HR-8776-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Laura Gillen (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would require the Attorney General, in consultation with the Directors of the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, the FBI, and the National Institute of Justice, to submit a report to Congress within 270 days of enactment. The report would identify effective strategies and best practices for reducing mental health stigma among law enforcement officers, encouraging officers to use mental health resources, and protecting the confidentiality of those services. The bill would also require the report to include recommendations for implementing those strategies.
Who benefits
Law enforcement officers at the federal, state, tribal, and local levels — including police, corrections officers, probation and parole officers, and judicial officers — who may gain access to better-designed mental health programs. Law enforcement agencies that would receive actionable federal guidance. Mental health service providers and peer support organizations that could see expanded partnerships with law enforcement. Families of officers who may benefit from improved officer mental health outcomes. Communities served by officers whose mental health and job performance may improve as a result.
Who is hurt
No group faces direct material harm from this bill, as it is purely advisory and produces only a report. Taxpayers would bear the modest administrative cost of producing the report. Stakeholders who prefer no federal involvement in state and local law enforcement policy may object to the federal government's role, even in an advisory capacity. The bill produces no mandates, so no agency, department, or individual is compelled to change behavior based on its findings.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that law enforcement officers face exceptionally high rates of occupational trauma, with studies showing that officers die by suicide at higher rates than in the line of duty — a 2019 Blue H.E.L.P. report counted 228 officer suicides compared to 132 line-of-duty deaths that year. They contend that cultural stigma within law enforcement is a documented barrier to help-seeking, and that a coordinated federal study drawing on agencies like the FBI and National Institute of Justice would produce evidence-based guidance that individual departments lack the resources to develop on their own.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that this bill produces only a report with no binding requirements, appropriations, or enforcement mechanisms, making it unlikely to produce meaningful change in officer mental health outcomes. They contend that the federal government already funds research through the National Institute of Justice and the COPS Office, and that commissioning another report duplicates existing work without addressing the underlying resource gaps — such as funding for peer support programs — that actually prevent officers from accessing care.