Blue Water Navy Bill Sinking in Senate Despite Late-Hour Talks

Blue Water Navy Bill Sinking in Senate Despite Late-Hour Talks
A scene from the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Constellation (CV-64) in the Gulf of Tonkin in 1968. (Terry Fincher/Getty Images)

As many as 90,000 ailing “blue-water Navy” veterans are likely to have to wait for a new Congress to see legislation passed that would make them eligible for Agent Orange-related disability compensation and VA-paid health care.

Sens. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), chair of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, and Jon Tester (Mont.), its ranking Democrat, negotiated this week with veteran service organizations, seeking to amend the House-passed Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act (H.R. 299) in ways that would satisfy both veteran groups and Republican senators threatening to block a vote on the bill.

The negotiations exposed a deepening desire among Senate Republicans to impose tighter controls on creating presumptions of service connection between certain exposures, including herbicides sprayed in the Vietnam War, and diseases of veterans involved in past or future wars. Battle lines are forming over whether Congress and past VA secretaries have gone too far in building lists of conditions the VA presumes are linked to toxins, burn pits, and battlefield environments.

[TAKE ACTION: Time is running out on Blue Water Navy, other critical legislation]

The high-water mark for veteran advocates might have been reached in June, when the House passed a blue-water Navy bill unanimously. By August, a new VA secretary, Robert Wilkie, reversed that momentum, directing deputies to strongly oppose extension of Agent Orange-related benefits to sailors and Marines who patrolled territorial waters off Vietnam but didn't come ashore or operate in “brown water” nearer to sprayed foliage or runoff from dioxin-laced herbicides.

Wilkie wrote to Isakson in early September that the science doesn't support extending benefits to blue-water Navy veterans, given that exposure levels are undetermined and the potency of dioxins sprayed over land likely was diluted so as not to affect personnel at sea. He also complained passage of H.R. 299 would slow efforts to end a backlog of VA compensation claim appeals, and that the House bill would cover the cost of new benefits in part by raising VA home loan fees, including, for the first time, imposing fees on disabled veterans, those who seek to buy higher-priced homes using VA-backed jumbo mortgages.

[RELATED: VSOs Push Back Against Blue Water Navy Comments]

At a late September hearing with Wilkie, Isakson insisted to colleagues that Wilkie had agreed to work with his committee on a compromise blue-water bill. Wilkie, however, didn't affirm such cooperation that day or since.

With a lame-duck Congress set to adjourn by mid-December, Isakson advised veteran groups he doesn't have time to build a routine business case for a revised bill with a committee hearing and floor debate. Instead, he hoped for a quick deal on a few amendments so the Senate could approve the bill by unanimous consent.

Rep. Phil Roe (R-Tenn.), chair of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, told me Tuesday he was standing by to get a revised bill back from the Senate that veteran groups endorsed and the House could pass again for blue-water veterans. But an eight-day window to get all of that done was closing fast, Roe warned.

Meanwhile at least three Republican senators - Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Mike Lee of Utah - were said to have put holds on the blue-water bill that would block a swift year-end Senate vote. We learned their names hours before deadline and asked the senators' offices to confirm their opposition.

Only Lee's office responded immediately, saying he “did object to passing the bill by unanimous consent. Other senators also have concerns. Senator Lee wants to wait for a forthcoming study on the extent of Agent Orange exposure,” which VA Secretary Wilkie promised to deliver in 2019, “before this bill is voted on.”

Isakson continued his fight for a late-hour compromise. He did so by embracing an informal but controversial proposal from first-term senator and physician Bill Cassidy (R-La.) to support blue-water legislation in return for changing current law to require a stronger scientific association between toxins and lists of medical conditions the VA presumes are caused by exposure.

[RELATED: MOAA Interview: Secretary Wilkie on VA Changes, Health Records, Blue Water Navy Benefits, and More]

Cassidy and Isakson asked executive directors of the four largest veterans service organizations - The American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, and Paralyzed Veterans of America - to back an amendment that would require the science show a “sufficient” association between a toxin and a disease before a VA secretary can add it to a presumptive ailment list.

Under current law, a VA secretary can add an ailment to the VA's presumptive list if the National Academy of Medicine confirms either a “limited or suggestive” association between exposure and disease or a “sufficient” association.

The Cassidy proposal would discard the limited or suggestive category but protect veterans who gained benefits due to past VA secretaries using the lower association to build presumptive lists. The change would make it more difficult to add diseases to current presumptive lists. Also, veterans who file disability claims after the proposal becomes law could see their claims denied for conditions that VA previously granted a service-connection almost automatically.

Indeed, a majority of conditions on the current Agent Orange presumptive list were based on limited or suggestive association to herbicide exposure. These include: type-2 diabetes; laryngeal cancer; cancer of the lung, bronchus, or trachea; prostate cancer; multiple myeloma; AL amyloidosis; early-onset peripheral neuropathy; Parkinson's disease; porphyria cutanea tarda; ischemic heart disease; and stroke. The VA continues to study whether to add Parkinson-like syndromes, hypothyroidism, and bladder cancer using limited or suggestive evidence.

If the Cassidy proposal were to become law, Vietnam veterans newly diagnosed with these ailments after enactment would not qualify automatically for disability compensation and health care. A more thorough review process would be needed to establish service connection.

Veterans groups this week rejected that proposal. Cassidy and Isakson countered by adding a “sunrise” feature. That is, Congress would pass the blue-water bill and adopt the stiffer presumptive standard but delay its enforcement for two years. This would allow Congress and veterans groups time to negotiate a more acceptable path for strengthening the science behind presumptive conditions.

Vet groups made a counterproposal: Pass the blue-water Navy bill, and veterans groups would promise to engage in a presumptive decision-making debate with concerned lawmakers in 2019. The bill also would amend the plan to pay for blue-water benefits, accepting Isakson's idea to continue to protect all disabled veterans from VA home loans fees but extending the period when higher fees are imposed on other VA home loan users by two years. That's where negotiations stood by Thursday, and with at least one senator still prepared to block a vote.

In a related development, the National Academy of Medicine released a new Agent Orange report in November that upgrades to “sufficient” the strength of association between hypertension (high blood pressure) and herbicide exposure. This upgrade from limited or suggestive association seems to strengthen the possibility that hypertension will be added to the Agent Orange presumptive list - even if something like the Cassidy proposal were to become law and remove many more ailments from the presumptive list for future claimants.

However, even a revised Agent Orange law would not mandate that a VA secretary adopt every National Academy recommendation. Hypertension is so prevalent among older Americans that every VA secretary since 2010 has declined to add it to the Agent Orange presumptive list, even though the strength of association to herbicide exposure matched that of less-common ailments on the list.

If, as expected, the blue-water Navy bill sinks in the Senate this week, Republicans are likely to keep its fate in the next Congress tied to their desire to strengthen the science behind presumptions of service-connected exposures.

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