Paralyzed Veterans of America
Increase Benefits for Catastrophically Disabled Veterans and Their Survivors
Severely disabled veterans and their survivors depend on federal benefits that recognize both the economic and non-economic consequences of service-connected disabilities. Yet these benefits, particularly Special Monthly Compensation (SMC) and Dependency and Indemnity...
Ensure Funding for Spinal Cord Injury Research Program
War-related spinal cord injuries (SCI) tend to be more severe and complex. This is one of the primary reasons why the Department of Defense initiated its Spinal Cord Injury Research Program (SCIRP) in 2009. This important program provides support for research that has...
Improve Disabled Veterans' Access to Mental Healthcare
Veterans continue to face significant obstacles when seeking mental health care, including geographic isolation, limited awareness of services, provider shortages, outdated IT infrastructure, and stigma. Despite the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) making progress in...
Help Disabled Veterans Adapt Their Homes
The Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) Home Improvements and Structural Alterations (HISA) grant is intended to help veterans and servicemembers make medically necessary improvements and alterations to their primary residence. This includes improving the entrance or exit...
Provide Tax Credits for Caregiving
Family caregivers provide essential support to veterans. Yet, despite the immense physical, emotional, and financial toll caregiving takes, family caregivers receive little to no direct assistance under current federal policy.Many caregivers are forced to reduce their work...
Support MST Survivors
In Fiscal Year 2023, an estimated 6.8 percent of women and 1.3 percent of men serving on active duty were victims of military sexual trauma (MST), meaning thousands of servicemembers experience MST each year. Many survivors have experienced barriers in accessing Department...
Help Veterans' Survivors
Veterans' and servicemembers' surviving spouses often face significant disruptions after the death of their loved ones. Under current law, when a surviving spouse remarries before age 55, they lose critical benefits such as Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC),...
Increase Autonomy for Disabled Veterans
The Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) Home Improvements and Structural Alterations (HISA) grant is intended to help veterans and service members make medically necessary improvements and alterations to their primary residence. This includes improving the entrance or exit...
Enhance Employment Opportunities for Disabled Veterans
The Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) is a federal tax credit for employers who hire individuals who face barriers to employment, such as people with disabilities and qualified veterans. WOTC rates have not increased since the program was created 27 years ago. WOTC opens...
Increase Veterans' Travel Reimbursement
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) pays eligible veterans and caregivers for mileage and other travel expenses to and from approved health care appointments, but the rate of reimbursement has not kept up with inflation. Fifteen years ago, Congress passed...
Boost Support for Veterans' Survivors
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) to qualified survivors of service members and veterans. Eligible surviving spouses can receive an additional $351.02 per month in DIC when a veteran who, at the time of death, was...
Provide Care for Disabled Veterans' Children
The Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Department of Veterans Affairs (CHAMPVA) allows the Department of Veterans Affairs to share the cost of health care for the dependents and survivors of certain eligible veterans. CHAMPVA provides health care coverage to...
Improve Access to Adapted Vehicles
Currently, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides vehicle modifications to allow veterans with disabilities to safely operate, enter, and exit their vehicle. In 2023, Congress passed legislation to include certain vehicle adaptations in the VA's medical benefits...
End the Wait for Social Security Disability/Medicare
Individuals whose eligibility for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) has already been approved, often after a lengthy process, remain barred from accessing their SSDI benefits for five months after that approval. In addition to this five-month waiting period...
Support Benefits for Combat-Injured Veterans
There are over 50,000 medically retired veterans with combat injuries who are being denied their full retirement and VA disability pay. Currently, only veterans who have served 20 or more years and have VA disability ratings of 50 percent or greater can receive both...
Increase Disability Access at VA
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is the largest health care provider in the country, and it serves millions of veterans each year. However, many catastrophically disabled veterans experience disability-related barriers when it comes to accessing the care and the...
Help Disabled Veterans Grow Their Families
Thousands of service members have suffered a genitourinary injury, resulting in the loss of, or compromised ability, to have a child. Among those who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, genital injuries, most of which were a result of ground-based explosive mechanisms, were...
Support Veterans' Survivors
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) to qualified survivors of service members and veterans. The DIC rate paid to survivors has been minimally adjusted since it was first established in 1993. H.R. 2055/S...