Bergman duty status legislation gains momentum with Senate introduction
Jack Bergman
Washington – Last week, U.S. Senators Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) – a member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense – and Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) – a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee – introduced the bipartisan Duty Status Reform Act in the Senate to make comprehensive reforms to the National Guard by consolidating and streamlining the duty status framework.
Reps. Jack Bergman (R-MI-01) and Gil Cisneros (D-CA-31) led the legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.
“Michigan’s National Guard members are among the most dedicated service members in the country, and they deserve a system that works as hard as they do,” said Bergman. “The current duty status framework – nearly 30 classifications – creates unnecessary confusion, delays pay and benefits, and limits commanders’ ability to mobilize quickly when our Nation calls. The Duty Status Reform Act fixes that by cutting through the bureaucracy and giving our Guardsmen the clarity, consistency, and equity they’ve earned. I’m proud to lead this effort in the House alongside Rep. Cisneros, and I thank Senators Moran and Rosen for carrying this forward in the Senate.”
“The men and women of the National Guard in Kansas and across the country play a critical role in serving our communities and defending our nation,” said Sen. Moran. “As the Guard’s mission has evolved, the duty status system has become increasingly complex. This legislation will simplify the structure and strengthen the Guard’s ability to carry out its missions by standardizing pay and benefits, bolstering readiness and better supporting those who serve.”
“Duty Status Reform is a necessary overhaul to antiquated administrative systems that have negatively impacted our Reserve and National Guard servicemembers’ quality of life and readiness,” said Sen. Rosen. “That’s why I’m proud to help introduce this bipartisan bill to cut through the red tape by simplifying the duty status structure from nearly 30 statuses down to four so the reserve component will receive timely and equitable pay and benefits without preventable delays or disruption. This legislation ensures the reserve component receives fair and equitable treatment when answering the call to service at a moment’s notice.”
“In our ever-changing operational environment, our military leaders need the flexibility to act quickly and effectively. But the duty status system has limited commanders’ ability to quickly mobilize guard and reserve units. The broken duty status construct is hurting our readiness and fixing this long-standing issue has remained my number one priority since returning to Congress,” said Rep. Cisneros. “The Duty Status Reform Act is a bipartisan, bicameral solution that will bolster our readiness and improve our service members’ lives by giving them predictability, pay parity, and hard-earned points towards TRICARE and Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits. I am thankful to Senators Moran and Rosen for leading the Senate’s efforts on this complex issue, and I look forward to working with partners in Congress, the administration, and the Department of Defense to get this legislation across the finish line.”
Specifically, the Duty Status Reform Act would:
– Standardize pay and benefits;
– Improve deployment readiness by clearly outlining mission eligibility requirements;
– Provide servicemembers and commanders with greater clarity on the duties servicemembers can perform before extensions are required;
– Ease transitions as servicemembers move from one status to another; and
– Improve consistency in Veterans’ benefits eligibility for Guard members by reducing disparities resulting from differing duty statuses.
The legislation would create four duty statuses:
Category 1: Active Duty – war, national emergency, disaster response, cyber/WMD events, presidential call-ups and pre-planned missions.
Category 2: Active Duty – disciplinary jurisdiction, missing status, required active-duty training and Active Guard and Reserve (AGR) functions.
Category 3: Reserve Component Duty – required annual training, musters, Inactive Duty Training (IDT)-like duties and additional training with consent.
Category 4: Remote Assignments – flexible tasks, online learning and individually assigned non-supervised duties.
“The National Guard has become an indispensable operational force for this country, but the duty status system has not kept pace with the way our Soldiers and Airmen serve today,” said Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Francis M. McGinn, President, National Guard Association of the United States (NGAUS). “Duty Status Reform will reduce administrative burdens, simplify a system that has become too complex, and make the Guard easier to access and employ when the nation needs us most. NGAUS is grateful to Senators Moran and Rosen for their leadership, and we are encouraged by the broad bipartisan support behind this legislation. That momentum reflects a growing recognition that the Guard deserves a modern system that matches the reality of its service.”





