S-265-118
Became Public Law No: 118-84.
Sponsored by Richard Durbin (D-IL)
What it does
This law extends a federal grant program that funds improvements to emergency medical services (EMS) in rural areas through fiscal year 2028. It adds a new requirement that grant recipients use some funds to train EMS workers on responding to mental health crises and substance use emergencies. It also allows — but does not require — grant funds to be used to purchase overdose reversal drugs and devices, such as naloxone.
Who benefits
Rural residents who need emergency medical care, particularly those experiencing mental health crises or drug overdoses. Rural EMS agencies and first responders who receive funding and training resources. Patients with substance use disorders in rural communities, who may receive faster access to overdose reversal treatment. Rural hospitals and healthcare systems that rely on EMS as a first point of contact.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who fund the grant program. Urban and suburban EMS agencies that do not qualify for rural-designated grants and may compete for related federal healthcare dollars. Potentially, rural EMS agencies that prefer flexibility in how they spend grant funds, as the new mandatory training requirement reduces their discretion over fund allocation.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that rural EMS systems face unique and severe resource shortages — longer response times, fewer personnel, and less specialized training — that leave rural residents at a dangerous disadvantage during medical emergencies. They contend that mental health crises and drug overdoses are among the most common and time-sensitive emergencies rural first responders encounter, yet many EMS workers lack the specific training to handle them effectively. Requiring training in these areas, supporters say, directly addresses a documented gap in rural emergency care. Permitting the purchase of overdose reversal drugs gives agencies a practical, low-cost tool that can save lives in the critical minutes before hospital care is available. Reauthorizing the program through 2028 provides agencies with the funding stability needed to recruit, train, and retain personnel in communities where EMS services might otherwise collapse entirely.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding a mandatory training requirement reduces the flexibility rural EMS agencies need to address their own locally identified priorities, which may differ significantly from community to community. They contend that a one-size-fits-all federal mandate on training content is an inefficient way to allocate scarce rural EMS resources, and that local agencies and state governments are better positioned to determine what training their personnel most urgently need. Critics may also argue that the program represents continued federal spending that adds to the national debt without a demonstrated, rigorous evaluation of whether prior grant cycles produced measurable improvements in rural emergency outcomes. Some may further contend that overdose reversal drug procurement is better handled through separate public health channels, and that folding it into EMS grants blurs the line between emergency response and broader drug policy.