HR-8952-119
Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
Sponsored by Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would amend the Older Americans Act of 1965 to create a new federal grant program targeting LGBTQI older adults and other protected-class older adults living in rural areas. Eligible recipients — including states, tribal organizations, nonprofits, and area agencies on aging — could use funds for community outreach, reducing social isolation, cultural competency training, nondiscrimination policy expansion, and sexual health services including HIV-related care. The bill would authorize $5 million per year for fiscal years 2027 and 2028, with a supplement-not-supplant requirement to ensure federal funds add to, rather than replace, existing state and local spending.
Who benefits
LGBTQI older adults in rural areas, who face documented higher rates of social isolation and barriers to culturally competent care. Older adults with HIV in rural areas who would gain access to sexual health services. Other protected-class older adults in rural areas who qualify under the program's broader eligibility language. Nonprofit organizations and area agencies on aging that would receive grant funding. Rural healthcare and social service providers who would receive cultural competency training. Tribal communities with eligible older adult populations.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the $10 million two-year authorization. Organizations that serve rural older adults but do not focus on LGBTQI or protected-class populations, who may face indirect competition for related funding streams. States and localities that could face administrative burden in coordinating with grant recipients under the supplement-not-supplant requirement. Rural service providers who may need to adopt new nondiscrimination policies as a condition of participation, which could conflict with the values of some faith-based providers currently serving rural seniors.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that LGBTQI older adults in rural areas face compounding disadvantages — geographic isolation, limited access to affirming healthcare providers, and higher rates of depression and poverty compared to their urban counterparts — that existing Older Americans Act programs do not adequately address. They contend that the $5 million annual authorization is modest and targeted, filling a documented service gap without displacing existing programs through the supplement-not-supplant requirement, and that expanding cultural competency among rural providers would improve care quality for all older adults in those communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a federally funded program that categorizes older adults by sexual orientation and gender identity, raising concerns about whether limited rural aging-services resources should be allocated on that basis rather than through universal need-based criteria. They contend that the nondiscrimination policy expansion requirement — covering sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics — could effectively exclude faith-based organizations that currently provide a significant share of rural senior services, reducing the overall capacity of the rural care network rather than expanding it.