S-3897-119
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 416.
Sponsored by Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Safety Officers' Benefits (PSOB) Program to set strict processing deadlines: the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) would have 90 days to notify claimants of missing information and 270 days to issue a final determination. If BJA misses the 270-day deadline, it would be required to issue an interim benefit payment. The bill would also require BJA to subpoena public agencies that fail to provide necessary claim documentation within 30 days, streamline approvals for first responders already certified by the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund or World Trade Center Health Program, and direct the GAO to conduct annual audits of backlogged claims.
Who benefits
Families of police officers, firefighters, and other public safety officers killed or permanently disabled in the line of duty — particularly those whose claims have been delayed for more than a year. First responders with 9/11-related illnesses already certified by the VCF or WTCHP, who would receive expedited approvals. Disabled officers who are permanently but not totally disabled (in the original bill version), who would gain access to a new partial benefit tier. Smaller and rural public safety agencies with less administrative capacity to navigate the claims process. National public safety organizations that would receive regular outreach from BJA.
Who is hurt
The Bureau of Justice Assistance, which would face new mandatory timelines, subpoena obligations, and annual GAO audits — potentially straining existing staff and administrative resources. Public agencies (e.g., local police and fire departments) that could be subpoenaed if they fail to provide documentation on time, creating compliance burdens. Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of interim benefit payments issued when BJA misses deadlines, even if some claims are ultimately denied. Claimants who receive interim payments and are later found ineligible may face uncertainty, though the bill bars repayment except in cases of fraud.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that PSOB claims have languished for years, leaving grieving families without promised benefits — a 2024 GAO report (GAO-24-105549) found systemic transparency and management failures in the program. They contend that mandatory deadlines, automatic interim payments, and subpoena requirements create enforceable accountability where voluntary compliance has repeatedly failed, and that first responders who already have VCF or WTCHP certifications should not be forced to re-litigate the same facts before a separate federal agency.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that rigid statutory deadlines may pressure BJA to rush complex determinations — particularly in disputed cases involving contested cause-of-death findings — increasing the risk of erroneous approvals or denials. They contend that mandatory interim payments issued before eligibility is confirmed could result in improper disbursements that are practically unrecoverable, and that compelling subpoenas against local public agencies imposes unfunded federal mandates on governments that may lack the records infrastructure to comply within 30 days.