Title 38 › Part PART V— - BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter CHAPTER 74— - VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION—PERSONNEL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - DISCIPLINARY AND GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES › § 7462
Only Disciplinary Appeals Boards can hear cases about the professional conduct or competence of a section 7401(1) employee when a major adverse action was taken. If a case mixes that kind of major action with other kinds of actions, the board must say it has exclusive authority and explain why. When charges could lead to a major adverse action, the employee must get written notice with the basis for each charge, the possible penalties, the specific rule alleged to be broken, and the evidence file—unless there is reasonable cause to believe the employee committed a crime that could bring imprisonment. The employee has seven business days to answer in writing and orally to a higher-ranking official and to submit affidavits and other evidence. The employee may have a lawyer or other representative at every stage. The deciding official must issue a written decision with reasons no later than 15 business days after the notice. An appeal to the Disciplinary Appeals Board must be filed within seven business days after the written decision is served. The board first checks it has the power to hear the case. It can sustain, dismiss, or partly sustain charges and can approve, modify, or reverse the action. The board must offer an oral hearing and give a transcript. It must decide within 45 days after the hearing, or no later than 120 days after the appeal began. The Secretary must carry out the board’s decision within 90 days, and may order reinstatement, back pay, expungement, or other remedies tied to the action. The Secretary can reverse or send the decision back if it is clearly contrary to the evidence or unlawful, or can lessen the penalty if it is not justified by the charges. The Secretary’s action is the final administrative step. The Secretary may name a Department employee to represent management before the board. A section 7401(1) employee may go to court to review the final decision, and a court can set aside agency action that is arbitrary, breaks required procedures, or lacks substantial evidence.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7462
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73