The Biden administration expanded benefits for veterans with some cancers that could be linked to burn pit exposure.
The department has added several blood and urinary tract cancers to the list of diseases considered to be related to service ...
The federal Department of Veterans Affairs changes mean some vets are entitled to an extra year of college payments — 48 ...
Gulf War veterans and Post-9/11 vets suffereing from leukemia and bladder cancer will get presumptive benefits status under a ...
President Biden signed a bill that would extend eligibility for burial benefits to terminally ill veterans who die at home, ...
Veterans who served multiple enlistments can now get as much as 48 months of educational support from two GI bills.
The Department of Veterans Affairs said the updated policy could impact more than 1 million veterans and their beneficiaries.
Higher education benefits have been expanded, giving an extra 12 months of funding for more than a million veterans.
Joshua Jacobs, the VA's undersecretary for benefits, said the VA now has the ability to provide up to 12 months of additional education benefits for qualifying veterans.
Legislation to expand veterans’ burial benefits that was inspired by a Kingsford man’s case has become federal law. President ...
Bipartisan legislation co-sponsored by U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) aimed at enhancing outreach to veterans regarding ...
Veterans who served through multiple reenlistments are now eligible for an additional 12 months of education benefits under ...