S-4844-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Martin Heinrich (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would direct the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), under the Department of Health and Human Services, to establish a grant program for eligible nonprofits, universities, and fire service organizations to research, develop, and test turnout gear — the protective clothing firefighters wear — that is free of PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). Beginning in fiscal year 2028, it would also fund grants for training firefighters on safe use, cleaning, and decontamination of the new gear. The bill would authorize $25 million per year from 2027–2031 for research and $2 million per year from 2028–2032 for training, and requires a progress report to Congress within two years of enactment.
Who benefits
Active firefighters (approximately 1.1 million in the U.S., including career and volunteer) who would be exposed to less PFAS through their gear. Emergency medical services personnel who use turnout gear. Firefighters' families, who may face secondary PFAS exposure through contaminated gear brought home. Researchers and academic institutions that would receive grant funding. Nonprofit fire safety organizations eligible for grants. Manufacturers of PFAS-free materials who would gain a federally funded market development pathway. Communities near fire stations, where PFAS contamination of water and soil from gear washing has been documented.
Who is hurt
Current manufacturers of PFAS-based turnout gear components, particularly those producing moisture barrier materials, who could face reduced demand if PFAS-free alternatives are successfully developed. Chemical companies that produce fluorinated compounds used in existing gear. Fire departments and jurisdictions that may face eventual pressure to replace existing PFAS-containing gear inventories, at their own cost, once alternatives are available. Taxpayers who would fund the authorized appropriations. Eligible entities that apply but do not receive grants under the competitive award process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that PFAS chemicals in turnout gear are a documented occupational health hazard: studies, including research by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health itself, have found elevated cancer rates among firefighters compared to the general population, and PFAS exposure through gear is identified as a contributing factor. They contend that the bill addresses a market failure — the fire safety equipment industry has not independently developed viable PFAS-free alternatives at scale — and that a targeted, time-limited federal research investment of $25 million annually is a proportionate response to protect a workforce that serves the public.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill authorizes up to $135 million in new federal spending without establishing clear performance benchmarks or accountability measures to ensure grant recipients produce usable, field-ready gear. They contend that existing PFAS regulations and market forces — including state-level PFAS restrictions already enacted in California, New York, and others — may already be driving private-sector innovation, making a separate federal grant program duplicative. Critics may also argue that the bill's eligibility criteria, requiring experience in at least three of six specified areas, could limit competition and concentrate funding among a small number of established organizations.