AB 2703, as amended, Quirk-Silva. County veterans service officers.
Existing law requires the Department of Veterans Affairs to disburse funds, appropriated to the department for the purpose of supporting county veterans service officers pursuant to the annual Budget Act, on a pro rata basis, to counties that comply with certain conditions. Existing law requires the Department of Veterans Affairs to annually determine the amount of new or increased monetary benefits paid to eligible veterans by the federal government attributable to the assistance of county veterans service officers, and requires the department to prepare and transmit its determination for the preceding fiscal year to the Department of Finance and the Legislature on or before October 1 of each year.
This bill would require the department, no laterbegin delete that Julyend deletebegin insert
than Januaryend insert 1, 2015, to develop an allocation formula based upon performancebegin delete toend deletebegin insert standards thatend insert encourage innovation and reward outstanding service by county veterans service officers. The bill would alsobegin insert continuouslyend insert appropriatebegin delete $6,000,000 fromend delete the General Fund to the Department of Veterans Affairsbegin insert in an amount equal to $6,000,000 each fiscal yearend insert for disbursement to the counties to fund the activities of county veterans service officers, as specified, and to encourage innovation and reward
outstanding service by these officers.
This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
end insertVote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) The recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are creating an
4entirely new generation of veterans who may be eligible for federal
5veterans benefits because of their war service and their physical
6and mental condition.
7(b) Californians make up to 10 percent of the federal military
8forces used in these conflicts. Furthermore, the California National
9Guard and California-based reserve units have contributed
10significantly to these current conflicts.
11(c) Many of these returning California veterans are not aware
12of the federal and state benefits that are
available to them.
13(d) Additionally, it is estimated that in California there may be
14over two million veterans, and their widows or widowers, who are
15unaware that they may be eligible for pensions from the federal
16government based upon their past military service in World War
17II, Korea, Vietnam, or the Gulf War.
18(e) California’s county veterans service officers (CVSOs) are
19the initial local point of contact for claimants accessing the United
20States Department of Veterans Affairs.
21(f) The costs of maintaining CVSOs are shared from county
22general funds and state reimbursement to the counties. In 1997, in
23order to track performance, the Governor signed into law Senate
24Bill 608, which required the California Department of Veterans
P3 1Affairs to annually report the amount of monetary benefits paid
2to veterans by the federal
government that were attributable to the
3assistance of CVSOs. Senate Bill 608 of the 1997-98 Regular
4Session also required the Department of Finance to consider an
5increase in the annual budget for CVSOs of up to $5,000,000, if
6approved in the yearly budget process. In 2009, the Governor
7signed Senate Bill 419 into law, which raised this amount to
8$11,000,000, if approved in the yearly budget process.
9(g) As a result of this annual reporting, by the end of 2011 it
10had been determined that from 1995 to 2011, inclusive, the state
11had cumulatively budgeted $36.2 million for its share of the cost
12of the CVSOs. As a result of this investment, CVSOs were able
13to assist local veterans in obtaining $3.3 billion in new federal
14moneys. This is a return of about $91 for every dollar the state
15allocates to CVSOs. Furthermore, $3.6 billion only reflects the
16actual monetary benefits qualified for in a given year. The monetary
17benefits qualified for in prior
years are not tracked, yet the veterans
18and their dependents may continue to receive those benefits for
19the rest of their lives. Added to this stellar return on the state’s
20investment, but not counted in the annual reporting, are the
21Medi-Cal cost avoidance savings incurred as a result of CVSOs
22qualifying and shifting veterans away from Medi-Cal and onto the
23appropriate federal veterans program.
24(h) The CVSOs had accomplished all of this without ever
25reaching the allowable state budget allocation of $5 million, set
26in 1997, or the updated allowable allocation set in 2009. To date,
27the CVSOs have not received more than $2.6 million per year from
28the state.
29(i) It is critical that the CVSOs receive an increase in this
30allocation because there continues to be a large number of
31underserved veterans and their dependents who are not aware of
32the federal benefits available to them as a
result of their military
33service. Studies from other states have shown that increases in
34CVSOs have resulted in larger amounts of federal moneys to the
35veterans. These new federal moneys and benefits are paid directly
36from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs to the
37qualifying veteran or their dependent and are used in the local
38economy.
Section 972.3 is added to the Military and Veterans
40Code, to read:
The Department of Veterans Affairs shall, no laterbegin delete that begin insert thanend insertbegin insert Januaryend insert 1, 2015, develop an allocation formula based
2Julyend delete
3upon performancebegin delete toend deletebegin insert standards thatend insert encourage innovation and
4reward outstanding service by county veterans service officers.
5Moneys appropriated for this purpose shall be allocated each fiscal
6year in accordance with that formula
among those counties that
7have established and maintain a county veterans service officer
8begin insert pend insertbegin insertursuant to Section 970end insert.
begin deleteThe end deletebegin insertNotwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government
10Code,end insertbegin delete sum of six million dollars ($6,000,000) is hereby the General Fundbegin insert is hereby continuously
11appropriated fromend delete
12appropriatedend insert to the Department of Veterans Affairsbegin insert
commencing
13July 1, 2014, in an amount equal to six million dollarsend insertbegin insert each fiscal
14year,end insert to be allocatedbegin insert each fiscal yearend insert as follows:
15(a) Five million six hundred thousand dollars ($5,600,000) shall
16be available for disbursement to the counties to fund the activities
17of county veterans service officers pursuant to subdivision (b) of
18Section 972.1 of the Military and Veterans Code.
19(b) Four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) shall be available
20for disbursement to the counties to encourage innovation and
21reward outstanding service by county veterans service officers
22pursuant to the allocation formula developed pursuant to Section
23972.3 of
the Military and Veterans Code.
This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
25immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
26the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
27immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
28Approximately 50 percent of the current General Fund
29appropriation in support of county veteran service offices
30operations expires on June 30, 2014. In order to provide for
31continuity of services critical to the successful reintegration of
32California’s veterans, to increase California’s utilization of veteran
33benefits,
and to ensure veteran’s claims for benefits are processed
34in a timely manner, it is necessary that this act take effect
35immediately.
CORRECTIONS:
Text--Page 4.
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Corrected 5-5-14—See last page. 98