VA announces 2024 Equity Action Plan

New actions to ensure that all veterans receive the health care and benefits they earned

By U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on February 19, 2024

WASHINGTON - The Department of Veterans Affairs released its 2024 Agency Equity Action Plan Feb. 14 to help ensure that VA delivers on its promise to provide world-class care and benefits to all veterans, their families, caregivers and survivors - regardless of their age, race, ethnicity, sex, gender identity, religion, disability, sexual orientation or geographic location.

As a part of this effort, VA also released the findings of a new study investigating disparities in grant rates for disability compensation for mental health conditions. This study found that recently separated Black veterans have grant rates better than or equal to other veterans when they apply for disability compensation benefits within the first year of leaving the military and use a VA-accredited Veterans Service Organization. This is a critical discovery because - while Black veterans receive VA benefits at higher rates than other veterans - their grant rates are lower for mental health conditions. In response to this new data, VA will be visiting 15 or more Department of Defense installations to work with transitioning service members, updating our Transition Assistance Program curriculum that is provided to all transitioning service members, updating VA Solid Start scripts to inform recently transitioned service members of their earned benefits, working directly with VSOs to engage with Black veterans, and doing direct outreach to encourage Black veterans to file for disability compensation benefits within the first year of discharge and utilize VA-accredited VSOs when filing a claim.

VA released this 2024 update to its Agency Equity Action Plan in coordination with the Biden-Harris Administration's whole-of-government equity agenda. VA's Equity Action Plan is part of the Department's efforts to implement the President's Executive Order on "Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through The Federal Government," which reaffirmed the administration's commitment to advance equity and build an America where we serve all veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors.

"It's our job to provide every veteran with the world-class care and benefits they deserve, no matter who they are, what they look like, who they love, where they are from, or how they identify," said VA Secretary Denis McDonough. "That means investigating any disparities in VA health care and benefits and eliminating them - and that's exactly what this new study and plan will help us do. We will not rest until any and all disparities at VA are a thing of the past."

As VA continues to deliver more care and more benefits to more veterans than ever before, VA will strive to ensure that every veteran gets the care and benefits they deserve. Using the Agency Equity Plan, VA will work urgently to improve outcomes and eliminate disparities in veteran benefits and health care; increase access to VA services; enhance economic security for all veterans, including historically underserved veteran communities; listen to and learn from veteran communities; and more. These efforts are spearheaded by VA's new agency equity team, which was launched in June 2023 to lead VA's equity efforts.

Since releasing its first-ever equity action plan in 2022, VA has taken the following steps:

As this work continues, updates will be posted on VA.gov/Equity. Learn more about the Administration's equity work at whitehouse.gov/equity and check out all Federal Equity Action Plans at performance.gov/equity.