HR-4821-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Marilyn Strickland (D-WA)
What it does
This bill would authorize $50 million per year in federal appropriations to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for fiscal years 2026 through 2031 — a total of $300 million over six years — to conduct or support research on firearms safety or gun violence prevention. The funding would be authorized under the Public Health Service Act and would be in addition to any other amounts already authorized for this purpose.
Who benefits
Public health researchers and academic institutions that would receive CDC grants. Universities and research hospitals that conduct injury prevention studies. Communities with high rates of gun violence, particularly urban areas, who could benefit from evidence-based policy recommendations. State and local governments seeking data to inform firearms policy. Survivors and families affected by gun violence who advocate for more research. Medical and trauma care providers who treat gunshot wounds and may benefit from improved prevention data.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would fund the $300 million authorization. Firearms industry groups and gun rights organizations that have historically opposed CDC firearms research, viewing it as a precursor to regulation. Competing federal research priorities that may receive less funding if discretionary budgets are constrained. Researchers in other public health areas who may compete for CDC resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the CDC was effectively barred from firearms research for over two decades due to the 1996 Dickey Amendment, creating a significant gap in public health data on a leading cause of death — firearms kill approximately 45,000 Americans annually, according to CDC data. They contend that treating gun violence as a public health issue, as the agency does with motor vehicle crashes and opioid overdoses, is essential to developing evidence-based prevention strategies and that Congress already restored this authority in 2019.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that dedicated CDC firearms research funding has historically been used to advocate for specific policy outcomes rather than produce neutral science, pointing to pre-Dickey Amendment studies that critics contend were designed to support firearms restrictions. They contend that $50 million per year represents a significant, targeted appropriation that could effectively direct public health infrastructure toward building a case for firearms regulation, and that existing NIH and DOJ research programs already address gun violence without a separate, large-scale CDC mandate.