VANEEP - ULTIMATE GUIDE

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I posted about this quite a while ago, but in the meantime missed an application deadline so had to wait an entire year to continue with this.

This is my experience with applying to and being accepted for the VA's VANEEP scholarship.


What is VANEEP?

VANEEP is a Department of Veteran's Affairs scholarship program intended to award employees a full ride scholarship in pursuit of a degree which is required for a first-time credential occupation (e.g., an initial BSN but not an MSN in leadership). The program operates under the auspices of the Employee Incentive Scholarship Program (EISP - VANEEP is just a certain flavor of the EISP).

https://www.vacareers.va.gov/Content/Documents/Print/VANEEP_VA_Careers_Page.pdf

What are the benefits?

VANEEP provides its recipients with a scholarship for the chosen degree; additionally the employee remains employed by their VA facility and retains their full-time status and salary. VANEEP provides the employee's VA facility with a temporary replacement salary to replace the recipient's position while they are in school.

What are the requirements?

The application itself is lengthy and requires multiple individual documents detailing the sought degree, why the scholarship is deserved, the exact dollar amount the scholarship must cover per fiscal year, the exact number of units, and essentially every single detail about the degree, classes, and finances involved. The documents are cross referenced and must all sync exactly down to the dollar.

The applicant must have been employed by the VA in any capacity for one year prior to the application submission.

Recipients are required to enter into a legal contract with the federal government with harsh penalties for failing to meet academic criteria. If the contract is broken, the recipient owes back to the government all expenses paid out with interest, multiplied by three. Yes that is correct.

Recipients must maintain a certain GPA overall, must not fail any classes, and must maintain regular contact with the facility's scholarship coordinator.

Recipients are required to return to their post for work during academic breaks, and during any period of cancelled classes longer than one day.

Recipients are required to report sick days to the scholarship coordinator and are required to submit sick leave requests to cover the absence.

Recipients are required to maintain their government email communications and TMS modules. Yep, you cannot escape TMS!

Recipients must complete their degree within a specified time frame (for my facility: 2 years).

Recipients will work for the VA in their new role after graduation and licensure/certification for 3 years. The recipient may work at any VA facility - transfers are allowed but with certain communication and paperwork requirements.

The recipient is not allowed to incur any other federal obligations during the three year payback period.

What is the timeline?

VANEEP application deadlines are twice per year, in March for classes starting after the spring, and in October for classes starting after the fall. The application can be made at any time during the degree path as long as all requirements are met (i.e., you can apply for VANEEP after you've already started the degree).

The application's ultimate approval and subsequent funding often does not come through until after classes have started, but conditional approval usually comes through right before classes start.

The application cannot be submitted until the applicant has a letter of unconditional acceptance by the school.

Here is my experience:

I already have a BS in general biology, 3.5 GPA overall.

July 2018 - applied for a local university's accelerated 14-month BSN; program starts once per year May 28th.

November 2018 - interviewed for a slot in the program.

Late January 2019 - Received a conditional letter of acceptance, pending my passing of a pre-req which I was, at the time, enrolled in; began the VANEEP application.

- Had to communicate with the school's academic adviser to have her fill out a VANEEP form indicating that my acceptance was unconditional despite that I was still taking a pre-req, so I could submit my VANEEP application. The adviser obliged.

- Had to estimate a lot of numbers regarding class dates and tuition costs because the school had not posted the future figures yet. Used past semesters as a guide.

March 2019 - submitted the nearly complete VANEEP application to my scholarship coordinator at the VA. The application was missing one thing, a mentor, which was held up because of a computer glitch with the mentor application. The scholarship coordinator accepted the application, the mentor came through right before the coordinator was required to submit the paperwork to the scholarship committee.

Early April 2019 - The VANEEP committee convened and pushed my application up the chain of command and was accepted by the facility director. The application was then submitted to national for consideration.

Late April 2019 - Received an email from the scholarship coordinator that national conditionally accepted my application, signed the legal contract for funding. The application was only pending a signature from the VA's Undersecretary of Health. This was not a guarantee, but there was no precedent for an applicant being rejected at this point.

May 2019 - Went to class orientation. Had my supervisor take me off of the unit schedule starting the weekend before classes start. Still no word on the final approval.

Mid May 2019 - Received my first tuition bill of $2,300, no word on final scholarship approval yet. Contacted the school's cashier's office and requested an extension due to my pending scholarship.

May 28th - First day of classes. Stopped by work on my lunch break from classes (the university is across the street from my VA), got an email from the coordinator that all approvals were done and that I would receive funding. At this point the coordinator begins communicating directly with the university's billing rep so I never see a bill.

Overall, I had to determine whether or not I would still go through with school if I did not get the scholarship; thankfully I got it. I've heard of others claiming that their VA told them that they did not have funding for the program, but this is confusing to me because the funding dollars do not come from individual VA facilities, it comes from a national organization called PG&E. This is with whom you sign the legal contract for funding.

The application is loooooong and very detailed. If anything is off, misspelled, or does not perfectly match all other documents, the scholarship coordinator will reject it and tell you to fix what's wrong. It can be daunting if you've never completed an application of this magnitude before.

Is it worth it?

Without question, yes. All of the work and uncertainty associated with the application process is well worth getting a degree and employment. The payback period is acceptable to me because I would continue to work for the VA whether or not I chose to become an RN.

Additionally, I will only use 14 month's worth of the funding, meaning I will have 10 months left over. I will be allowed to use that 10 moths toward a more advanced degree after my payback period, though I will have to remain working. That means I can get a good chunk of a DNP or MSN paid for.

The academic requirements are somewhat rigorous, but they are on par with the nursing school's own requirements for passing, so no big deal there.

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There is a lot of mystery surrounding the application and process of submission, because all of the forms are on the VA's sharepoint intranet site which is not accessible from the public internet, and because VANEEP scholarship coordinators are not easily reachable and don't always have the answers your looking for. Luckily my coordinator is on top of things. If you have any questions please post or pm me, I'll do my best to check back here.

Specializes in Behavioral Health/Psychiatric Nursing.
1 minute ago, NateD2019 said:

Hello everyone,

Does anyone know the gpa requirements for the VANEEP. I could swear I saw 2.75 somewhere at work on a power point but on a VA website it says 3.0. Also is that for the prerequsites or for your overall cumulative GPA.

Thanks everyone

Right now it's 2.5 but there's a rumor it may bump up to 3.0 in the future. I don't think anything has been set in stone with that, though.

Does anyone know what VISNs are currently offering VANEEP? I work for VISN 10, specifically Indianapolis VAMC and as of 6-8 years ago, it's been on hold/discontinued. I have no idea when it's coming back, but I really need to figure out an alternative route to get through my BSN program. I'm at Chamberlain College of Nursing so it wouldn't be an issue to transfer to a different VA hospital in another state (with a Chamberlain campus) if need be. I was thinking about the Jesse Brown VAMC in Chicago. Anyone know if they are currently offering it? I suppose I could use the outlook database and get ahold of the scholarship coordinator to verify that information.

Specializes in Behavioral Health/Psychiatric Nursing.
8 hours ago, Future_NP_88 said:

Does anyone know what VISNs are currently offering VANEEP? I work for VISN 10, specifically Indianapolis VAMC and as of 6-8 years ago, it's been on hold/discontinued. I have no idea when it's coming back, but I really need to figure out an alternative route to get through my BSN program. I'm at Chamberlain College of Nursing so it wouldn't be an issue to transfer to a different VA hospital in another state (with a Chamberlain campus) if need be. I was thinking about the Jesse Brown VAMC in Chicago. Anyone know if they are currently offering it? I suppose I could use the outlook database and get ahold of the scholarship coordinator to verify that information.

I would talk about it with your scholarship coordinator first, I was under the impression that VANEEP was available nationally. I know my VISN (4, Pittsburgh/Western PA) uses the program pretty heavily and we get a mass email every application cycle. If you look at the Sharepoint under Nursing Education there should be scholarship info as well.

Hi Everyone,

Does anyone know if VANEEP works for CRNA programs? Also, if you do get VANEEP for a CRNA program, can the VA place you in any hospital it chooses once you graduate?

Thanks so much for the help.

Specializes in Behavioral Health/Psychiatric Nursing.
4 minutes ago, adkhopeful2 said:

Hi Everyone,

Does anyone know if VANEEP works for CRNA programs? Also, if you do get VANEEP for a CRNA program, can the VA place you in any hospital it chooses once you graduate?

Thanks so much for the help.

There's a separate program for CRNAs; they send you out to Texas for two years to complete a residency and your clinical hours as well as classes. It's on the VA's dime and there is a service obligation after. I was looking into it for my grad school plans but two years in Texas isn't really feasible for me.

You could use NNEI funds to pay for schooling if you don't want to travel to Texas, but you'd still have to work during that time and there's also a service obligation (from what I understand it's hard for CRNAs to work during school). NNEI is for advanced nursing degrees (post-BSN).

1 hour ago, 16BitSalt said:

There's a separate program for CRNAs; they send you out to Texas for two years to complete a residency and your clinical hours as well as classes. It's on the VA's dime and there is a service obligation after. I was looking into it for my grad school plans but two years in Texas isn't really feasible for me.

You could use NNEI funds to pay for schooling if you don't want to travel to Texas, but you'd still have to work during that time and there's also a service obligation (from what I understand it's hard for CRNAs to work during school). NNEI is for advanced nursing degrees (post-BSN).

Thanks for the reply and helpful info. Texas isn't really an option for me either, unfortunately. I'll have to look into NNEI. From what I can tell, NNEI does not pay your salary while you're in school. Is this correct?

Specializes in Behavioral Health/Psychiatric Nursing.
6 minutes ago, adkhopeful2 said:

Thanks for the reply and helpful info. Texas isn't really an option for me either, unfortunately. I'll have to look into NNEI. From what I can tell, NNEI does not pay your salary while you're in school. Is this correct?

That's correct. You would still be expected to work while receiving NNEI funds so you would be paid your normal salary while working. The VA does offer some pretty helpful residency options if you decide to pursue CRNA while employed there, but I don't know enough about it to provide any info unfortunately.

9 hours ago, adkhopeful2 said:

Hi Everyone,

Does anyone know if VANEEP works for CRNA programs? Also, if you do get VANEEP for a CRNA program, can the VA place you in any hospital it chooses once you graduate?

Thanks so much for the help.

VANEEP can be used for any program that falls within its outline. Since CRNA would be a first time licensure for you, I believe it could be used. There are maximum funding and time limits however. For my BSN at my state’s flagship university I am maxed out and will end up paying about $1500 out of pocket. My facility’s info sheet says the time limit is 3 academic years, but the contract I signed is for a 2 year limit.

The VA CRNA school in Texas actually belongs to the dept of defense, and you would go to school with military and PHS officers. You would be placed by the VA upon credentialing, though I’m sure they would give you something like a top 3 list for consideration. It’s a hell of a deal to consider, even if living in TX isn’t feasible for you, but for last application cycle the program was not accepting any applications at all. People I am in school with can barely work at all while pursuing a bsn (albeit it is an accelerated 14 month program), so I really doubt you could work any meaningful hours if you went the NNEI route. In fact the school might even have you sign a commitment to not work.

Glad to see this thread has gotten some attention!

Specializes in Psychiatric Nurse/Addiction Nurse.

This is great info! A few years ago when I was trying to navigate the system there was no helpful info out there.

I would like to add my 2 cents about the VA scholarship programs in general. There are national guideline but local VA’s can also create their own guideline.

I was a LPN and started an LPN to RN program. I followed their guidelines to a T and stayed in constant contact with the Scholarship Coordinator. During my application process, the coordinator asked how I was going to work and attend school (EISP). I told her it was a hybrid program. The didactic was online and clinical was in person. My local VA did not approve hybrid programs. This guideline wasn’t stated in any paperwork. I escalated the issue and the union produced minutes from the RN council years before I started. That stated they would no longer fund hybrid programs. I was livid. I resigned the following month.

25 minutes ago, BishopLPN said:

This is great info! A few years ago when I was trying to navigate the system there was no helpful info out there.

I would like to add my 2 cents about the VA Scholarship programs in general. There are national guideline but local VA’s can also create their own guideline.

I was a LPN and started an LPN to RN program. I followed their guidelines to a T and stayed in constant contact with the Scholarship Coordinator. During my application process, the coordinator asked how I was going to work and attend school (EISP). I told her it was a hybrid program. The didactic was online and clinical was in person. My local VA did not approve hybrid programs. This guideline wasn’t stated in any paperwork. I escalated the issue and the union produced minutes from the RN council years before I started. That stated they would no longer fund hybrid programs. I was livid. I resigned the following month.

Great info but readers please be aware that VANEEP is not the same as EISP.

Specializes in Critical Care.

Hey everyone,

I am trying to sort through all the different scholarship programs that the VA offers. I'm hoping to apply to CRNA schools in Cali and use my Post 9/11 GI Bill. Unfortunately CSUF is the only school that will be fully covered by it and I intended on applying to other schools such as Loma Linda University and USC as well. Will any of the VA scholarships help offset the remaining balance that my GI Bill won't cover? I understand that the VA has a program strictly for CRNA's but its not feasible for me due to family issues and the location. Any info on any and all programs is much appreciated! My resources are limited as I am not currently a VA employee.

HELP!

I am trying to apply for the VANEEP scholarship for fall of 2021. I will be able to apply to nursing in April 2021 but I won’t have an acceptance letter until June 1st.

Has anyone else ran into this issue? If anyone has any recommendations as to what I should do please reply!

It’s impossible to get an acceptance letter before you can even apply to the nursing program.

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