S-4843-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 to direct the Secretary of Education, in coordination with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), to develop and publish one or more evidence-based model mental health and suicide prevention plans for colleges and universities within one year of enactment. The Secretary would also provide voluntary technical assistance to institutions that want to adopt these plans, and would update the models at least every five years. The bill explicitly states it would not create any new legal requirements for colleges or universities.
Who benefits
College and university students — particularly the estimated 1 in 5 who experience a mental health condition — who may gain access to more structured campus mental health resources. Smaller and under-resourced institutions that lack the staff or expertise to develop their own plans would benefit from free federal guidance. SAMHSA and the Department of Education would gain a formal coordination role. Nonprofit mental health organizations and community-based groups could be engaged as collaborators. Families of students who struggle with mental health crises may indirectly benefit from improved campus support systems.
Who is hurt
No group faces direct legal or financial harm, as participation is entirely voluntary and the bill creates no mandates. Institutions that already have robust, independently developed mental health programs may find federal model plans redundant or may face soft pressure to conform to a federal template. State governments with existing mental health frameworks could see their approaches implicitly compared to or displaced by a federal model. Taxpayers would bear the administrative cost of developing, disseminating, and updating the model plans, though no specific appropriation is included in the bill text.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that college student mental health has reached crisis levels — the American College Health Association found that over 40% of college students reported feeling so depressed it was difficult to function, and suicide is the second leading cause of death among college-aged adults. They contend that many institutions, especially smaller or less-resourced ones, lack the expertise to build effective prevention programs from scratch, and that voluntary federal model plans fill this gap at no cost to schools while preserving institutional autonomy through the explicit no-new-requirements clause.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mental health programming is a quintessentially local function best handled by states and individual institutions, which already know their student populations, and that federal model plans risk imposing a one-size-fits-all framework on diverse campuses. They contend that without dedicated funding, the bill may produce guidance documents that go unused, and that the federal administrative resources spent developing and updating these plans could be better directed toward direct mental health service grants — a mechanism with a stronger evidence base for improving student outcomes.