S-4625-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Edward Markey (D-MA)
What it does
This bill would amend the Older Americans Act of 1965 in three main ways. First, it would add LGBTQI individuals and people living with HIV to the Act's definition of groups with "greatest social need," making them eligible for targeted services. Second, it would create a new Office of LGBTQI Inclusion within the Administration for Community Living, headed by a Secretary-appointed Director, to coordinate services, collect data, and administer grants. Third, it would establish a rural outreach grant program — authorized at $5 million per year from 2027 through 2031 — to fund education, social connection, cultural competency training, nondiscrimination policies, and sexual health services for LGBTQI older adults and other protected-class individuals in rural areas.
Who benefits
LGBTQI older adults, particularly those in rural areas who face geographic and social isolation. Older adults living with HIV who would gain access to targeted sexual health services. Rural area agencies on aging, nonprofits, and tribal organizations that would be eligible for grant funding. Researchers studying LGBTQI aging, who would benefit from new federal data collection. Indirectly, caregivers and family members of LGBTQI older adults who may gain access to better-coordinated support services.
Who is hurt
Organizations that object on religious or moral grounds to LGBTQI-inclusive nondiscrimination policies may face pressure or be ineligible for grants if they do not adopt such policies. State and local governments could face administrative burdens in coordinating with the new federal office. Taxpayers would bear the cost of the $25 million five-year authorization and the administrative overhead of the new office. Other underserved older adult populations not specifically named in the bill may receive relatively less attention or funding as agency resources are directed toward the new office's mandate.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that LGBTQI older adults face measurably higher rates of social isolation, depression, and poverty than their non-LGBTQI peers — with SAGE (Services and Advocacy for LGBTQ+ Elders) research finding they are twice as likely to live alone and four times less likely to have family caregivers. They contend that the existing Older Americans Act framework has no mechanism to track or address these disparities, and that creating a dedicated office and rural grant program fills a documented structural gap in federal elder care policy for a population that already faces barriers to disclosing their identity to service providers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the Older Americans Act already serves all seniors regardless of identity, and that creating a population-specific federal office sets a precedent for fragmenting elder care policy into identity-based silos rather than addressing universal needs like caregiver shortages and long-term care costs. They contend that the $25 million authorization and new bureaucratic layer could be better directed toward broad rural elder care infrastructure, and that grant conditions requiring adoption of nondiscrimination policies based on gender identity may conflict with the religious beliefs of faith-based service providers who are often the only available care organizations in rural communities.