Title 38 › Part PART II— - GENERAL BENEFITS › Chapter CHAPTER 20— - BENEFITS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - COMPREHENSIVE SERVICE PROGRAMS › § 2012
Pays daily money to groups that help homeless veterans when Congress provides the funds. The Department pays organizations that have a certain grant or that the Department says do the same work, for veterans the Department refers or OKs. The daily payment is based on the group's estimated cost of care, but the Department lowers that amount to remove other payments the group gets from federal, state, local, or private sources. If a veteran has a minor child with them, the payment for that child is an extra 50 percent of the veteran’s daily cost. The Department can change payment rates, but the rate cannot be lower than the rate in place before the Navy SEAL Bill Mulder Act of 2020 and generally cannot go above 115 percent of the State homes domiciliary rate (133 percent during the period that begins with the Housing our Military Veterans Effectively Act of 2024 and ends on September 30, 2027). If the housing will become the veteran’s permanent home, the cap is 150 percent. For fiscal years 2025 through 2027 the Department may, after telling Congress, raise the cap up to 200 percent for some providers, but not for more than 50 percent of all providers in a year. No more than 12,000 per diem payments may be made in any fiscal year, and payments can be paid back up to 3 days before the Department’s approval. The Department can inspect facilities and will only pay groups whose buildings meet the standards it sets, including fire and safety rules from the Life Safety Code, except that a five-year exception applies for groups that got a 1992 Homeless Veterans grant before the date this rule was made if they meet other fire and safety rules the Department sets. At least $5,000,000 must be used to help those older groups meet the Life Safety Code. The Department can also pay reasonable fees for using the homeless management information system if the group cannot get that data for free. Within 90 days after the HOME Act of 2024 is enacted, and at least twice a year after that, the Department must report to the veterans’ committees with, for each Veterans Integrated Service Network, the average payment rate, locations where the rate is within 10 percent of the maximum, and the average length of a veteran’s stay. The Department may fund groups that meet all required services or meet some, and it gives payment priority to those that meet all criteria.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 2012
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73