HR-6383-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Gilbert Cisneros (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Defense, working with each military department secretary and the Defense Health Agency, to develop a strategic plan addressing suicide and mental health services for active-duty service members. The plan would be required to include uniform protocols for the existing self-initiated mental health referral process and standardized training for commanders, senior enlisted leaders, and medical personnel on identifying and responding to mental health concerns. It would also require a certification process to document that personnel have completed the required training.
Who benefits
Active-duty service members who struggle with mental health issues or suicidal ideation, particularly those who may be unaware of or face barriers to the existing self-initiated referral process. Military families who may benefit from better-equipped commanders and leaders. Medical personnel who would receive clearer, standardized guidance. Veterans' mental health advocates who have long pushed for systemic change. The family of Brandon Caserta, a Navy sailor whose death by suicide inspired the original Brandon Act, and whose legacy this bill extends.
Who is hurt
Military commanders and senior enlisted leaders who would face new mandatory training and certification requirements, adding to existing administrative burdens. The Department of Defense and military departments would bear implementation costs for developing, rolling out, and tracking compliance with the new training and certification system. Units with high operational tempo may face scheduling challenges in completing required training. Contractors or existing training program providers whose curricula may be displaced by new standardized requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that military suicide rates have remained persistently elevated — the Department of Defense reported 519 active-duty suicides in 2021, exceeding combat deaths — and that inconsistent implementation of the existing self-initiated referral process leaves service members without reliable access to care. They contend that standardized training and a documented certification process would close accountability gaps, ensuring commanders cannot ignore or mishandle mental health referrals as has been documented in cases like Brandon Caserta's.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a planning and training mandate without dedicated funding or enforcement mechanisms, risking a compliance-on-paper outcome where certifications are completed but behavioral change does not follow. They contend that the Department of Defense already has extensive mental health programs and that adding another strategic plan layer may produce bureaucratic duplication rather than measurable reductions in suicide rates, diverting leadership time from operational readiness without demonstrated effectiveness.