WASHINGTON
– The
U.S. Senate today unanimously passed legislation authored by Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand to reduce the
backlog of families awaiting approval of survivor benefits of public safety
officers killed in the line of duty. The bill, passed during Police Week
alongside other measures supporting law enforcement, now goes to the House of
Representatives for consideration.
“As
a society, we’ve promised to support the loved ones of officers who paid the
ultimate sacrifice to protect us, so it’s unacceptable that these families are
often forced to wait, in some cases, for years, for the Justice Department to
process their survivor benefits applications. A little transparency and public
scrutiny can go a long way, and this bill shines a bright public light on the
Justice Department’s survivor benefits backlog to get some answers for these
families. My colleagues in the House of Representatives should pass this bill
as soon as possible to bring needed help to the loved ones of our fallen
officers,” Grassley said.
“I’m
very pleased the Public Safety Officers’ Benefits Improvement Act unanimously
passed the Senate,” said Senator Gillibrand. “When a first responder dies as a
result of their work, we all have a responsibility to help take care of their
surviving family members. This legislation would help ensure that the families
of fallen first responders receive the compensation they deserve and need in a
timely and transparent manner. Now that this bill has
passed the Senate, I urge my colleagues in the House of Representatives to send
it to the President’s desk to be signed into law as quickly as possible.”
Congress
established the Public Safety Officers’ Benefits program in 1976 to provide
death benefits to survivors of officers who die in the line of duty. Over the
years, the law has been amended to provide disability and education benefits,
and to expand the pool of officers who are eligible for these benefits. While
the Justice Department has a goal of processing survivor claims within one year
of the time they are filed, many families must wait long periods of time for
their applications to be approved.
According
to recent data, at the end of March 2017, there were 756 active claims before
the PSOB Office. These claims have been pending for an average of 753 days.
Between October 2016 and March 2017, the PSOB Office determined 179 claims, but
received 192 claims, resulting in a net increase in the number of pending
claims.
To
address the backlog, the Public Safety Officers’ Benefits Improvement Act
expands public oversight of the Public Safety Officers’ Benefits program by
permanently increasing the level of transparency regarding wait times for
benefits applications. Specifically, the bill:
·
requires
the Justice Department to post on its website, weekly status updates for all
pending claims and biannual aggregate statistics regarding these claims;
·
allows
the Justice Department to rely on other federal regulatory standards;
·
requires
the Justice Department to demonstrate clear and convincing evidence that an officer
was negligent or engaged in misconduct at the time of his or her death or
injury before denying a claim on those grounds; and
·
allows
for the Justice Department to give substantial weight to—and sometimes requires
it to adopt—findings of fact of state, local, and other federal agencies.
Under
the bill, the Justice Department must also utilize all of its investigative
authorities before rejecting claims based on a lack of information, and
establish remedies for claimants who age out of eligibility for education
benefits because of the department’s own delays in processing their claims. The
bill’s provisions would apply to all claims that are pending at the time of the
bill’s enactment, in addition to all claims filed after that date.
The
Senate passed
similar
legislation
last year. The Public Safety Officers’ Benefits Improvement Act was
introduced this year by
Grassley and Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), and is cosponsored by Senators Orrin Hatch
(R-Utah), Chris Coons (D-Del.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.),
Al Franken (D-Minn.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.),
Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.).
Last
year, Grassley convened a
Senate
Judiciary Committee hearing to shed light on the length of time the Justice
Department takes to consider death benefit claims from the families of fallen
public safety officers. At the hearing, Jay Langenbau of Northwood, Iowa,
testified that his family had yet to receive benefits following the death of
his wife, Shelly, in 2013. Two days following Langenbau’s public testimony, the
Justice Department finally approved his benefits application.
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