SF4072
Certain veterans or former members of the armed forces who have forfeited federal benefits do not qualify for state-funded benefits, services, or programs provision; environmental hazards information and assistance program for veterans discontinuance provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: HF3544
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Establish new rules for veteran benefits eligibility in Minnesota, tying eligibility for state-funded benefits to federal benefit forfeiture decisions.
- Rework the environmental hazards information and assistance framework for veterans, including how information is shared and how help is provided.
- Create data collection related to deceased veterans and their families, with specific privacy protections and limits on how the data can be used.
Main Provisions
Eligibility for state-funded benefits
- An individual who is a veteran or former member of the armed forces does not qualify for state-funded benefits services or programs if the United States Department of Veterans Affairs has determined that the individual forfeited entitlement to federal benefits under federal law (38 U.S.C. 61).
Repeal of existing environmental hazards statutes (and related reorganization)
- Repeals certain sections of Minnesota law related to the Environmental Hazards Information and Assistance Act (sections 196.19, 196.21, 196.22 subdivisions 1, 2, 3 and 5, 196.23, 196.24, 196.25, 196.26, and 197.225).
- Replaces them with a restructured framework to provide veterans with information about environmental hazards (especially related to chemical agents), and to coordinate with federal and state resources for treatment and claims support.
Environmental hazards information and assistance framework
- Establishes an Environmental Hazards Information and Assistance Section within the Department of Veterans Affairs, headed by a director.
- The director is appointed by the commissioner of veterans affairs and works with the commissioner on duties under the new act.
- The section is supported with office space, administrative services, and clerical support.
Director and governance
- The director leads the environmental hazards information and assistance program and fulfills duties defined in the act.
- Minimum qualifications for the director are set by the commissioner with input from the budget office to ensure appropriate scientific and technical background.
Health and scientific responsibilities
- The commissioner of health provides medical information to health professionals about detection, diagnosis, and treatment of symptoms related to chemical exposures.
- The commissioner of health, with the University of Minnesota and other experts, provides genetic information and counseling about potential genetic effects from chemical exposures.
- The commissioner of health offers technical assistance to support the program’s duties.
Information sharing, confidentiality, and data use
- Identity of a veteran whose information is collected under the environmental hazards program is private data (confidential), with public summary data allowed.
- Data about deceased veterans collected under the program’s provisions may be shared with next of kin, veterans organizations, the news media, and researchers for ceremonial or historical purposes, but with privacy protections and restrictions.
Referrals and assistance
- The program coordinates with federal agencies, county veterans service officers, and veterans organizations to refer veterans to appropriate treatment for health conditions related to chemical exposure.
- The program helps veterans access advocacy services to assist with filing compensation claims for disabilities linked to chemical exposure.
- Limited studies on the prevalence of exposure-related health conditions may be contracted, with input from health experts and institutions.
Legal and civil actions
- The commissioner may request the attorney general to represent a class of veterans in legal actions to obtain information about exposure or to obtain access to individual medical records if needed.
List of deceased personnel
- The commissioner collects data on Minnesota residents who died from service-connected causes, including next of kin information if applicable.
- Collected data are nonpublic, but may be disseminated for ceremonial or honorary purposes to specified groups, with restrictions.
- Next of kin can request that the data not be disseminated for any purpose.
- The data collected does not determine anyone’s status for veteran benefits.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
Tying state benefit eligibility to federal benefit forfeiture decisions
- State-funded veterans benefits would be denied if federal authorities determine forfeiture of federal benefits.
Major rewrite of environmental hazards program
- The bill repeals current environmental hazards statutes and creates a new structure under an Environmental Hazards Information and Assistance Act, including a dedicated section, director, and coordinated services for veterans facing health issues from chemical exposures.
Expanded health and counseling duties
- Health department involvement increases through medical information provision, genetic counseling, and technical support related to environmental exposures.
Data privacy and allowed disclosures
- Strengthened confidentiality for veterans’ information, with clearly defined limits on what data can be shared and to whom, while permitting certain public-summary uses and next-of-kin access.
Deceased veterans data collection
- New data collection on deceased service members and related privacy rules for next of kin, ceremonial and historical use.
Local and federal collaboration
- Expanded collaboration with federal Veterans Affairs, county offices, veterans organizations, and researchers to help veterans with exposure-related health issues and benefits claims.
Relevant Terms - forfeiture of federal benefits - United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) - 38 U.S.C. 61 (federal forfeiture statute) - state-funded benefits/services - Environmental Hazards Information and Assistance Act - chemical agents - Agent Orange - environmental hazards information and assistance section - director (of the environmental hazards section) - Department of Veterans Affairs (Minnesota) - commissioner of veterans affairs - commissioner of health - genetic information and counseling - referrals to treatment and claims assistance - limited studies / prevalence studies - confidentiality / private data - summary data (public data) - next of kin / data dissemination restrictions - data on deceased veterans - attorney general representation for class actions - deputy commissioners (veteran services, veteran health care, administration)
Past committee meetings
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Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 02, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| March 02, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Agriculture, Veterans, Broadband, and Rural Development | |
| March 17, 2026 | Senate | Action | Comm report: To pass as amended | ||
| March 17, 2026 | Senate | Action | Second reading | ||
| April 15, 2026 | Senate | Action | Rule 45; subst. General Orders | ||
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Meeting documents
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Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
Sponsors
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