A Bill to Help Fight Terrorism or Kill Non-profits?

A Bill to Help Fight Terrorism or Kill Non-profits?

By: Stephanie Kalota 
Founder, Veteran Legislative Voice & AHG Correspondent

Shortly before Thanksgiving, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 9495, the Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act, which greatly concerned many non-profit organizations. Part of this bill is a well-needed correction to tax law, that postpones deadlines for filing taxes for those that are wrongfully detained abroad. This could also be applied to the spouse of the detained individual so that they could be eligible for maximum
benefits.

What has concerned non-profit organizations is section four of the bill, “Termination of Tax-Exempt Status of Terrorist Supporting Organization.” Within this section, the Treasury Secretary (who is under the leadership of the President) could designate a non-profit organization as a
“terrorist supporting organization” which strips them of their tax-exempt status. This law doesn’t
require any due process or formal investigation from professionals like the FBI or CIA. It does allow for administrative review underneath the Treasury Secretary’s Department of Internal Revenue Service Independent Office of Appeals, and it allows the U.S. Court System to have exclusive jurisdiction to review a final determination.

Bear in mind that these federal judges could also be the president’s appointee, and just being appointed by them has not required these judges to recuse themselves for possible conflict of interest.

There are a number of organizations that have spoken out against this legislation in hopes of
preventing the Senate from acting on this bill. The NAACP has stated that “With H.R. 9495, the incoming administration is threatening to use their power to undermine our freedoms by
dismantling tax-exempt organizations they don't like. Now, civil society groups across the
political spectrum are at serious risk, including the NAACP.” The Utah Non-Profits Association stated that this “ is a bill that would devastate our communities, our organizations, and our
democracy. It would let the Executive Branch unilaterally shut down any nonprofits they disagree with, without due process. The potential for overreach, subjective application, and abuse of this legislation is enormous, and the consequences for organizations and the people
they serve cannot be overstated. As nonprofits, we have the right under the 1st amendment to protest and advocate for or against legislation that will directly impact our sector, and with this bill, this right is at risk.”

But how would this impact everyday Americans? This could prevent people in this country from receiving the care that they need in times of emergency because these organizations are spending more money protect them legally, or not speaking up and advocating for those that
need it.

congress

The Latest Veterans Bills to Close out the Congressional Session

By: Stephanie Kalota 
Founder, Veteran Legislative Voice & AHG Correspondent

Before Christmas, three congressional bills passed the Senate and the House and were presented to the President’s desk. They are S. 2181, the Keeping Military Families Together Act
of 2023, S. 2513, the Veterans Benefits Improvement Act of 2024, and S. 141, Senator
Elizabeth Dole's 21 st Century Veterans Healthcare and Benefits Improvement Act.

Before Christmas, three congressional bills passed the Senate and the House and were presented to the President’s desk. They are S. 2181, the Keeping Military Families Together Act
of 2023, S. 2513, the Veterans Benefits Improvement Act of 2024, and S. 141, Senator
Elizabeth Dole's 21 st Century Veterans Healthcare and Benefits Improvement Act.

The second bill, introduced by Senator Jon Tester (D-MT), the Veterans Benefits Improvement Act of 2024, is long overdue and it contains a large amount of improvements! It improves the disability benefit questionnaire forms, (which helps veterans in their disability claims processing)
and provisions for medical disability examinations by the contractors. It also requires a report on the feasibility of providing enhanced access to certain systems to governmental veterans'
service officers, whether the VA would benefit from the establishment of an intergovernmental
liaison between the VA and the governmental veterans' service officers, and any other
recommendations that may improve how the VA monitors, coordinates with or provides support
to covered governmental veterans service officers. This bill also creates an internship program for the Board of Veterans’ Appeals for those enrolled in the first or second year of law schools
accredited by the American Bar Association. Another aspect of the bill is the establishment of
benefits for those laypersons who work for the Department of Veterans Affairs like student loan repayment, a mentorship program, and an occupational assignment program. The last two
items include an increase on additional temporary expansion of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims and a report on improving access to Board of Veterans’ Appeals
telehearings.

The last bill, introduced by Senator Jerry Moran (R-KS), the Senator Elizabeth Dole 21st Century Veterans Healthcare and Benefits Improvement Act has been something that many
have been watching. This is a very extensive bill that is set to improve certain VA programs for home and community-based services, education services, home loan programs, homeless
veteran programs, disability, and memorial affairs matters, oversight and investigation matters,
and employment/training programs for veterans. Many organizations like the Disabled American
Veterans, the Wounded Warrior Project, and the Elizabeth Dole Foundation applaud the
progress of this bill, especially for everything that it will improve.

As this article is written, these bills are yet to be signed by President Biden. But there are not any known causes of concern on whether he would veto it. This could be a lasting legacy for veterans before his administration ends that could improve the quality of lives of many who
served.