S-3487-117
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 429.
What it does
This bill would raise the one-time death benefit paid to survivors of federal employees who die in the line of duty from $10,000 to $100,000 — a tenfold increase. It would also raise the funeral benefit from $800 to $8,800. Both dollar amounts would be adjusted each year to keep pace with inflation, preventing their value from eroding over time.
Who benefits
Surviving family members (spouses, children, dependents) of federal civilian employees who die in the line of duty would receive significantly larger death and funeral payments. Federal employees in higher-risk roles — such as law enforcement officers, border agents, postal workers, and other field personnel — and their families stand to benefit most directly. Federal agencies that recruit and retain workers in dangerous positions may also benefit from improved survivor benefit packages.
Who is hurt
U.S. taxpayers broadly would bear the cost of the increased benefit payments and the ongoing inflation adjustments, as these are funded through the federal budget. The bill does not appear to negatively affect any specific private-sector group. Competing federal spending priorities could be indirectly affected if the increased outlays are not offset by other budget adjustments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current death benefit of $10,000 — unchanged for decades — has lost most of its real value to inflation and falls far short of providing meaningful financial support to grieving families. Federal employees who die serving the public deserve the same level of recognition and financial protection afforded to other public servants. Raising the benefit to $100,000 and indexing it to inflation ensures the payment remains meaningful over time, honors the sacrifice of civil servants, and helps the federal government attract and retain qualified workers in dangerous roles by demonstrating a genuine commitment to their families' well-being.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that while the goal of supporting survivors is sympathetic, a tenfold increase in the death benefit represents a significant and potentially unjustified expansion of federal spending that lacks a clear cost offset. Critics may contend that federal employees already receive robust compensation packages — including pensions, life insurance through the Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance program, and other survivor benefits — making this additional increase duplicative. Others may argue that the inflation-indexing provision creates an open-ended, permanently growing spending obligation that bypasses the normal annual appropriations process and reduces congressional oversight of federal expenditures.