New mental health scholarships designed to counter VA staff shortfalls

By Leo Shane III

Starting next summer, Veterans Affairs officials will award scholarships to students studying mental health care in exchange for a promise that the recipients work for the department after graduation, the latest effort from leaders to try to fill critical staffing vacancies.

The move, mandated by Congress as part of the Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Mental Health Care Improvement Act of 2019, will provide two years of tuition for graduate level studies in exchange for a promise of six years of work at a VA Vet Center. Officials said that “underserved areas that need additional mental health professionals” would be prioritized.

“Vet Centers provide Veterans, service members, and their families with quick and easy access to the mental health care they need and deserve,” VA Secretary Denis McDonough said in a statement.

“These scholarships will help VA ensure all veterans and service members — including those in historically underserved areas — have access to Vet Centers with highly qualified, trained and compassionate staff.”

By Tamar Celis
Tamar Celis Career Advising Specialist