Modernizing Access to Military Records: 
August 8, 2022 
Frequently Asked Questions 
Heather M. Salazar 
As the world increasingly relies on digital access and electronic material as means to apply for 
Analyst in Veterans Policy 
jobs, educational programs, disability or military benefits, etc., documents that are not digitized 
  
are met with greater frustration by individuals trying to apply for various programs. One area that 
Meghan M. Stuessy 
has received significant attention is the means of accessing military service records because only 
Analyst in Government 
a small portion is currently digitized. 
Organization and 
The process to access military service records can be challenging, due in part to the number of 
Management 
agencies and institutions involved in creating, retrieving, and maintaining military service 
  
information. Documents such as identifying information and specific claims forms may be within 
a veteran’s possession, but accessing other documents may require contacting the National 
 
Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the Department of Defense (DOD), or the 
veteran’s private doctor or medical facility. The main repository of military service records, outside of DOD, is in St. Louis , 
MO at the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC). The NPRC holds 4 million cubic feet of military and civil-service 
personnel-related records stored in several buildings, of which more than 2 million cubic feet are specifically military 
personnel and medical records for servicemembers who separated prior to or during 1994. Only 10% of these records are 
digitized, while the remainder are in paper form, making it more challenging for veterans and other federal agencies to acces s 
the records. 
Digitization of materials may allow for the expedited consideration of veterans benefits, but concerns about the durability of 
digital formats and associated costs compared to paper records remain. As the federal government increasingly manages 
information in digital formats, efforts to modernize access to military service records have warranted congressional attention 
and oversight. 
This report explains how records are created, how military service records are managed and stored, and the processes that 
surround digitizing and modernizing these records. In addition, this report responds to several questions frequently posed to 
CRS regarding funding for digitization and modernization efforts, along with challenges or obstacles that agencies may face 
while attempting to digitize their records. 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
Contents 
Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1 
1. What are military service records? ............................................................................ 2 
2. How do agencies collect and manage military service records?...................................... 3 
3. Where are military service records located?................................................................ 4 
4. How are military service records formatted and stored?................................................ 5 
5. Who can request documents? ................................................................................... 7 
Restrictions on Disclosure ..................................................................................... 9 
6. Are fees charged to reproduce military service records? ............................................... 9 
7. How quickly are NPRC records requests processed?.................................................. 10 
Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Processing................................................... 11 
8. What efforts are being made to digitize military service records? ................................. 12 
9. What are the chal enges to digitizing military service records? .................................... 14 
Ongoing Maintenance and Training Costs .............................................................. 14 
Incorporating Records Management Consideration in IT Systems Planning ................. 14 
Records Identifiers ............................................................................................. 15 
10. What funds are available to support digitization of military service records?................ 15 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. Then and Now: Records Sent to NARA................................................................. 6 
 
Tables 
 
Table A-1. Abbreviations ................................................................................................ 17 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix. Abbreviations ................................................................................................ 17 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ....................................................................................................... 17 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
Introduction 
Servicemembers, veterans, and their families frequently seek access to military service records 
for a variety of reasons: to ensure veterans receive their earned benefits and honors;1 to complete 
family histories; among others. The process to access military service records can be chal enging, 
due in part to the number of agencies and institutions involved in creating, retrieving, and 
maintaining military service information. As the federal government increasingly manages 
information in digital  formats, efforts to modernize access to military service records have 
warranted congressional attention and oversight.  
Documents such as identifying information and specific claims forms may be within a veteran’s 
possession, but accessing other documents may require contacting the National Archives and 
Records Administration (NARA’s) National Personnel Records Center (NPRC), the Department 
of Defense (DOD), or the veteran’s private doctor or medical facility. Some Department of 
Veterans Affairs (VA)  programs require additional or different documentation for a variety of 
reasons, but the following are always required: 
  relevant identifying information, which could include a service number (SN) for 
certain groups of veterans, Social Security number (SSN), or marriage or birth 
certificates, etc.;  
  the veteran’s discharge or separation papers—Certificate of Uniformed Service 
(DD Form 214) or equivalent; 
  an official military personnel file (OMPF), which typical y includes dates and 
locations of service, and records of medical diagnosis treatment; and  
  relevant VA  application forms. 
For al  disability claims, the veteran is required to submit evidence of an injury/disease that 
happened during active duty service and potential medical evidence from private doctors or 
hospitals, in addition to the aforementioned items.2 A veteran has the option to submit these 
documents electronical y, through the U.S. Postal Service, in person at a VA regional office, 
through a veterans service organization, or with the help of a VA  accredited representative.3 If a 
veteran has al  of the required information, he or she can submit a “fully developed claim” which 
is an electonic claim that VA  can adjudicate quicker because the documentation does not require 
scanning and uploading. This type of claim also does not require VA to acquire additional 
                                              
1 VA  offers a wide  variety of benefits for veterans and their families including  but not limited to: disability 
compensation; disability pension; health care; readjustment counseling;  burial  benefits; and survivor pension. For more 
information on a variety of VA benefits, see  CRS  Report R44837, 
Benefits for Service-Disabled Veterans, coordinated 
by Heather M. Salazar;  CRS  Report R46813, 
Departm ent of Veterans Affairs: Burial Benefits and the National 
Cem etery Adm inistration, by Heather M. Salazar  and T amar B. Breslauer;  CRS  Report R46511, 
Veterans Benefits 
Adm inistration (VBA): Pension Program s, by Heather M. Salazar;  and CRS  Report R42747, 
Health Care for Veterans: 
Answers  to Frequently Asked Questions, by Sidath  Viranga  Panangala and Jared S.  Sussman .   
2 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
Evidence Needed for Your Disability  Claims, March 22, 2022, at 
https://www.va.gov/disability/how-to-file-claim/evidence-needed/;  and Department of Veterans Affairs, “ How t o 
Apply for VA  Health Care,” March 9, 2022, at https://www.va.gov/health-care/how-to-apply/. 
3 For more information on veterans service organizations and accredited representatives, see CRS  Report R46412, 
Veterans  Service Organizations (VSOs): Frequently Asked Questions, by T amar B. Breslauer  and Carol D. Davis;  and 
CRS  Report R46428, 
Veterans Accredited Representatives: Frequently Asked Questions, by Heather M. Salazar  and 
T amar B. Breslauer. 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
information. However, the adjudication process is longer if VA needs to assist the veteran in 
acquiring paper records or has to process a paper claim.4 
Congress has taken an interest in modernizing the VA  benefits claim process with more digital 
assets and has also taken an interest in overal  records digitization efforts, chiefly overseen by 
NARA. Legislative efforts during the 117th Congress have included: 
  H.R. 7153, “Department of Veterans Affairs Principles of Benefits Automation 
Act,” and 
  H.R. 7256, “Expediting Temporary Ratings for Veterans Act.”  
These legislative proposals would direct VA to modernize and improve the agency’s information 
technology mechanisms to increase the speed of processing claims, including digitizing and 
accessing records electronical y. The legislative proposals regarding NARA are focused on the 
performance of the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC), and include: 
  H.R. 7337, “Access for Veterans to Records Act,” and 
  H.R. 3710, “Reopening to address Every COmplete Record request for Devoted 
Servicemembers Act of 2021 (RECORDS Act of 2021).” 
Digitization  of materials may al ow for the expedited consideration of veterans benefits, but 
concerns remain about the durability of digital formats and associated costs compared to paper 
records.5 This report answers questions on how records are created, how military service records 
are managed and stored, and the processes that surround digitizing and modernizing these 
records. In addition, this report provides answers to several questions frequently posed to CRS 
regarding funding for digitization  and modernization efforts along with chal enges or obstacles 
that agencies may face while attempting to digitize their records.  
1. What are military service records? 
When an individual  joins the U.S. Armed Forces,6 its Reserve components, or the National 
Guard, an “official military personnel file” (OMPF) is created, which records the activities of the 
servicemember throughout his or her career. The OMPF contains documentation pertaining to the 
servicemember’s training, education, tour of duty dates and locations, performance, awards, and 
decoration. It also includes records of injuries incurred, and the circumstance of the member’s 
separation from military service. The OMPF is created by the service branch in which the 
servicemember serves and becomes a crucial record to accessing benefits upon separation.  
Upon a servicemember’s separation from service, the individual is issued a Certificate of 
Uniformed Service, most often referred to as DD Form 214. This form is provided to 
servicemembers who completed active duty or at least 90 days of consecutive days of active duty 
for training. The DD Form 214 wil  provide information on when and where the individual 
entered and left the service, last duty assignment and rank, their job specialty, awards or citations 
received, and character of service at separation. 
                                              
4 For more information on VA’s claims  process, see CRS  Report R47163, 
Department of Veterans Affairs: Claims 
Process and Com pensation and Pension Exam s by Contracted Physicians, coordinated by Heather M. Salazar. 
5 For an exploration of some of these challenges surrounding  digital  and print formats, see CRS  Report R45014, 
Governm ent Printing, Publications, and Digital Inform ation Management: Issues and Challenges, by R. Eric Petersen.  
6 10 U.S.C.  §101(a)(4). T he U.S. Armed Forces includes  the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard,  and 
Space  Force. 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
In February 2022, the Department of Defense (DOD) released new instructions on the issuance of 
DD Form 214-1. This form is an addendum to the regularly issued DD Form 214, and wil  be 
provided for al  members of the National Guard and Reserve Components upon separation, 
whether or not the individual completes a period of active duty or active duty for training. The 
DD Form 214-1 would list al  of the individual’s  Guard/Reserve service—active duty or not—
and wil  be provided in conjunction with the DD Form 214; however, only the relevant portions 
of the DD Form 214 wil  be completed. If a National Guard or Reserve member did not serve on 
active duty, the DD Form 214 wil  only include identifying information related to the service 
branch and individual. If the Guardsmen or Reservist had active duty service, that would be listed 
on the initial  DD Form 214, with any additional Guard/Reserve duty listed on DD Form 214-1.7 
In cases, where a veteran’s DD Form 214 is missing, has been destroyed, or cannot be provided to 
the veteran, a “Statement of Service” is issued in lieu of the DD Form 214.8 This document is 
general y created to assist veterans with qualifying for VA benefits. The veteran should contact 
the service branch for information on this statement or request VA to assist in acquiring such a 
statement through its obligation of “duty to assist” (see question 2). 
DOD is in the process of creating electronic discharge papers, pursuant to Section 569 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2020 (P.L. 116-92). More 
information on this effort is found in Questi
on 8. What efforts are being made to digitize military 
service records?” 
2. How do agencies collect and manage military service records? 
When a veteran or survivor files a claim for VA benefits—under Title 38, Section 5103A, of the 
U.S. Code and Title 38, Section 3.159, of the 
Code of Federal Regulations—VA has a “duty to 
assist” in developing or completing a claim, which initiates the federal government’s effort to 
collect and manage an individual’s military service records. This obligation requires VA to notify 
the claimant of additional evidence that was not previously submitted but is required to process 
the claim. In addition, under VA’s “duty to assist” obligation, it can assist in accessing records 
from nonfederal and federal entities. VA can contact DOD to request a veteran’s OMPF, including 
medical and separation documentation, and NPRC for an older veteran whose records and DD 
Form 214 have been sent to NPRC for archival purposes. 
Another way in which agencies work together to collect and manage military service records is 
through joint records centers. Beginning in 1989, the U.S. Army’s Joint Services Record 
Research Center (JSRRC) mission researched Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast 
Guard records that contained historical information on the branches’ individual units, as wel  as 
some personnel records, to support requests from VA for veterans’ claims. In 2019, an Army 
reorganization led JSRRC to begin to transfer responsibility for certain records research to the 
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA).9 As a result, VBA created a Records Research Center                                               
7 Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness,  Department of Defense, 
DoD Instruction 
1336.01: Certificate of Uniform ed Service (DD Form  214/5 Series) , February 17, 2022, at https://www.esd.whs.mil/
Portals/54/Documents/DD/issuances/dodi/133601p.pdf. 
8 Approximately 16-18 million OMPFs were destroyed in a fire at the NPRC on July 12, 1973. It is estimated that 80% 
of records for Army personnel discharged  between November 1, 1912 and January 1, 1960, and 75% of records for Air 
Force personnel discharged  between September 25, 1947 and January 1, 1964, were destroyed. For more information 
about materials affected by the 1973 NPRC fire, see National Archives and Records  Administration, 
The 1973 Fire, 
National Personnel Records Center,  at https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-center/fire-1973. 
9 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
FY2021 Budget Submission, Benefits and Burial Programs and Departmental 
Adm inistration, vol. 3 of 4, February 2020, p. VBA-186.
 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
(RRC) to take on JSRRC’s mission. VA published a final rule in the 
Federal Register on March 
23, 2021, amending its regulations addressing the change in agencies.10 
VA’s FY2021 budget submission explained the change in records research, stating that RRC 
planned to use contract support and 13 full-time employees to transition these records research 
services from JSRRC to VBA.11  
VA’s FY2022 budget submission explained that the Army’s new Office for Unit Records 
Response wil  conduct research for the VBA on Agent Orange and post-traumatic stress disorder 
claims for incidents that occurred less than 30 years ago. This includes locations where DOD 
conducts environmental and soil tests to determine traces of Agent Orange or other tactical 
herbicides. In December 2019, DOD updated the list of locations that VA uses to grant benefits 
for Agent Orange exposure due to newly discovered evidence and environmental testing that 
supported use, storage, or testing of the herbicides. 
VBA’s RRC wil  conduct the research for claims where the incident occurred more than 30 years 
ago. The budget submission also included information about VA  creating a digital  repository for 
these claims.  
Compensation Service developed and deployed a workflow engine tool within the Veterans 
Benefits Management System (VBMS)  that provides a fully  searchable digital image 
repository. This stores the digitized records and tracks current tasks. Compensation Service 
is targeting a full operational capability by the end of 2021. The VA -Army IT interface is 
critical  for  the  RRC  and  the  Department  of  the  Army  to  process  these  claims. 
Compensation Service plans to implement a scanning solution for daily research and add 
Coast Guard records.12 
According to VA’s FY2023 budget submission, the fully searchable digital repository did not 
launch at the end of the calendar year 2021 as predicted. It is targeted for full operational 
capability by the end of 2022, according to the budget submission. VBA said it also plans to 
include a scanning solution for Coast Guard records that are used in completion of research 
requests. VBA reported that it completed more than 41,000 research requests in 2021 and is 
averaging approximately 200 requests per day. VBA estimated that with the increased requests, 
the cost of research wil  be approximately $6.4 mil ion  in 2023 and is included in the overal  
appropriation requests for VBA’s Office of Field Operations and Office of Business Integration.13 
3. Where are military service records located? 
DOD, VA, and NPRC may hold relevant records for servicemembers and veterans, and the age of 
the record determines where the record is stored. The transfer of records between agencies and 
storage locations can have implications for locating materials needed to process veterans’ benefits 
requests.14 The age of the servicemember’s records is calculated from the date of separation from 
the military. 
                                              
10 Department of Veterans Affairs, “New Evidence,” 86
 Federal Register 15413-15414, March 23, 2021. 
11 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
FY2021 Budget Submission, Benefits and Burial Programs and Departmental 
Adm inistration, vol. 3 of 4, February 2020, p. VBA-186. 
12 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
FY2022 Budget Submission, Benefits and Burial Programs and Departmental 
Adm inistration, vol. 3 of 4, May 2021, p. VBA-173. 
13 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
FY2023 Budget Submission, Burial and Benefits Programs and Departmental 
Adm inistration, vol. 3 of 4, March 2022, p. VBA-80. 
14 U.S.  Congress, House  Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on Disability  Assistance and Memorial 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
General y, the records of servicemembers who separated from the military less than 62 years ago 
are under the purview of the DOD or VA. NARA takes custody of, or 
accessions, records of 
servicemembers who separated from the military more than 62 years ago via NPRC. The NPRC 
is the central repository for the federal government’s military and civil service personnel-related 
records. The NPRC stores these documents permanently in accordance with the Federal Records 
Act (44 U.S.C. Chapters 21, 29, 31, and 33).15 NARA provides information on records not 
available  at NPRC and where they are otherwise located on their website.16 
Records control schedules also provide information on the location of records prior to their 
transfer to NARA. A records control schedule includes information such as a title of the records 
series that is descriptive in a meaningful way for agency personnel, a complete description of 
their agency use, physical type as appropriate, how the records are arranged, and disposition 
instructions.17 
For additional information on locating sources related to military unit histories and awards, see 
CRS Report RS21282, 
Military Service Records, Awards, and Unit Histories: A Guide to 
Locating Sources, by Barbara Salazar Torreon and Travis A. Ferrel . 
4. How are military service records formatted and stored? 
The formatting and storage of military service records varies widely based on when the 
information was created. While recently created records are increasingly managed digital y, many 
older records, including those at the NPRC, remain in physical formats. The NPRC houses 2 
mil ion  boxes of military and medical records in 15 warehouses. Of those holdings, only 10% are 
available  in electronic formats, while the rest are available in paper and other physical formats.18 
The NPRC holds 4 mil ion  cubic feet of military and civil-service personnel-related records 
stored in several buildings, of which more than 2 mil ion cubic feet are military personnel and 
medical records for servicemembers who separated prior to or during 1994.19 General y, records 
for servicemembers who separated after 1994 are available in electronic formats and are available 
through the servicemembers’ branch of service.20 
                                              
Affairs, 
Wading Through Warehouses  of Paper: The Challenges of Transitioning Veterans  Records to Paperless 
Technology, 112th Cong., 1st sess., December 4, 2012, H.Hrg 112-82 (Washington: GPO, 2013), pp. 54 -55. 
15 For more information on the treatment of records under the Federal Records Act, see  CRS  In Focus IF11119, 
Federal Records: Types and Treatm ents, by Meghan M. Stuessy. 
16 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center: Records Not at NPRC, July  13, 
2021, at 
 https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/frequently-requested-records. See also National 
Archives and Records  Administration, 
Locations of Service Records, at https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-
service-records/locations.  
17 36 C.F.R. §1225.14 and 36 C.F.R. §1225.16. For more information about the treatment of federal records materials, 
see CRS  In Focus  IF11119, 
Federal Records: Types and Treatm ents, by Meghan M. Stuessy.   
18 Letter from Rob Portman, Senator, and Sherrod Brown, Senator, to President Joseph R. Biden  and Hon. David S. 
Ferriero, Archivist of the United States, April 14, 2021, at https://www.portman.senate.gov/sites/default/files/2021-04/
%5BUntitled%5D%20%283%29_0.pdf. 
19 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
The National Personnel Records Center  - A History, at 
https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-center/history; and National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center  Prepares for Expansion of Onsite Workforce,  Washington, DC, March 8, 2021, at 
https://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2021/nr21-30. 
20 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
Access to Military  Service and Pension Records, May 20, 2022, at  
https://www.archives.gov/research/order/research/order/order-vets-records.  
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 Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
Figure 1. Then and Now: Records Sent to NARA
Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
Figure 1. Then and Now: Records Sent to NARA 
1936 and 2021 
 
Source: National Archives  and Records Administration,  
Photograph  of Veteran’s Bureau Records in Stack Areas, 
6/12/1936, National Archives  Catalog, Record Group 64, Series:  Historic  Photograph File of National Archives 
Events and Personnel,  1935 - 1975, June 12, 1936, at https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7820633. U.S.  Air Force 
Office of Special Investigations, 
Largest OSI caseload sent to National Archives,  Quantico, VA, December  20, 2021, 
at https://www.osi.af.mil/News/Art icle-Display/Article/2879835/largest-osi-caseload-sent-to-national-archives/. 
Complicating efforts to digitize tangible materials while also managing digital  files, the volume 
of digital  records materials has increased exponential y in comparison to tangible records.21 
“Huge volumes of electronic information” are a “major chal enge” in record management, 
according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), and “electronic information is 
                                              
21 Because  NARA  accepts historical materials from agencies for preservation, the volume of analog materials to be 
processed has not slowed,  even as agencies adopt electronic formats. Under its current strategic plan, NARA notes that 
it still receives about 100,000 cubic feet per year of new  archival records in analog formats. Similarly, the volume of 
new  electronic records transferred varies significantly from year-to-year, but remains substantial. NARA plans that it 
will  digitize  500 million pages of records and make them available online to the public by FY2024. For more 
information on NARA’s current strategic plan, see National Archives and Records Administration, 
2018-2022 
Strategic Plan, February  2018, at https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/strategic-plan/2018/strategic-plan-
2018-2022.pdf. 
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
increasingly being created in volumes that pose a significant technical chal enge to our ability to 
organize it and make it accessible.”22 
In December 2020, the Archivist of the United States wrote to Congress that in a typical year 
NPRC responds to 1.2 mil ion records requests, most of which were completed within 10 days.23 
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, NPRC reported that it could respond to about 6,300 requests 
from VA per week. However, due to complications from the pandemic, such as facility closures, 
delayed reopenings, and reduced staffing, NPRC said it responded to an average of 2,500 VA 
requests per week during the winter between 2020 and 2021.24 
With specific regard to managing military service records requests, NARA stated that staff 
responded to more than 7,000 emergency reference requests during the closure and delayed 
reopening period.25 However, in its FY2023 congressional budget justification, NARA reported: 
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic continued to disrupt operations at NARA’s Federal 
Records Centers throughout  FY 2021  causing  NARA  to fall  well  below its target in 
meeting  customers’  requests.  Substantial  backlogs  of  unanswered  users  requests 
accumulated as a significant number of staff were unable to work onsite at their local 
facility  due to  facility closures. Emergency requests  were given priority and serviced 
although backlogs of veterans and agency requests amassed.26 
NARA’s ability  to keep pace with the processing of records requests depends not only on the 
volume of records, but also on the adequacy of staff training and records maintenance. NARA 
also describes that the pandemic has delayed the transfer of records from agencies to the NPRC, 
and that the agency is working to develop capacity to service requests remotely. 
5. Who can request documents? 
Federal agencies may request documents from other federal entities. VA’s “duty to assist” 
obligation can apply to accessing records from either federal or nonfederal entities. This authority 
is typical y used in assisting a veteran in filing  a claim for disability compensation, disability 
pension, health care, or burial, among other VA benefits. In some circumstances, VA is able to 
acquire a veteran’s medical records through the electronic health system that is a joint DOD-VA 
system. In other cases, where the records have not been digitized, VA  can contact the service 
branches or NPRC for a veteran’s records. The veteran’s name, service branch, date of service, 
and either service number or SSN is needed. 
                                              
22 GAO  noted that it did not independently verify these reported volumes of records. See  GAO,  
Information 
Managem ent: The Challenges of Managing Electronic Records, GAO-10-838T , June 17, 2010, at http://gao.gov/assets/
130/124883.pdf, pp. 10-11. 
23 Letter from David S. Ferriero, Archivist of the United States, to Carolyn B. Maloney, Chairwoman, December 2020, 
at https://oversight.house.gov/sites/democrats.oversight.house.gov/files/NARA.201209.Letter%20re%20NPRC.pdf. 
24 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center Prepares for Expansion of 
Onsite Workforce,  Washington, DC, March 8, 2021, at https://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2021/nr21-30. 
See  also Nicole Ogrysko, “Pandemic-induced backlog sparks new efforts to digitize military records at NARA,” 
Federal News  Network, June  7, 2021, at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/management/2021/06/pandemic-induced-
backlog-sparks-new-efforts-to-digitize-military-records-at-nara/. For more information, see CRS  In Focus  IF11950, 
COVID-19 Im pact on Access to Military  Service Records, by Heather M. Salazar  and Meghan M. Stuessy . 
25 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
FY2022 Congressional Justification, May 28, 2021, p. 76, at 
https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/performance-budget/2022performance-budget.pdf. 
26 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
FY2023 Congressional Justification, March 28, 2022, p. APP-6, at 
https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/performance-budget/2023-nara-congressional-justification.pdf. 
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Servicemembers, veterans, next of kin (NOK), and VA are also able to request information from 
DOD and NPRC. If the servicemember’s discharge date is less than 62 years ago, the veteran may 
be eligible  to request their personnel and medical records directly from the Army,27 Navy,28 
Marine Corps,29 Air Force,30 Coast Guard,31 or Space Force.32 
Requests for a living servicemember’s records must be accompanied by the signature of the 
servicemember, court appointment documentation, authorization letter, or proof of power of 
attorney in order for documents to be released to the servicemember, NOK, or authorized 
representative.  
For deceased servicemembers who separated less than 62 years ago, NOK may request military 
service records from the service branch by providing proof of the servicemember’s death. 
Both NPRC and VA  consider a veteran’s NOK to include a surviving spouse who has not 
remarried, parents, children, or siblings. VA details four ways in which the veteran’s NOK can 
request the military records: (1) mail or fax form SF-180; (2) write a letter to NPRC; (3) visit 
NPRC in person; or (4) contact the state or county veterans agency.33 A request for a veteran’s 
record by a NOK must contain: the veteran’s full name; service branch; date of service; either 
service number or SSN; and date and place of birth. If the NOK suspects that the deceased 
veteran’s records were destroyed, NPRC requests the NOK also provide the veteran’s place of 
discharge; last assigned unit; and place of entry into service, if known.34 
For deceased servicemembers who separated more than 62 years ago, these archival records may 
be requested through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA; 5 U.S.C. §552).35 Any member of 
the public may make a FOIA request. DOD, VA, and NARA  al  must comply with information 
requests through FOIA subject to certain exclusions, and oftentimes proactively disclose certain 
                                              
27 Army Soldier  Record Branch, 
Accessing or Requesting Your Official Military  Personnel File Documents, May 10, 
2022, at https://www.hrc.army.mil/content/
Accessing%20or%20Requesting%20Your%20Official%20Military%20Personnel%20File%2 0Documents.  
28 Navy Personnel Command, 
Ordering & Reviewing Your OMPF, at https://www.mynavyhr.navy.mil/Career-
Management/Records-Management/Military-Personnel-Records/Order-Review-OMPF/. 
29 U.S.  Marines, 
Official Military  Personnel Files,  at https://www.hqmc.marines.mil/Agencies/Office-of-Legislative-
Affairs/Congressional-Correspondence-Section/Records-Request/. 
30 Air Force Personnel Center, 
Request Copy of Military  Records, at https://www.afpc.af.mil/Career-Management/
Military-Personnel-Records/. 
31 Personnel Service Center USGC  Military Records  Section, 
Obtaining a Copy of Your Personnel Data Record (PDR), 
at https://www.dcms.uscg.mil/Our-Organization/Assistant -Commandant -for-Human-Resources-CG-1/Personnel-
Service-Center-PSC/BOPS/PSC-BOPS-C/PSC-BOP S-C-MR/P SC- BOPS- C-MR_PDR/. 
32 T he Space Force is  a separate branch of the U.S. military that is organized within the Department of the Air Force. 
Currently, many of the policies and requirements are the same as the Air Force due  to the recent creation of the force.  
33 Form SF-180 provides an instruction and information sheet that explains the procedures required  to request and 
release military service records in detail. See  National Archives and Records  Administration, 
Standard Form  180 – 
Requests Pertaining to Military  Records, at https://www.archives.gov/files/research/order/standard-form-180.pdf. See 
also Department  of Veterans Affairs, “ How Do I Request  Someone Else’s Military Records,”  
Request Your Military 
Service Records (including DD214), March 22, 2022, at https://www.va.gov/records/get-military-service-records/. 
34 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center: Request Military  Service 
Records, April 22, 2022, at https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records. 
35 For more information on how to make a request under  FOIA, see U.S. Department of Justice, 
How do I make a FOIA 
Request? at https://www.foia.gov/how-to.html. For more information about FOIA, see CRS  Report R46238, 
The 
Freedom  of Inform ation Act (FOIA): A Legal Overview,  by Daniel J. Sheffner. 
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commonly requested agency records through their FOIA libraries.36 Certain information provided 
in response to a FOIA request may be redacted, per one of FOIA’s nine exemptions. 
Restrictions on Disclosure 
Certain statutes govern the release of government and personal information once requested. These 
statutory requirements can impact the completeness of information received in response to a 
request, and whether individuals can make an appropriate request for documents. 
Information provided in response to a records request may be redacted under FOIA or the Privacy 
Act of 1974 and therefore may appear incomplete. While FOIA’s main purpose is to inform the 
public of the federal government’s operations, the act excludes certain private and governmental 
interests from disclosure. FOIA lists nine exemptions from its disclosure requirements that 
permit, but do not require, agencies to withhold information or records that are otherwise subject 
to release. These include reasons related to national defense or foreign policy, matters exempted 
from disclosure under other statutes, and personnel, medical, and similar files.37 
Like other individual y  identifiable  information the federal government maintains, disclosure of 
military service records is restricted by the Privacy Act of 1974. The Privacy Act of 1974 pertains 
to living  U.S. citizens and permanent residents, and general y prohibits disclosure of individual y 
identifiable  information without the individual’s written consent.38 The act al ows an individual to 
request an agency perform a search for information in a system of records based on identifiers 
such as the individual’s own name or SSN. Courts and the Department of Justice have interpreted 
the Privacy Act’s definition of 
individual to exclude deceased individuals.39 To comply with the 
Privacy Act, the agency solicits written consent of the servicemember via completion of form SF-
180 or other permissible documentation, depending on the nature of the requester’s relationship to 
the servicemember. 
6. Are fees charged to reproduce military service records?  
Fees to reproduce military service records general y depend on where the information is located, 
and the policies of the agencies holding the information.40 Records of individuals who separated 
from the military less than 62 years ago are under the purview of DOD, while those exceeding 62 
years are managed by NARA.   
Sections 1041 and 1042 of Title 10 of the 
U.S. Code prohibit DOD fees for providing certificates 
of service or discharge under certain conditions. Therefore, for records less than 62 years old 
under DOD’s purview, there is general y no charge for basic military personnel and medical 
record information provided to veterans, NOK, and authorized representatives. 
                                              
36 U.S.  Department of Justice, 
Search Government Websites, at https://www.foia.gov/search.html. 
37 See  CRS  In Focus  IF11450, 
The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): An Introduction, by Daniel J. Sheffner. 
38 Exceptions to the written consent requirement of the Privacy Act can be located at 5 U.S.C.  §552a(b). For more 
information on recent legislation to modernize the Privacy Act’s written consent requirement to permit electronic 
authorizations, see CRS  In Focus IF12159, 
The CASES Act: Im plem entation and Issues for Congress, by Meghan M. 
Stuessy  and R. Eric Petersen. 
39 U.S.  Department of Justice, 
Overview of the Privacy Act of 1974, 2020, p. 24, at https://www.justice.gov/opcl/
overview-privacy-act-1974-2020-edition. 
40 Under 5 U.S.C.  §522(a)(f)(5) of the Privacy Act, an agency may only assess  fees for reproduction in response to an 
individual’s  request for information about him or herself.  
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For records more than 62 years old, NARA assesses reproduction fees as it would for any types of 
archival records under Title 44, Sections 2116 and 2307, of the 
U.S. Code. Archival records are 
open to the public and subject to NARA’s public fee schedule.41 NARA notes that a typical 
OMPF copy of more than 6 pages would be subject to a $70 flat fee; however, there is no fee to 
review an archival record in person at the St. Louis Archival Research Room.42 
Some companies request servicemembers’ written consent to retrieve military service records, 
including DD Form 214s, and later charge recipients for this service. However, many of these 
records can be requested by servicemembers and produced at no cost to the requester. The VA 
warns against using these companies for document retrieval, writing:  
unscrupulous businesses continue  to charge  them fees to obtain copies of their (free) 
military service and discharge records. Some websites charge $90 to $150 to obtain copies 
of DD-214s and other free military records through their “expedited” service, but Veterans 
Affairs agencies in most states often can provide the requested paperwork within a day or 
within hours for military funeral honors. All states have benefits counselors where Veterans 
can receive free assistance. 
Veterans who encounter companies charging fees for  their discharge records  or other 
military paperwork are encouraged to report it to their state’s Veterans Affairs agency.43 
These companies have also recently come under congressional scrutiny. On July 15, 2022, the 
House Committee on Oversight and Reform announced that they are investigating whether these 
companies “are misusing National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) procedures intended to 
expedite emergency records requests while charging veterans to obtain government records they 
are entitled to receive at no cost.”44 
7. How quickly are NPRC records requests processed? 
NARA  stated in March 2021 that in a typical year, NPRC “responds to more than 1.2 mil ion 
requests for copies of [military personnel and medical] records, or more than 20,000 requests 
each week, most of which are completed in under 10 days.”45 Additional y,  NPRC reported in 
June 2021 that it could respond to about 6,300 requests from VA per week.46 For requests from 
individuals, NPRC provides a web portal and telephone number to check the status of a records 
                                              
41 44 U.S.C.  §2116(c) and 44 U.S.C.  §2307. 
42 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center: Official Military  Personnel 
Files (OMPF) and Archival Records Requests, January 24, 2022, at https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-
center/military-personnel/ompf-archival-requests#fees.  
43 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
Veterans: Be wary  of scams regarding job offers and the sale of military records, 
governm ent form s, VAntage Point, April 17, 2018, at https://blogs.va.gov/VAntage/47492/veterans-be-wary-of-scams-
regarding-job-offers-and-the-sale-of-military-records-government-forms/. 
44 Letter from Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, Chairwoman of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, 
and Representative Stephen F. Lynch, Chairman, Subcommittee on National Security, to Mr. Cody Graham, July 15, 
2022, at https://oversight.house.gov/sites/democrats.oversight.house.gov/files/2022-07-
15.CBM%20SFL%20to%20Graham-Angels%20Research%20re%20Emergency%20Records%20Request.pdf . See  also 
Amelia Brust, “Congress investigating whether companies are profiting off veterans disability claims backlog,” 
Federal News  Network, July  15, 2022, at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/veterans-affairs/2022/07/congress-
investigating-whether-companies-are-profiting-off-veterans-disability-claims-backlog/slide/1/. 
45 National Archives and Records  Administration, “National Personnel Records Center Prepares for Expansion of 
Onsite Workforce,” press release, March 8, 2021, at https://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2021/nr21-30.  
46 Nicole Ogrysko, “Pandemic-Induced Backlog Sparks  New  Efforts to Digitize Military Records at NARA,” 
Federal 
News  Network,  June 7, 2021, at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/management/2021/06/pandemic-induced-backlog-
sparks-new-efforts-to-digitize-military-records-at-nara/. 
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request and suggests that requesters al ow 10 days for the receipt and initial processing of the 
request.47 
NARA  states that improvements are underway “to expand remote processing opportunities and 
increase capacity for digitization in the stacks in order to enhance operations in a social y-
distanced, post-COVID-19 environment.”48 
In NARA’s five-year strategic plan, the agency set forward a goal that by FY2026, it would 
provide 95% of customer requests in the promised time. Per the strategic plan, this figure would 
represent the “weighted average of NARA’s average response time when: furnishing items in 
public research rooms, responding to reference requests by email and mail, providing veterans 
and their families with copies of military separation documents (DD-214), and responding to 
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests from the public.”49 While NARA reports that it has 
responded to 93% of customer requests within the promised time since 2017, NARA missed its 
target in 2020 by reportedly delivering 89.2% of requested records within the promised time.50 
Data for 2021 and 2022 are not yet available.  These figures do not account for possible 
fluctuations in the request fulfilment times offered to requesters, and therefore may not reconcile 
with reported backlog numbers.  
Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Processing  
In March 2020, NPRC closed due to COVID-19, keeping minimal staff on site to complete 
emergency requests.51 The NPRC resumed normal operations on March 7, 2022.52 
During the COVID-19 pandemic, NPRC staff prioritized emergency requests.53 Emergency 
requests are considered to be those involving burial honors for deceased veterans, life-threatening 
medical emergencies, homeless shelters seeking to gain admittance of homeless veterans, and 
comparable emergencies. Requests for records were not processed as expeditiously as before the 
pandemic. At the height of the pandemic, the NPRC reportedly processed 2,500 requests from VA 
per week, down from their reported 20,000 requests per week in a typical year.54 As of March 31, 
                                              
47 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center: Check Status of a Request for 
Military  Service Records, July  1, 2022, at 
 https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-center/forms. 
48 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
FY 2022 Congressional Justification, May 28, 2021, p. APP-6, at 
https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/performance-budget/2022performance-budget.pdf. 
49 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
FY 2022-2026 Strategic Plan, March 2022, p. 7, at 
https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/strategic-plan/nara-2022-2026-strategic-plan-march-2022.pdf/. 
50 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
FY2023 Congressional Justification, March 28, 2022, p. APP-6, at 
https://www.archives.gov/files/about/plans-reports/performance-budget/2023-nara-congressional-justification.pdf. 
51 T he number of staff available  at the NPRC has varied throughout the pandemic. In October 2020, staff began to 
return to in-person work to process more requests, but on November 7, 2020, NPRC again closed  due  to a spike in 
COVID  cases  among staff. Following  a gradual  restoration of on -site staff, during the spring and summer of 2021, 
NPRC increased on-site staffing levels to 45% of its workforce, effective October 18, 2021.  
52 See  banner announcement at https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-center/military-personnel#:~:text=
Louis%20area%20have%20improved%20and,.gov%2Fst%2Dlouis. “ Resumption of Onsite Operations at the National 
Personnel Records Center (NPRC) in St. Louis: Local health conditions in the St. Louis area have improved and the 
NPRC resumed  normal operations on March 7, 2022. While the National Personnel Records Center has reopened for 
normal operations, the federal record center research room remains closed.  T he operating status of the public research 
room may be found at  http://www.archives.gov/st -louis.” 
53 NARA  notes that emergency requests may be submitted via the online eVetRecs portal, accessible  at 
https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/emergencies. 
54 Nicole Ogrysko, “Pandemic-Induced Backlog Sparks  New  Efforts to Digitize Military Records at NARA,” 
Federal 
News  Network,  June 7, 2021, at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/management/2021/06/pandemic-induced-backlog-
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2022, NARA’s Office of Inspector General states that the NPRC’s backlog of requests exceeded 
500,000 requests.55 According to 
The Federal News Network June 7, 2021 report, the NPRC 
anticipates that it may take 18-to-24 months to resolve the backlog.56 
Complicating the efforts to reduce the backlog of records requests is that the majority of records 
requested from NPRC are in paper form. As of June 2021, only 10% of these records were 
available  in digital  formats, meaning the vast majority of materials at the NPRC only exist in 
paper form and cannot be accessed remotely.57 As a result, staff must physical y retrieve materials 
on-site and may not be able to maintain social distancing. 
8. What efforts are being made to digitize military service records? 
Government-wide efforts to digitize paper records to increase remote accessibility are ongoing 
and predate the pandemic.58 In 2019, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and NARA 
announced an initiative  to convert federal recordkeeping practices from analog to digital. The 
corresponding guidance, OMB Memorandum M-19-21, provided seven targets for al  federal 
agencies to meet in order to comply. Two of them have December 31, 2022, deadlines:59 
1.2 By 2022,  Federal agencies will manage all permanent records in an electronic format 
and with appropriate metadata; and 
1.3 By 2022, Federal agencies will manage all temporary records in an electronic format 
or store them in commercial records storage facilities. 
NARA  annual y solicits reports from the Senior Agency Officials for Records Management 
(SAORMs) on policy successes and chal enges related to records program implementation. 
SAORMs are agency officials tasked with ensuring that their agencies efficiently and 
appropriately comply with al  applicable statutes and policies related to records management.60 
The 2021 report asked SAORMs to report on various aspects of M-19-21 implementation. DOD61 
and VA62  SAORMs reported that they would not meet targets 1.2 and 1.3 by the end of 2022, but 
                                              
sparks-new-efforts-to-digitize-military-records-at-nara/. 
55 Brett M. Baker, 
Semiannual Report to Congress: October 1, 2021 to March 31, 2022 , National Archives Office of 
Inspector General, Washington DC, March 31, 2022, p. 12, at https://www.archives.gov/files/oig/nara-oig-sar22a-
1oct21-to-31mar22.pdf#page=12. 
56 Nicole Ogrysko, “Pandemic-Induced Backlog Sparks  New  Efforts to Digitize Military Records at NARA,” 
Federal 
News  Network,  June 7, 2021, at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/management/2021/06/pandemic-induced-backlog-
sparks-new-efforts-to-digitize-military-records-at-nara/. 
57 Nicole Ogrysko, “Pandemic-induced backlog sparks new  efforts to digitize military records at NARA,” 
Federal 
News  Network,  June 7, 2021 at https://federalnewsnetwork.com/management/2021/06/pandemic-induced-backlog-
sparks-new-efforts-to-digitize-military-records-at-nara/. T he NPRC resumed normal operations on March 7, 2022. For 
more information, see National Archives and Records  Administration, 
Onsite Operations at the National Personnel 
Records Center in St. Louis, at https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/operating-status.  
58 Federal Records  Management Council, 
FRMC White  Paper: Digitization Cost Benefit Analysis, National Archives 
and Records  Administration, at https://www.archives.gov/files/frmc-digitization-cost -benefit -whitepaper.pdf. 
59 Russel  T . Vought and David S.  Ferriero, 
M-19-21: Transition to Electronic Records, White House Office of 
Management and Budget,  June 28, 2019, at https://www.archives.gov/files/records-mgmt/policy/m-19-21-transition-to-
federal-records.pdf. 
60 Chief Information Officers Council, 
Key Stakeholders: 4.16 Senior Agency Official for Records Management 
(SAORM), at https://www.cio.gov/handbook/key-stakeholders/saorm/. 
61 Christine Condon, 
Senior Agency Official for Records Management: 2021 Annual Report, Department of Defense, 
Washington DC, March 30, 2022, at https://www.archives.gov/files/records-mgmt/agency/dod-saorm-2021.pdf. 
62 Kurt DelBene, 
Senior Agency Official  for Records Management: 2021 Annual Report, Department of Veterans 
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that they have planned for temporary records storage in commercial records storage facilities. 
Additional y,  both agencies plan to request exceptions to the M-19-21 requirements before the 
December deadline.63 NARA’s SAORM responded yes to both targets.64 
VA  and DOD have also made efforts to digitize their records at the agency level.65 A recent 
digitization  effort undertaken by VA and NARA  was in response to the Blue Water Navy Vietnam 
Veterans Act of 2019 (P.L. 116-23), which expanded VA presumptive service connected benefits 
for those exposed to Agent Orange. VA and NARA  entered into an agreement in August 2019 to 
digitize  the deck logs of U.S. military vessels that served during the Vietnam War within the 
geographic locations specified in law. The project took approximately one year to complete, with 
the final logs entered in VA’s special y created ship locator tool in September 2020.66 The project 
digitized  approximately 29 mil ion  images from 1,800 vessels’ deck logs and has helped over 
25,000 Vietnam veterans receive VA benefits.67 
Through this effort, many Vietnam-era veterans (or their families if those veterans have died) are 
able to resubmit information if their VA benefits were previously denied due to not having 
eligible  “in country” service. VA claims processors are now able to enter the dates of service and 
the ship names into the ship locator tool, and it wil  determine whether those ships were within 
the boundaries set forth in P.L. 116-23. 
Currently, DOD is enhancing its digital capabilities  for DOD records to interface with VA, 
including those records for servicemembers who separated prior to the use of electronic health 
records. In a 2014 report to Congress, DOD explained that it is scanning Service Treatment 
Records from January 1, 2014 forward, into a system that is designed to share data with VA.68 
Some records prior to 2014 have also been scanned, including some records that were not retired 
and sent to NPRC. 
Congress has enacted legislation mandating digitization  of the DD Form 214. Section 569 of the 
FY2020 NDAA (P.L. 116-92) requires that DOD provide separated servicemembers with a 
machine-readable and electronical y transferable DD Form 214 beginning December 31, 2023.69 
                                              
Affairs, Washington DC, March 11, 2022, at https://www.archives.gov/files/records-mgmt/agency/va-saorm-2021.pdf. 
63 For more information about the exception process, see https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/bulletins/2020/2020-
01.  
64 William J. Bosanko, 
Senior Agency Official for Records Management: 2021 Annual Report, National Archives and 
Records  Administration, College Park, MD, March 11, 2022, at https://www.archives.gov/files/records-mgmt/agency/
nara-saorm-2021.pdf.  
65 Department of Defense Instruction (DODI) 5015.02, 
DOD Records Management Program , August 17, 2017,
 at 
https://www.esd.whs.mil/Portals/54/Documents/DD/issuances/dodi/501502p.pdf. 
66 Brandi Vincent, “VA, NARA  Complete Digitization Effort to Help Speed Up Disability Claims  for Some Veterans,” 
Nextgov, September 29, 2020, at https://www.nextgov.com/it-modernization/2020/09/va-nara-complete-digitization-
effort -help-speed-disability-claims-some-veterans/168869/. 
67 National Archives and Records  Administration, Letter of Agreement Between Department of Veterans Affairs: 
Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) and National Archives and Records  Administration (NARA), August  9, 2019, 
at https://www.archives.gov/files/digitization/pdf/va-letterofagreement-final-signed.pdf.https://www.archives.gov/files/
digitization/pdf/va-letterofagreement-final-signed.pdf. 
68 Department of Defense, 
Report to Congress: Interoperability of the Department of Defense (DoD) Health Artifact 
and Im age Managem ent Solution (HAIMS) and the Departm ent of Veterans Affairs (VA) Veterans  Benefits 
Managem ent System  (VBMS), June 23, 2014, at https://www.health.mil/Reference-Center/Reports/2014/06/23/
Electronic-Health-Records-of-the-DoD-and-VA-HAIMS.  
69 Robert Fahs, Congressional Requirements  to Digitize Military Service Records  Support Progress toward Improving 
Classification and Declassification, National Archives and Records  Administration, Information Security Oversight 
Office, April 9, 2020, at https://isoo-overview.blogs.archives.gov/2020/04/09/congressional-requirements-to-digitize-
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Modernizing  Access to Military Records: Frequently Asked Questions  
 
9. What are the challenges to digitizing military service records?  
In addition to the increasing volume of records and initial costs associated with digitizing analog 
records (such as hardware, software, and program staffing), chal enges include the ongoing costs 
involved in maintaining access and usability of the converted materials, including records 
management considerations in developing or updating agency information technology (IT) 
systems, and changing identifiers for a series of records.70 
Ongoing Maintenance and Training Costs 
In its guidance on maintaining electronic materials, NARA urges agencies to plan for these 
ongoing costs for the entire retention period of the records, observing that agencies wil  incur 
repeating costs.71 Specifical y, Title 36, Section 1236.12 of the 
Code of Federal Regulations 
requires, 
As part of the capital planning and systems development life cycle processes, agencies 
must ensure: (a) That records management controls … are planned and implemented in the 
system; (b) That all records in the system will  be retrievable and usable for as long as 
needed to conduct agency business (i.e.,  for  their  NARA -approved retention period). 
Where the records will need to be retained beyond the planned life of the system, agencies 
must plan and budget for the migration of records and their associated metadata to new 
storage media  or  formats in  order  to  avoid loss due to  media  decay or  technology 
obsolescence. 
With respect to images to be retained indefinitely, NARA  requires the records systems be 
periodical y inspected for file stability, documentation quality, and finding aid reliability.72  These 
periodic inspections and maintenance requirements indicate the need for resource management 
and planning beyond the initial  digital conversion of materials. 
Incorporating Records Management Consideration in IT Systems Planning 
NARA  and VA’s Office of Inspector General have recommended increased attention to VA’s 
management of staff and department-wide records management training. In its most recent 2016 
inspection of VA’s records management program, NARA notes that VA had not included records 
management processes as a stakeholder consideration in developing IT systems.73 Moreover, the 
2016 inspection also found that records management training was not compliant with Title 36 of 
the 
Code of Federal Regulations, and that existing records management policies at VA were 
inadequate and not properly disseminated.74 
                                              
military-service-records-support -progress-toward-improving-classification-and-declassification/. 
70 T he challenges surrounding  the volume of records is further discussed  in 
“ 4. How are military service records 
formatted and stored?” 
71 36 C.F.R. §1236.14. For more information on the process to schedule records as  appropriate for temporary or 
permanent preservation periods, see CRS  In Focus  IF11119, 
Federal Records: Types and Treatm ents, by Meghan M. 
Stuessy. 
72 36 C.F.R. §1237.28. 
73 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
Department of Veterans Affairs  Records Management Program: 
Records Managem ent Inspection Report, Washington, DC, October 7, 2016, p. 22, at https://www.archives.gov/files/
records-mgmt/pdf/va-2016-inspection.pdf. 
74 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
Department of Veterans Affairs  Records Management Program: 
Records Managem ent Inspection Report, Washington, DC, October 7, 2016, p. 13, at https://www.archives.gov/files/
records-mgmt/pdf/va-2016-inspection.pdf. 
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Records Identifiers 
Digitizing  records associated with military service is often more difficult than it appears. 
Discharge paperwork is not uniform, unlike the large digitization  effort for Blue Water Navy 
veterans, where the deck logs could be scanned in large quantities because they were in a similar 
format. The current DD Form 214 has been issued to separating servicemembers only since 
January 1, 1950. Prior to 1950, there were several different forms to prove military service such 
as: DA 1569 Transcript of Military Record; DD 256 Honorable Discharge Certificate; DD 257 
General Discharge Certificate; and many more.75 This means, for example,that individuals who 
served in World War II, left service, and then re-enlisted to serve in Korea would have two 
different discharge papers, but both are important for purposes of various benefits.  
Another chal enge in scanning large quantities of military records is that some identifying 
numbers associated with servicemembers have changed over time. Prior to certain dates, the U.S. 
military identified a servicemember by a service number (SN) and not by SSN. The use of SNs 
changed during the late 1960s and into the 1970s depending upon the individual’s branch of 
service. The change from SN to SSNs happened on the following dates for members of each 
service branch: 
  Army and Air Force—July 1, 1969; 
  Navy and Marine Corps—January 1, 1972; 
  Coast Guard—October 1, 1974.76 
In order to digitize these records, a mechanism might be needed to identify the veteran by one or 
both of the record identifiers based upon the time period he or she served. There may be increased 
concern in cases where the veteran’s service was non-consecutive, and when that service 
occurred, both before and after changes in identifying numbers.  
10. What funds are available to support digitization of military 
service records? 
NARA  and VA have received various funds for digitization efforts, and some of these funds have 
been targeted for the NPRC. For FY2022, NARA received $388.3 mil ion, of which $29 mil ion 
“shal  remain available  until expended for expenses necessary to enhance the Federal 
Government’s ability to electronical y preserve, manage, and store Government records.”77 
Congress appropriated $50 mil ion (to remain available  until September 30, 2022) to NARA via 
the Records Center Revolving Fund in P.L. 116-260, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, 
to offset the loss of user fees usual y collected by the fund as a result of the pandemic. According 
to a letter from some Members of Congress to President Joe Biden and the Archivist of the United 
States, as of April 5, 2021, $15 mil ion  from this funding had been al ocated to NPRC.78 
                                              
75 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
National Cemetery Administration: 
Veterans  Military Discharge Documents, March 
17, 2020, at https://www.cem.va.gov/hmm/discharge_documents.asp.  
76 National Archives and Records  Administration, 
National Personnel Records Center: Service Numbers and Social 
Security Num bers, February 25, 2020, at https://www.archives.gov/personnel-records-center/social-security-numbers. 
77 P.L. 117-103, 136 Stat. 278.  
78 Letter from Warren Davidson, Member of Congress et al. to Joseph R. Biden,  President of the United States, and 
David S.  Ferriero, Archivist of the United States, April 5, 2021, at https://republicans-veterans.house.gov/
uploadedfiles/2021_4_6_rmb_davidson_ltr_re_nprc.pdf. 
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In the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, Congress appropriated $272 mil ion to VA  to mitigate 
the impacts of the pandemic on the benefits claims and appeals backlog.79 VA stated that it is 
using $150 mil ion  “to expand the scope of Federal scanning to reduce claims processing delays 
and reduce the current claims backlog by half. In addition, VA wil  provide digital  copies of al  
scanned records to NARA to help expedite pending and future requests for any Veteran 
records.”80 
Congress is also currently considering additional funds for records digitization. H.R. 8254, the 
FY2023 appropriations bil  for Financial Services and General Government Operations, proposes 
an increased budget of $427.5 mil ion to NARA, of which $30 mil ion would remain available  for 
electronic records preservation. The House passed this bil  on July 20, 2022, as Division D of 
H.R. 8294, an omnibus appropriations bil   providing funding for a number of government 
agencies. In the report accompanying H.R. 8254, the House Appropriations Committee wrote that 
the backlog of records requests persists at NPRC despite the $50 mil ion in emergency funding to 
the Records Center Revolving Fund. Further,  
the Committee expects NARA to restore the NPRC to full operational capacity as quickly 
as feasible, to continue to use its emergency funding expeditiously to streamline operations 
and reduce the records backlog, and to continue to prioritize critical veterans records. The 
Committee directs NARA to provide quarterly reports detailing obligations and planned 
spending for this emergency funding, the current status of the backlog and an estimate for 
when it will  be fully cleared, and lessons learned about NPRC operations as a result of the 
pandemic and recommendations for future improvements.81 
On May 23, 2022, the General Services Administration (GSA) awarded a $9.1 mil ion  loan to 
NARA  from the Technology Modernization Fund (TMF) to modernize records delivery 
systems.82 The funds are to be used for systems that process veterans’ records requests and 
systems that manage the workings of federal records centers.83 NARA is required to repay the 
TMF over the next five years. For more information on this fund, see CRS Report R46877, 
Federal Information Technology (IT) Budgeting Process in the Executive Branch: An Overview, 
by Dominick A. Fiorentino, 
Federal Information Technology (IT) Budgeting Process in the 
Executive Branch: An Overview, by Dominick A. Fiorentino. 
                                              
79 P.L. 117-2. 
80 Department of Veterans Affairs, 
VA and NARA to digitize federal records for Veterans, VAntage  Point, August 5, 
2021, at https://blogs.va.gov/VAntage/92792/va-nara-digitize-federal-records-veterans/. 
81 U.S.  Congress, House  Committee on Appropriations, 
Financial Services and General Government Appropriations 
Bill, 2023, Report T ogether with Minority Views to Accompany H.R. 8254, 117th Cong., 2nd sess., June 28, 2022, 
H.Rept. 117-393 (Washington: GPO, 2022), p. 91. 
82 U.S.  General Services  Administration, 
Technology Modernization Fund Announces Investments to Modernize Major 
System s at USDA and NARA, Washington, DC, May 23, 2022, at https://www.gsa.gov/about -us/newsroom/news-
releases/technology-modernization-fund-announces-investments-to-modernize-major-systems-at-usda-and-nara-
05232022. Relatedly, VA also received funds  from the T MF in April 2022 for adjacent efforts. GSA  awarded  VA 
$10.5 million in order to modernize the sign-in experiences at VA.gov  and MyHealth.VA.gov, and seeks to improve 
the experience of Veterans to “ digitally access benefits and services more reliably, equitably  and securely.”  U.S. 
General Services  Administration, 
Technology Modernization Fund Is Making It Easier and More Secure for Veterans 
to Access Benefits and Services, Washington, DC, April 19, 2022, at https://www.gsa.gov/about -us/newsroom/news-
releases/technology-modernization-fund-is-making-it-easier-and-more-secure-for-veterans-to-access-benefits-and-
services-04192022. 
83 Robert Fahs, “$9.1M T echnology Modernization Fund Award  Backs Updates to National Archives’ Legacy 
Systems,” 
National Archives ISOO Blog, June 3, 2022, at https://isoo-overview.blogs.archives.gov/2022/06/03/9-1m-
technology-modernization-fund-award-backs-updates-to-national-archives-legacy-systems/. 
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Appendix. Abbreviations 
The common abbreviations listed i
n Table A-1 are used throughout this report.  
Table A-1. Abbreviations 
Acronym 
Term 
DOD 
Department of Defense 
DD-214 
Certificate of Uniformed  Service 
FOIA 
Freedom  of Information Act 
FY 
Fiscal Year 
JSRRC 
Joint Services  Records Research Center 
NARA 
National Archives  and Records Administration 
NOK 
Next of Kin 
NPRC 
National Personnel Records Center 
OMPF 
Official Military Personnel  File 
SN 
Service  Number 
SSN 
Social Security Number 
VA 
Department of Veterans Affairs 
VBA 
Veterans Benefits Administration 
 
 
 
 
Author Information 
 Heather M. Salazar 
  Meghan M. Stuessy 
Analyst in Veterans Policy 
Analyst in Government Organization and 
    
Management     
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should n ot be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
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