Press Releases

CONYERS’ STATEMENT ON THE LAW ENFORCEMENT MENTAL HEALTH AND WELLNESS ACT

H.R. 2228 seeks to help create and improve mental health and wellness services for law enforcement officers.

Washington, DC, October 12, 2017

Today, House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers Jr. (D-MI.) delivered the following remarks during the House Judiciary Committee’s markup of H.R. 2228, the “Law Enforcement Mental Health and Wellness Act of 2017”

I am proud to cosponsor H.R. 2228, the “Law Enforcement Mental Health and Wellness Act of 2017.” This bill would provide support for law enforcement agencies to protect the mental health and well-being of law enforcement officers.
At the outset, we must recognize that law enforcement officers have a special role in our communities, with exceptional responsibilities to serve and protect. In the performance of these duties, they see, encounter, and experience events that the rest of us would run from, but they do not.
Law enforcement officers respond to horrendous situations that are both dangerous and stressful, and oftentimes life-threatening, as they find themselves in harm’s way while protecting the communities they serve.
For example, some recent tragedies which law enforcement officers have responded to include in June 2016 when 49 people were killed and 53 others wounded by a gunman at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida; one month later when a gunman killed five officers and wounded another nine officers along with two civilians in Dallas, Texas; and just this month when a gunman in Las Vegas killed 58 innocent citizens and injured nearly 500 others.
And, of course, law enforcement officers must respond to the calls related to violence of many kinds in our communities every day.
In many cases, these traumatic situations remain with officers long after the threats are reduced and the communities they serve have gained a renewed since of safety.
However, members of law enforcement are left to face the continued trauma from their daily work, which can be difficult to process and impossible to forget.
That is why this bill is necessary.
H.R. 2228 seeks to help create and improve mental health and wellness services for law enforcement officers.
The bill provides support for law enforcement agencies by requiring reports on mental health practices and services that can be adopted by law enforcement agencies and establishes peer mentoring mental health and wellness pilot programs within law enforcement agencies.
H.R. 2228 would also provide support for mental health programs by developing educational resources for mental health providers regarding the culture of law enforcement agencies and therapies for mental health issues common to law enforcement.
This measure would also provide support for law enforcement officers by reviewing existing crisis hotlines, recommending improvements regarding these crisis hotlines, and researching the effectiveness of annual mental health checks for law enforcement officers.
With this legislation, we in Congress can help better provide for and protect the mental health, safety, and wellness of all law enforcement officers as they unselfishly protect each of us daily.
For these reasons, I support this bill and ask that my colleagues join me in doing so today.