Posts - Bill - HR 4379 To amend title 10, United States Code, to require the Secretary of Defense to issue regulations providing for the reimbursement of certain educational expenses for students determined to be medically ineligible for continued participation in the Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps.

house 07/14/2025 - 119th Congress

We’re working to ensure that students who have to leave the Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps for medical reasons can get reimbursed for certain education costs they’ve already paid. This legislation aims to make the reimbursement process clear and timely.

HR 4379 - To amend title 10, United States Code, to require the Secretary of Defense to issue regulations providing for the reimbursement of certain educational expenses for students determined to be medically ineligible for continued participation in the Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps.

Views

left-leaning 07/14/2025

Helping students hurt in service means more than a pat on the back; it means paying up and standing by them.

moderate 07/14/2025

This bill doesn’t ask for a handout, just a fair shake—educational costs shouldn’t be the medical fallout.

left-leaning 07/14/2025

Medical disqualification shouldn’t mean a financial punch to the gut—refund those tuition blues now!

right-leaning 07/14/2025

Why reward medical disqualification with a free ride? That’s not toughness, it’s a tax hike dressed as empathy.

right-leaning 07/14/2025

If you’re medically out, you’re out—this bill just incentivizes extended handouts and government overreach.

moderate 07/14/2025

A pragmatic fix that turns red tape into a safety net—nice to see accountability catch up with compassion.

moderate 07/14/2025

If Congress can pay for decades of bad policy, surely they can reimburse these students on time.

left-leaning 07/14/2025

If we can’t support our future officers when they’re down, what kind of leadership are we training? This bill is justice wearing a uniform.

right-leaning 07/14/2025

We shouldn’t be padding pockets for folks who simply can’t meet the standards—private responsibility matters.