HR-8367-119
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H3446)
Sponsored by Kat Cammack (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Health Service Act to require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to conduct outreach activities aimed at increasing use of the 988 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline among first responders (law enforcement, firefighters, EMTs, and public safety telecommunicators). It would authorize grants for public awareness campaigns, fund training programs for 988 counselors tailored to first responder needs, and require privacy-protected data collection on hotline usage by first responders. The bill would also establish a pilot program coordinating SAMHSA, the U.S. Fire Administration, and first responder organizations, with a report to Congress due within three years.
Who benefits
Active-duty and retired first responders who may use the 988 hotline — estimated 4+ million law enforcement officers, firefighters, EMTs, and 911 dispatchers nationwide. First responder families who may benefit from improved mental health outcomes. 988 hotline counselors who would receive specialized training. First responder labor organizations and professional associations that would be eligible for grants. Mental health service providers and nonprofits that could receive grant funding. Communities that depend on first responders whose mental health and job performance may improve.
Who is hurt
Federal discretionary budget — the bill authorizes grants and a pilot program, though no specific dollar amount is appropriated. Other mental health programs competing for SAMHSA funding if resources are redirected. First responder organizations that do not meet eligibility criteria for grants. Potentially, first responders in jurisdictions where state or local privacy laws conflict with federal data collection requirements, creating compliance complexity for state and local partners.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that first responders face suicide rates significantly higher than line-of-duty deaths — a 2019 Ruderman Family Foundation study found firefighters and police officers die by suicide at roughly twice the rate they die in the line of duty — yet cultural stigma and lack of tailored services prevent many from seeking help. They contend that directing the 988 system to specifically address first responder barriers, including privacy concerns about employer access to call records, fills a documented gap that general mental health outreach has failed to close.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates new federal mandates and grant programs without specifying funding levels, risking an unfunded directive that produces bureaucratic activity without measurable outcomes. They contend that mental health support for first responders is primarily a state, local, and employer responsibility, and that layering federal outreach requirements onto the existing 988 infrastructure may dilute resources and counselor capacity currently serving the broader public, without clear evidence that federal-level campaigns are more effective than locally tailored peer support programs.