SCONRES-15-119
Held at the desk.
What it does
This concurrent resolution would express Congress's formal support for U.S. law enforcement professionals. It cites statistics on officer assaults, line-of-duty deaths, and workforce declines, then calls on all levels of government to provide officers with more personnel, better training and equipment, tougher penalties for assaulting or killing officers, and increased mental health resources. As a concurrent resolution, it does not carry the force of law, create new programs, or appropriate any funds.
Who benefits
Current law enforcement officers, who receive formal congressional recognition and a public call for increased resources and protections. Families of fallen or injured officers, who are specifically honored. Law enforcement unions and advocacy organizations, whose policy priorities (more personnel, tougher assault penalties, mental health resources) are formally endorsed by Congress. Communities that may indirectly benefit if the resolution spurs future legislation increasing officer staffing or safety.
Who is hurt
No group is directly harmed by a non-binding resolution. Critics of current policing practices may view the resolution's framing — particularly its call for "tough penalties" for assaulting officers — as implicitly opposing criminal justice measures they support. Civil liberties and police accountability advocates may argue the resolution's one-sided framing omits discussion of community oversight or accountability measures. No funding is redirected and no legal rights are altered.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that law enforcement officers face measurable and growing dangers — 79,000 assaults in 2023 alone, a 54% higher suicide rate than other workers, and a 5.3% drop in sworn officer levels between 2019 and 2021 — and that Congress has a responsibility to formally recognize these realities. They contend that expressing bipartisan support for officer safety and mental health resources sends an important signal to communities and governments at all levels to prioritize law enforcement staffing and well-being.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution that calls for "tough penalties" and increased policing resources, without any mention of accountability, oversight, or community trust, presents an incomplete picture of public safety. They contend that Congress's formal endorsement of one set of policy priorities — without acknowledging documented concerns about use-of-force practices or disparate policing outcomes — may make it harder to advance balanced criminal justice legislation that addresses both officer safety and community accountability.