For decades, America’s National Guard and Reserve troops have been buried under a mountain of bureaucratic nonsense when it comes to their orders, pay, and benefits.
Now, Congress is trying to untangle that mess with a new piece of legislation called the Duty Status Reform Act.
The mission is simple: cut through the endless red tape that’s been shortchanging those who serve both state and country.
The current system is a hodgepodge of over 30 duty statuses, ranging from Title 10 to Title 32 and State Active Duty designations.
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The result is confusion, uneven benefits, and in some cases, outright unfairness.
The type of duty order you’re on determines what pay, housing allowance, health care, and retirement points you get — and the inconsistencies have frustrated troops for years.
Senator Jerry Moran of Kansas, one of the bill’s Republican champions, said the reform would “simplify the structure and strengthen the Guard’s ability to carry out its missions by standardizing pay and benefits.”
Senator Moran’s statement cuts right to the heart of the issue: the Guard’s role has evolved, but Washington’s outdated paperwork hasn’t kept up.
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President Donald Trump brought much-needed attention to this issue when he spoke out in Memphis last March, noting that Guardsmen deployed to American cities should receive deployment pay and benefits like any active-duty soldier.
His remarks spotlighted the very real inequities built into the current system — inequities that this reform seeks to erase.
Julian Plamann, deputy director of government affairs at the National Guard Association of the United States, put it bluntly: “If you’re a Guardsman and you’re on orders for less than 30 days, you do not receive health care or housing benefits.” That’s the catch.
The difference between a 29-day order and a 31-day order can mean the difference between having coverage or not — a ridiculous game of bureaucratic limbo that punishes those who serve.
Plamann called the reform long overdue but admitted the challenge is huge. Reforming the duty status system means rewriting hundreds of policies across war department regulations, joint travel rules, and federal pay codes.

“The can of worms that this is, is so massive it really has stagnated progress,” she said. But it’s exactly the type of problem determined lawmakers and leaders should tackle head-on.
The RAND Corporation released a report in August 2025 that confirmed what every Guardsman already knew — the current system causes confusion for both commanders and troops.
RAND found that some units hesitate to activate their personnel because of pay, benefits, and administrative headaches. That doesn’t just waste time; it undercuts readiness.
One blatant example of the system’s absurdity played out during the 2020 COVID-19 response in New York. Navy reservists deployed on the hospital ship USNS Comfort were under Title 10 orders, which came with full benefits.
But Army National Guard troops working at the nearby Javits Center were under Title 32 orders, meaning their pay and benefits were completely different — even though they were doing the same mission.
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Matt Schwartzman, policy director for the Reserve Organization of America, explained another major problem: “The system rewards how orders are written over the duty actually performed.”
Troops can work nearly full-time under a mix of short-term orders and still lack consistent health coverage or housing support. That reality is unacceptable in a nation that claims to support its service members.
The impact doesn’t stop with the troops themselves. Military families have also been caught in the crossfire of bureaucratic rules.

After a tragic 2015 helicopter crash in the Gulf of Mexico that killed four Guard members and seven Marines, it was revealed that the Guard families received less in survivor payments simply because their loved ones were on “inactive duty training.”
Congress tried to fix that inequity in the 2017 annual war bill, but other loopholes remain.
The new bill proposes cutting more than two dozen statuses down to four broad categories that clearly define who qualifies for what. These categories would cover everything from war and national emergency response to state-level disaster deployments, training, and even remote cyber operations.
It’s modernization the Guard desperately needs as cyber and remote missions become more frequent.
Major Plamann, who also serves as a Maryland National Guard company commander, said the change would bring much-needed clarity for modern Guard units that do remote or tech-driven work.
“There’s so much that we do in between drills,” she said. “This will be nice to actually have something to point to in a structure that allows us to get some sort of compensation for that.”
Supporters believe that passing this bill isn’t just about simplifying paperwork — it’s about fairness, respect, and finally giving Guardsmen and reservists what they’ve earned.
The Department of War exists to support our troops in every aspect, and this legislative cleanup could finally bring that principle to life.
If Congress follows through, the Duty Status Reform Act could be the long-overdue victory America’s part-time warriors have been waiting for.
Our troops deserve consistency, not confusion. The message is clear: if you serve this country, your benefits shouldn’t depend on what line of text appears at the top of your orders.
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