HR-7718-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Randy Weber (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Safety Officers' Benefits (PSOB) Program to add new procedural timelines, requiring the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) to notify claimants of missing information within 90 days and issue eligibility determinations within 270 days of receiving a complete claim. It would create a new category of partial permanent disability benefits (at half the full benefit amount) for officers who can no longer work as public safety officers but are not totally disabled. It would also require the BJA to issue subpoenas to uncooperative agencies withholding claim-relevant records, mandate annual GAO audits of backlogged claims, and direct expedited approval of claims already certified by the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund or the World Trade Center Health Program.
Who benefits
Public safety officers (police, firefighters, EMS personnel) who suffer permanent partial disabilities in the line of duty and currently receive no PSOB benefit because they do not meet the "total disability" threshold. Families of fallen officers whose claims have been delayed by uncooperative agencies. September 11th first responders and their survivors whose claims would be fast-tracked via VCF or WTCHP certification. Officers from smaller or "underserved" public safety agencies who may be unaware of the program. Disability advocates and organizations supporting injured officers. Claimants whose cases have stalled due to bureaucratic backlog.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of expanded benefit eligibility and new interim payments. The Bureau of Justice Assistance, which would face new mandatory timelines, subpoena obligations, and annual audit requirements that may strain administrative capacity. State and local public safety agencies that could be compelled via subpoena to produce records, potentially creating administrative burdens. Officers who progress from partial to total disability may receive a reduced net payout due to the offset provision. Claimants in disputed beneficiary situations may face delays as interim payments are routed to escrow rather than paid directly.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the PSOB program has a well-documented backlog problem — a 2024 GAO report (GAO-24-105549) found systemic transparency and management failures leaving injured officers and grieving families waiting years for benefits they are legally owed. They contend that adding a partial permanent disability tier closes a significant gap: officers who are medically retired and can never return to public safety work currently receive nothing if they retain any capacity for other employment, an outcome that fails to reflect the true sacrifice of a career-ending line-of-duty injury.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing rigid 270-day determination deadlines and mandatory subpoena requirements on the BJA may force premature decisions on complex claims, increasing the risk of erroneous approvals or costly appeals. They contend that the new partial disability benefit tier — set at half the full benefit with an offset against future death benefits — creates a complicated layered structure that could generate litigation over eligibility thresholds and reduce the net benefit to officers whose conditions worsen, while adding long-term mandatory spending obligations that have not been fully scored or offset.