S-4530-119
Became Public Law No: 119-95.
Sponsored by Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
What it does
This bill would amend federal civil service retirement law (chapters 83 and 84 of title 5, U.S. Code) to allow an increase in the mandatory retirement age for members of the U.S. Capitol Police. Under current law, federal law enforcement officers covered by these chapters face a mandatory retirement age; this bill would authorize raising that age specifically for Capitol Police personnel.
Who benefits
Capitol Police officers who wish to continue working past the current mandatory retirement age and would retain their jobs and income longer. The Capitol Police force as an institution, which may benefit from retaining experienced officers during staffing shortages. Congress, as the employer, which gains flexibility to manage workforce levels. Taxpayers, to the extent retaining experienced officers reduces training and recruitment costs.
Who is hurt
Younger or mid-career Capitol Police officers whose promotion opportunities may be slowed if senior officers remain in their positions longer. Prospective new hires who may find fewer open positions if current officers delay retirement. Officers who remain on the job past their physical peak may face increased health or safety risks, as could their colleagues. Retirement and pension fund administrators may face actuarial adjustments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Capitol Police has faced persistent staffing shortages — the force was reported to be hundreds of officers below authorized strength in recent years — and that forcing experienced, capable officers into mandatory retirement exacerbates that gap. They contend that allowing officers who are physically and professionally fit to continue serving preserves institutional knowledge and operational readiness at one of the nation's most critical security posts.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandatory retirement ages for law enforcement exist for sound public safety reasons: the physical and cognitive demands of police work make age-based limits a reasonable workforce management tool, and individual fitness evaluations are an imperfect substitute. They contend that retaining older officers in a high-stress, physically demanding environment could create liability and safety risks, and that the better solution to staffing shortages is accelerated recruitment and competitive compensation rather than extending careers.