Veterans who served multiple enlistments can now get as much as 48 months of educational support from two GI bills.
The Biden administration expanded benefits for veterans with some cancers that could be linked to burn pit exposure.
The Department of Veterans Affairs said the updated policy could impact more than 1 million veterans and their beneficiaries.
The Defense Department has reached a settlement with more than 35,000 LGBTQ+ veterans who claimed they were wrongfully ...
The agreement, if approved by a judge, would let former service members upgrade their discharge status and receive benefits ...
This Valentine’s Day, the Wisconsin Department of Veterans Affairs hopes you’ll send a card to a veteran living in WDVA ...
Acute and chronic leukemias and other life-threatening cancers will now be recognized as presumptive conditions for ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs announced the change in response to a U.S. Supreme Court decision in April favoring a veteran who sought benefits under two different GI Bill programs.
The federal Department of Veterans Affairs changes mean some vets are entitled to an extra year of college payments — 48 ...
Still, even a one-person jump in the number of veterans in Congress is significant, because an increase in members with ...
A group of LGBTQ veterans who sued the Department of Defense last year for denying them honorable discharges because of their ...
When a young person today sees the political elite not serving, being pardoned for crimes, being excused and even elevated in ...