<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Tuesday,  April 23 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Politics

Veterans who work in cannabis being denied key benefit of GI Bill

Lawmakers say policy makes home loans inaccessible

By Emily Kopp, CQ-Roll Call
Published: June 4, 2019, 8:26pm

WASHINGTON — For 75 years, veterans purchasing a home have been able to count on help with their home loans from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — home loans backed by the VA are one of the core benefits included in the 1944 GI Bill.

But a little-known rule — one the VA has never issued any policies or guidance on — makes those loans inaccessible to veterans who work in the cannabis industry, according to a group of about two dozen lawmakers.

Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass., first became aware of the off-the-books policy when a veteran wrote her office after his application for help with a home loan was rejected.

The VA wrote that it considered working in cannabis to be insufficiently “stable and reliable” — even though pot sales are legal in the state for both medicinal and recreational use.

“The VA needs to catch up with the times and recognize the growing role of the cannabis economy that employs over 200,000 Americans,” Clark said in a statement. “Our veterans shouldn’t be penalized or denied the benefits they have earned because they are working in a budding industry.”

A spokesman for the VA did not reply to requests for comment on the department’s unstated policy.

The veteran asked Clark’s office not to be identified because he is concerned about job security.

In a letter shared with Roll Call, roughly two dozen lawmakers acknowledge that marijuana businesses already employ nearly a quarter-million people, and the number of veterans working in the industry is likely to rise.

The letter is dated May 13; the lawmakers requested a reply clarifying the VA’s policy within 30 days.

The VA underwrites part of a mortgage loan application for eligible veterans. If the veteran defaults, the government guarantees the lender a portion of what is owed. That makes veterans and service members attractive to lenders.

Veterans don’t have to make a down payment and avoid mortgage insurance fees.

In the years following the GI Bill, zero down-payment loan programs helped drive a boom in homeownership, some economists say.

According to Clark’s office, the VA denied her constituent’s loan application because approving it would risk prosecution by the U.S. Department of Justice under anti-money laundering statutes.

But the lawmakers point out that the DOJ has narrowed its prosecutions of state-sanctioned pot sales in recent years.

Loading...