S-1511-117
Became Public Law No: 117-61.
Sponsored by Chuck Grassley (R-IA)
What it does
This law expands and modifies the Public Safety Officers' Benefits (PSOB) program, which pays death, disability, and education benefits to public safety officers and their families. It broadens who qualifies for benefits, increases benefit amounts, speeds up claims processing, and extends coverage to World Trade Center responders and officers affected by COVID-19.
Who benefits
Firefighters whose primary role is scene security or traffic control during emergencies; police and fire cadets or trainees in candidate-officer training; public safety officers who respond outside their home jurisdiction; surviving spouses and children of eligible officers (who now receive mandatory rather than optional retroactive education benefits); World Trade Center responders and their surviving family members; public safety officers who died or were disabled due to COVID-19; officers with neurocognitive disorders (e.g., dementia linked to line-of-duty exposure); claimants whose cases have been pending more than 365 days.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who fund the PSOB program, as expanded eligibility and higher benefit amounts would increase program costs. Third parties such as public agencies and medical providers may face new administrative burdens from DOJ subpoenas issued to expedite claims. State and local governments that employ public safety officers may face increased documentation and compliance demands during the claims process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the PSOB program has not kept pace with the realities of modern emergency response. Firefighters managing traffic and cadets in training face the same life-threatening risks as fully sworn officers, yet were previously excluded from coverage — a gap this law closes. Extending benefits to officers who respond outside their jurisdiction reflects how mutual aid agreements actually work in the field. The law also addresses long-standing delays in claims processing that have left grieving families waiting years for benefits they are owed. Requiring — rather than merely allowing — retroactive education benefits ensures that children and spouses of fallen officers are not denied support through administrative inaction. Covering neurocognitive disorders acknowledges the growing body of evidence linking conditions like dementia to repeated occupational trauma. Finally, extending COVID-19 and World Trade Center coverage recognizes that the dangers of public service do not always manifest immediately.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding PSOB eligibility without rigorous cost controls risks straining a program that must remain financially sustainable for its core beneficiaries — officers killed or catastrophically injured in direct line-of-duty action. Granting DOJ subpoena power over third-party agencies introduces a federal investigative tool into what has traditionally been a state and local administrative process, raising concerns about federal overreach into personnel and medical records. Critics also contend that extending COVID-19 eligibility indefinitely and broadening the definition of qualifying injuries — including neurocognitive disorders that may be difficult to link directly to line-of-duty service — could open the program to claims that are hard to verify, increasing costs and potentially diverting resources from the families of officers killed in the most direct and unambiguous circumstances. Broader eligibility definitions may also create inconsistent application across jurisdictions.