficult given the need to identify qualified individuals willing to serve and navigate the federal appointment process. Ensuring meaningful participation from veterans with disabilities requires not only formal appointment but also accommodation of diverse disability needs in meeting formats and communication methods. The bill does not specify funding levels or authorize appropriations, creating uncertainty about whether adequate resources will be available to support robust Committee operations, particularly for staff support and comprehensive accessibility assessments. The effectiveness of the Committee depends heavily on the Department's responsiveness to recommendations, but the legislation requires only that the Secretary respond in writing, not that specific recommendations be implemented, potentially limiting the Committee's practical impact if recommendations are acknowledged but not acted upon. The requirement to abolish an inactive committee may face resistance if stakeholders associated with that committee object to its elimination, though the bill does not specify which committee must be abolished, leaving that determination to the Secretary. The ten-year sunset provision ensures periodic reevaluation but creates uncertainty about long-term institutional knowledge and continuity if the Committee proves effective but requires reauthorization. Cost implications remain unclear without specific appropriations or budget estimates, raising questions about whether implementation will require new funding or reallocation of existing resources. Potential unintended consequences include the possibility that the Committee's advisory role may create an additional layer of process without corresponding improvements in accessibility if recommendations are not translated into concrete policy changes, or that the Committee could become a forum for airing grievances without effective resolution mechanisms.

Key Points

  • Appointment challenges: Identifying and appointing 15 qualified members within 180 days
  • Resource uncertainty: No specific appropriations or funding authorization provided
  • Implementation gap: Secretary required only to respond to recommendations, not implement them
  • Accommodation requirements: Ensuring Committee meetings and processes are accessible to members with disabilities
  • Unclear cost implications without budget estimates or appropriations
  • Potential for advisory role without enforcement authority to limit practical impact
  • Uncertainty about which inactive committee will be abolished
  • Ten-year sunset creates continuity concerns if Committee proves effective

From the Legislature

A bill to establish the Veterans Advisory Committee on Equal Access, and for other purposes.

Sponsors

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5
3
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Democratic CaucusRepublican Caucus

Roll Call Votes

53 Yea

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47 Nay

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Calendar

May 21, 2025

4:00 PM

Senate Veterans' Affairs Hearing

Jul 30, 2025

4:00 PM

Senate Veterans' Affairs Hearing

Feb 10

3:30 PM

House Committee on Rules Hearing