Petition to Provide Competency-Based Credentialing

Jake Wood

Below is a letter submitted by Team Rubicon leadership to Mr. Bill McBride, the Executive Director of the National Governors Association, in reference our recent petition  to providing competency-based medical credentialing to veterans with medical training.

To learn more and to sign the petition, please visit Petitions.WhiteHouse.gov.


Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Mr. Bill McBride
Executive Director
National Governors Association

Mr. McBride,

Thank you for your leadership as our nation navigates the response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Team Rubicon is a 501(c)3 nonprofit disaster response organization whose mission is to assist communities by mobilizing veterans to continue their service, leveraging their skills and experience to help people prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters and humanitarian crises.

We believe that, in response to COVID-19 and in order to increase the overall capacity of our nation’s medical system, states should streamline their requirements and procedures to allow retired or recently transitioned veterans who held military medical care occupational specialties, or who completed certain medical training while serving in the Armed Forces of the United States, to meet certification, licensure, and other requirements applicable to civilian health care professions (such as emergency medical technician, paramedic, licensed practical nurse, registered nurse, physical therapy assistant, or physician assistant professions) in the State.

The Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) declared a public health emergency on January 31, 2020, under section 319 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 247d), in response to COVID-19. We are asking the National Governors Association to review and encourage all Governors to exercise the provisions as described under §247. Assisting veterans with military emergency medical training to meet requirements for becoming civilian health care professionals. Additionally, Team Rubicon requests that the National Governors Association encourage states to expand or include measures within their Emergency Powers to allow for the use of qualified veterans who meet the requirements of Sec. 247 as healthcare providers. Addressing our nation’s rising healthcare needs will require all hands on deck. Given the nationwide scale of COVID-19 cases, states will not be able to rely on neighboring states to send health care providers to meet the demand. Authorizing recently retired or transitioned medically-trained veterans to serve within healthcare as they have been trained—allowing them to get into the fight—is a vital way to meet the nation’s rising needs: It utilizes the qualified citizens already in our communities.

There are hundreds of thousands of military veterans with extensive training and experience in emergency medicine, yet there exists no pathway towards credentialing or using these individuals in a time of domestic crisis. Our taxpayers have invested hundreds of billions of dollars to train these individuals as the world’s most nimble and effective problem solvers. Yet in this moment of need, we are keeping them on the sidelines. Thank you for your leadership at this critical time.

Respectfully Submitted,

Jake Wood
Chief Executive Officer

  • Reflection

    A Better Tomorrow

    A volunteer responding to tornadoes in Ohio gets a glimpse at the hidden value of the work Greyshirts do.

  • Preparedness

    How to Prepare Your Pets for Disaster

    From leashes for Fido to carriers for Kitty, here are our top disaster preparedness for pets tips to add to your emergency planning now.

  • Feature Story

    Serving World Health Means Innovating

    From Haiti to Ukraine, for World Health Day, we look at where we've delivered disaster relief and humanitarian aid over the past 14 years, and how far we have to go.

Read More Stories