Chairman's News

FY27 Military Construction & VA Bill Markup: Sustaining Funding for Veterans & Defense

AI Analysis Relevanz: 6/10

The House Appropriations Subcommittee began considering the Fiscal Year 2027 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs bill. This initial step prioritizes fully funding veteran healthcare and benefits, including mental health support, while also investing in military construction, base readiness, and military family quality of life needs. It signals continued robust government spending and potential opportunities for contractors in defense construction, healthcare services, and related support sectors.

Why relevant? This is an early legislative step (subcommittee markup) for a fiscal year (FY27) still some time away, thus not an immediate market driver. However, it outlines clear spending priorities for significant sectors like defense construction and veteran healthcare, providing forward-looking insight into government contract opportunities and sustained funding for these areas.

Original Article

from the Senate Finance Committee

Cole Remarks at FY27 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Bill Subcommittee Markup

Thank you, Chairman Carter, and thank you to Ranking Member Wasserman Schultz, Ranking Member DeLauro, and all members of the subcommittee.

Today, we begin consideration of the Fiscal Year 2027 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs bill – our first step in advancing another year of responsible, results-driven appropriations.

This measure reflects a clear priority: delivering for those who have served and those who continue to serve. 

It fully funds veteran health care and benefits and ensures that the promises made to our nation’s heroes are met with both words and actions. It strengthens safety nets for those in need by supporting critical mental health and suicide prevention efforts. And, it invests in long-term improvements at the VA and our nation’s military cemeteries. 

At the same time, this bill reinforces our base posture from the ground up by investing in military construction, improving barracks, and ensuring our installations are equipped to support readiness in an increasingly complex environment. From the Indo-Pacific to installations here at home, strength and preparedness are not optional. 

We also recognize that the military unit doesn’t stop at the uniform – but extends to the family behind it. That’s why this bill sustains resources for family housing, childcare, and quality-of-life needs.

Our servicemembers, both past and present, uphold their duty in uniform – and we uphold ours through Article I. This is a responsible, mission-focused bill that honors that shared commitment.

I thank Chairman Carter for his leadership. And also to Ranking Member Wasserman Schultz, and the majority and minority staff for their work on this bill. I look forward to its consideration today.