WASHINGTON – Bipartisan legislation aimed at
helping families of fallen first responders receive the survivor benefits
they’d been promised was signed into law today. The Public Safety Officers
Benefits Improvement Act, led by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck
Grassley (R-Iowa) and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) reduces processing
times through increased transparency of application backlogs.
“First responders and members of law enforcement
often run toward danger to keep our communities safe. Sadly, far too many make
the ultimate sacrifice for the public good. As a society, we’ve promised to
support the loved ones of these fallen officers. It’s unacceptable that many
are left in limbo, for years in some cases, just to hear back on their
application for survivor benefits. Our bill, which is now law, shines a light
on the Justice Department backlogs so these families can quickly get the
answers they deserve and the assistance they’ve been promised,” Grassley said.
“I’m very pleased the Public Safety Officers’
Benefits Improvement Act was signed into law. 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 law will help ensure that the families of fallen
first responders finally receive the compensation they deserve and need in a
timely and transparent manner,” Gillibrand said.
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, the
PSOB Office had 756 active claims, which had 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;
·
requires the Justice Department to
utilize all of its investigative authorities before rejecting claims based on
lack of information;
·
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; and
·
establishes 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.
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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