Burn Pit Bill Creates Massive, Debt-Fueled Backdoor Expansion of the V.A. Health Care System
Iraq and Afghanistan veterans wouldn't have to show any link between their service and a long list of medical conditions to obtain government-funded healthcare.

Expanding care to troops harmed by toxic burn pits has become an increasingly bipartisan cause.
Members of both parties have introduced a flurry of bills that would make it easier for veterans exposed to the fumes from overseas military bases' trash burning sites—where munitions, batteries, and medical waste were incinerated in open pits—to claim health benefits for a wide variety of conditions.
But the particulars of a largely-Democrat supported burn pit bill racing through Congress are attracting criticism for their hefty price tag and exceptionally wide eligibility criteria that could see the federal government take on billions in debt to cover veterans' conditions unconnected to their military service.
On Monday, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released an analysis of the Senate-amended version of the Honoring our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act (PACT) of 2021. The CBO found that the bill would create an additional $667 billion in entitlement spending and increase overall spending by $277 billion.
"This seems like a blatant attempt to find an excuse to rope more of the population into a government-run health care system with absolutely no attempts to pay for it," says David Ditch, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation of the PACT Act.
Former military service members are generally able to get their healthcare expenses covered by the Department of Veterans Affairs (V.A.) for conditions they developed as a result of their service. Often that requires proving that a particular condition was a result of one's service.
Veterans' advocates and their allies in Congress have long argued that the current system makes it too difficult to receive coverage for ailments caused by the toxic fumes of burn pits, which might only manifest years after someone has left the military.
To fix this problem, the PACT Act would create a "presumption of service connection" for 23 conditions—including several types of cancer, leukemia, and bronchitis—for veterans who were stationed in 17 countries during particular times, including in Iraq during the Gulf Wars and Afghanistan following 9/11.
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs would have the power to add more conditions and countries that would qualify for this "presumption of service connection."
The bill would relieve veterans of having to prove that any of those conditions were linked to their service in order to get V.A. coverage for them.
That's obviously a pretty expansive set of eligibility criteria. Someone who served in Iraq and is diagnosed with lung cancer decades later will be eligible for federally funded health care under the PACT Act, even if they were never exposed to a burn pit and were also a lifelong smoker.
The breadth of the people who would qualify for benefits under those criteria, and the number of conditions covered, is a welcomed feature for many veteran advocates. A coalition of 42 veterans' groups said the PACT Act's scope made it their preferred piece of burn pit legislation in a February letter to House leaders.
President Joe Biden, who blames burn pits for causing his son Beau's fatal brain cancer, has endorsed the bill as well. So has comedian Jon Stewart.
Ditch counters that there should be some minimal effort to establish a link between one's medical condition and exposure to a burn pit before awarding them government-sponsored benefits.
He also takes issue with the fiscal design of the bill, which he says will create new, effectively limitless entitlements. Most V.A. programs are covered by discretionary spending that has to be periodically reauthorized by Congress and is subject to annual budget caps.
That puts some outer bounds on the amount of money going out the door, even as Congress and the V.A. have made it easier for more people to lay claim to a broader set of benefits.
"To guarantee the money goes out of the door, they are shifting a huge chunk of the V.A. system from the subject-to-caps spending and moving it to the mandatory category so that it can grow on autopilot without anyone needing to worry about it," he tells Reason, an arrangement he says inappropriate in light of rising national debt and inflation.
Biden has argued that reducing the deficit is key to fighting inflation and has touted his own administration's success at shrinking it. Yet, the burn pit bill he's endorsed would only add to the national debt. By his logic, it would make inflation worse too.
The PACT Act passed the House on a mostly party-line vote in March 2022 and could be voted on by the Senate later this year.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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"Burn Pit Bill Creates Massive, Debt-Fueled Backdoor Expansion"
The jokes write themselves...
saw that yes.
From what I know about the V.A they'd be better off being treated by a vet, the animal kind.
I have long held that I should be able to legally declare myself to be a dog, so as to be able to obtain effective and affordable medicine! And bypass the Government-Almighty-damned greedy medical malpractice scum-sucking LAWYERS who inflate my medical costs!
>>see the federal government take on billions in debt
is this even a thing anymore?
Given the writers here were all for giving everyone government checks to cover for government lockdowns deemed necessary because of a virus developed at government expense? No, it is not a thing to take seriously from these clowns.
Is there a single article in the Reason stimulus archives that is pro-stimulus? If there is, it is certainly the minority position. Maybe I missed your point?
https://reason.com/tag/stimulus/
If I read the link correctly, anyone with 24 months active duty would qualify for VA.
And no one who has private health insurance is likely to choose VA care over private healthcare.
So this is going to have approximately zero impact. I suppose there is a Medicaid patient somewhere with 12 months active duty who might get shifted to the VA?
I’m not outraged.
I wonder if Britches thinks TriCare should pay for "gender affirming care" for service members and their families.
Likely does. And he probably okay with the VA paying for them to transition after they get out too, because they were denied the right to transition until just recently while serving. Denying them that care is service related no questions asked I'm sure. But paying for their care when they were exposed to toxic burn pits, burn pits the military has known are dangerous since the 1970s seems to be asking to much.
The VA is something the government has promised us vets in return for our service, however, utilizing it is a nightmare of red tape. I have arthritis in my back, likely in part due to my service. I deal with pain every day, but I haven't tried to get it covered by the VA because I never had any documented back injuries while I was in. They didn't show up until years after my service, but the damage likely started from the heavy lifting, body armor and ruck marches we did all the time, also long runs on pavement. It is way to much hassle to try and go through the process of getting coverage (also, having to travel all the way to Billings, hundreds of miles away for treatment) isn't worth it. I know several vets who have similar complaints. I'm sorry, but I'm less worried about making care for vets from injuries likely sustained while in, than I am about how fucked up the process is to get coverage. You call it an entitlement, I call it a contract we made when we joined. Honoring that contract is not an entitlement. Besides the military has known for several decades the dangers of burn pits but still continued to utilize them. The analysis is incomplete without understanding the known dangers the DoD exposed vets to.
And just FYI, I was never exposed to burn pits, so this law doesn't impact me, personally. I just feel that the DoD knowingly exposed veterans to known dangers and as a result the government should pay for any damages that possibly resulted from that exposure. It's know different than paying for care from wounds received as a result of combat.
Spring and summer of 2003 in Iraq burn pits were crazy. We burned everything, human waste, trash, dead dogs. All fueled by diesel. No idea if that was really bad for us or not, but there is a at least a rational theory that it could have been. I can still smell it.
The military has known of the dangers of burn pits since at least Vietnam. They've documented it pretty thoroughly but the VA never recognized those dangers and the DoD largely ignored or denied them as well. As our military has grown more technologically advanced, we're burning even more toxic shit. We've known of the environmental dangers of this for decades. It's actually against the law in the states to burn a lot of the shit the military burned in theater, because of the environmental and health dangers. The author of this piece completely ignores the government's culpability in exposing our veterans to known environmental and health hazards, mainly because he doesn't want to pay for it. The government created this problem, they should have to pay for it. The bigger problem isn't the government paying for it, but the fact that they pay for so much shit they shouldn't that in order for them to pay for shit they really should pay for, they have to borrow.
Between ENBs gaslighting on what happened in Texas, the stupid piece on the recall effort in San Francisco and now this piece of shit review that leaves out critical pieces of information, this is definitely one of the worse days of leftarian thinking I've seen on Reason. Whatever happened to the journalistic honesty that once was the hallmark of this publication?
"Whatever happened to the journalistic honesty that once was the hallmark of this publication?"
The same thing that happened to the ACLU.
Cato and Reason were infiltrated by establishment bien pensants who killed them, gutted them, and now wear them as skin and suits, demanding the respect the carcasses had previously earned.
Shapiro was the last sorta libertarian still at Cato and he just resigned not long ago.
*skinsuits
The author also doesn't seem aware of how you prove an injury is service related. You can only do that if you had a documented medical injury while in service. If you never went to sick call after exposure to a burn pit, you can't prove it's service related. The process is intentionally designed to deny coverage, even when the injury or condition was definitely service related. It took decades for Vietnam veterans to get coverage for exposure to Agent Orange because of the process. This is exactly the same shit our veterans exposed to burn pits, which the military knew were dangerous to health yet still used them, are going through now. Fuck Brischgi for being a completely disingenuous lying fuck, who completely misrepresents what happened and why it is necessary to change the way the VA does business. Basically, the VA is set up to deny coverage, period. It's basically designed for the government to pretend it's taking care of our veterans while actually doing everything possible to deny us care we were promised. Most vets are like me and don't even try to get the care we earned because the VA is a big fuck you to the vet community.
Another (quick) example is lead solder. The long-term consequences are too much for most consumer applications these days.
The military still uses is though.
Yeah,and because the health effects take years or decades to manifest (and can have other causes as Brischgi stated, but misses the point) proving they are service related is fucking damn near impossible under the current law and regulations of the VA. Brischgi misses the entire point. The military caused this harm, the current law protects the government from having to pay for the harm because the current regulations makes it nearly impossible to get coverage. The government wastes trillions of dollars each year paying for bullshit, but Brischgi is upset when the government is making it easier for veterans who served and were injured due to government negligence. Fuck that, it's one of the few fucking legitimate uses of government funds, paying for damage the fucking governments created.
Oh fucking boohoo this will make it easier for vets to get the medical care they were promised and earned and deserve. I'm betting if this bill made it easier for illegal aliens to get medical care Brischgi would be condemning anyone who opposed it. But because it's vets who were injured by our own government negligence and dishonesty, he cries a river. Fuck this is why people fucking criticize Reason.
Thank you for this reasonable comment. My husband has terrible back pain from his time in the military and getting treatment was bureaucratic hell on earth. Like you, we just gave up.
Sometimes, I joke with him that I'll take him to the VA if he's bad.
No worries on the funding side.
Just eliminate the Department of Education and asset forfeiture all political campaign chests, because the congress is as fine a criminal enterprise as I have ever seen. If that isn't enough, confiscate all "higher" education endowments from any school with an administrator that has the word 'diversity' in their title.
Why do i feel like i recently read something similar about some cities having the same issue with firefighters, because they made it law that any cancer they get is presumed to be from the job and now they're finding out that's expensive?
will have to research..
6.86% of the population is veterans...
Only a wildly corrupted government could possibly turn 7% of the USA population into a debt crisis.
Oh yeah; Then there's programs a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j,k,l....... A $50K/yr salary for *every* UN-working people because a virus was twice as lethal as the common-cold. Excuse, excuse, excuse, excuse......
What's bankrupting the USA? The Nazi(National Socialist)-Regime.
I have some special insight on this. In 2008 I was at Camp Buccanon the Battalion Staff as Intel NCOIC for the 391st MP BN. Our Medical Officer was worried about the fumes from the burn pits. He tool samples and some things were 5,000 times the allowable limit. He was told by "Big Army" that is was ok for young healthy people. Of course not everyone was young or healthy. They did this to us knowing that it wasn't safe. This is compensation, not entitlement.
It is nearly impossible to prove service connection without a specific incident recorded in your medical record. How do you prove toxic fumes from exposure to burn pits is the reason you have cancer? You can't. My Uncle was Brown Water Navy in Vietnam and just got approved maybe 10 years ago for his chemically induced Parkinsons from Agent Orange exposure from handling corpses.
Like one other person said, arthritis likely caused by rigourous physical activity while serving is pretty much impossible to claim, as are other cumulative issues that appear later in life. We have a Court acknowledged Constitutionally protected right to seek Veterans Compensation, and that right has long been trampled upon by burdensome and lengthy procedures. Reform to make it easier for Veterans to justifiably receive compensation has been urgently needed for decades.
It is nearly impossible to prove service connection
*Camp Bucca on
This program may be a little overly ambitious and easy to get a disability payment, but that's no reason to condemn the VA. I can't speak for other regions, but in Massachusetts, the VA care for veterans is exceptional. I only started receiving VA care in the past few years and only wish I has gone to them earlier for care.