SRES-727-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S2281-2282)
What it does
This resolution designates May 29, 2026 as "Mental Health Awareness in Agriculture Day." It expresses the Senate's support for raising awareness of mental health challenges faced by farmers, ranchers, and farmworkers, and encourages the public to observe the day. It also highlights existing resources available through the USDA's Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network.
Who benefits
Farmers, ranchers, and farmworkers — approximately 3.37 million agricultural producers and 1.6 million farmworkers — who may benefit from reduced stigma and increased awareness of mental health resources. Mental health advocacy organizations and rural health nonprofits that gain a platform. The USDA's Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network, which receives increased visibility. Rural communities broadly, where agricultural mental health challenges are concentrated.
Who is hurt
This resolution carries no binding legal or fiscal obligations, so no group faces a direct material harm. There are no identifiable groups negatively affected by this legislation.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the agricultural workforce faces a documented and severe mental health crisis: the National Rural Health Association reports farmer suicide rates 3.5 times higher than the general population, and farmworker suicide rates 1.4 times higher than all other occupations. They contend that a formal Senate designation raises the visibility of existing resources like the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network and that reducing stigma in rural communities — where mental health care is often culturally discouraged — can encourage individuals to seek help before reaching a crisis point.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions without accompanying funding, program expansions, or policy changes do little to address the structural causes of agricultural mental health challenges, such as volatile commodity prices, farm debt, and rural provider shortages. They contend that congressional time and attention would be better directed toward substantive legislation — such as expanding rural mental health provider access or increasing Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network funding — rather than a non-binding designation that expires after a single day.