S-2446-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S4701)
Sponsored by Alex Padilla (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Health Service Act to require the Secretary of Health and Human Services, through the Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use, to develop and implement a behavioral and mental health outreach and education strategy specifically targeting Hispanic and Latino populations. The strategy would be required to address cultural and language diversity within those communities, raise awareness of mental illness symptoms, and promote evidence-based, culturally appropriate treatments. The bill would authorize $1 million in appropriations for fiscal year 2026 and require annual reports to Congress on outcomes.
Who benefits
Hispanic and Latino individuals and communities who may face mental health stigma or lack access to culturally and linguistically appropriate mental health information. Subgroups specifically named include people of varying gender identities, ages, sexual orientations, and ethnicities within the broader Latino population. Mental health advocacy organizations serving these communities, which would be engaged as partners in developing the strategy. Behavioral health providers who specialize in culturally adapted care may see increased demand for their services.
Who is hurt
Other racial, ethnic, or demographic groups with unmet mental health outreach needs who are not addressed by this targeted program may see their relative share of limited federal mental health outreach resources remain unchanged. Organizations competing for the same $1 million appropriation for other mental health priorities could face indirect opportunity costs. Taxpayers bear the cost of the appropriation, though at $1 million it is minimal. If the strategy is poorly implemented, communities it targets could receive ineffective or misdirected outreach.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Hispanic and Latino Americans are significantly less likely to receive mental health treatment than non-Hispanic white Americans — with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) reporting that only 35% of Latino adults with mental illness receive treatment, compared to 52% of white adults — and that cultural stigma and language barriers are documented contributors to this gap. They contend that a targeted, culturally adapted outreach strategy is precisely the kind of evidence-based intervention needed to close this disparity, and that the bill's requirement for community participation ensures the strategy reflects the actual needs of diverse Latino subgroups.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that singling out one ethnic group for a federally funded mental health program raises questions about equal treatment and whether limited federal resources should be allocated on the basis of ethnicity rather than need-based criteria that could reach all underserved populations. They contend that $1 million is insufficient to produce measurable outcomes at the national scale of the Latino population — roughly 63 million people — and that the bill creates a new reporting and administrative mandate without a funding stream beyond a single fiscal year, potentially producing an unfunded obligation or a program that lapses before demonstrating results.