HR-1360-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Randy Weber (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to require the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) to notify claimants of their benefit eligibility determination within 270 calendar days of receiving a claim. The bill applies to claims filed under the Public Safety Officers' Benefits (PSOB) program, which provides death and disability benefits to law enforcement officers, firefighters, and other public safety personnel killed or seriously injured in the line of duty. It would not change the eligibility criteria or benefit amounts — only the timeline for issuing decisions.
Who benefits
Surviving family members of public safety officers killed in the line of duty who are waiting for death benefit determinations. Officers with permanent disabilities seeking disability benefits. Claimants who currently experience multi-year delays in receiving decisions. Legal representatives and attorneys handling PSOB claims who need predictable timelines. Public safety unions and advocacy organizations that have long pushed for faster processing.
Who is hurt
The Bureau of Justice Assistance, which would face a new statutory deadline and may require additional staffing or resources to comply. Taxpayers who may indirectly bear the cost of any administrative expansion needed to meet the deadline. Claimants in complex cases where a thorough investigation may be difficult to complete within 270 days, as a rushed determination could result in a denial that might otherwise have been approved with more time.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that PSOB claimants — grieving families and injured officers — have routinely waited years for benefit decisions, with some cases taking five or more years to resolve, causing severe financial hardship during an already devastating time. They contend that a 270-day statutory deadline creates basic accountability for a federal agency administering benefits that Congress intended to be delivered promptly, and that the absence of any deadline has allowed chronic backlogs to persist without consequence.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing a hard 270-day deadline without additional funding or staffing authority could pressure the BJA to issue rushed or incomplete determinations, potentially resulting in more denials of legitimate claims that would otherwise be approved after thorough review. They contend that complex cases — such as those involving disputed line-of-duty circumstances or long-latency occupational diseases — may genuinely require more than 270 days to investigate fairly, and that a deadline without a cure mechanism could harm the very claimants it intends to help.