Las Vegas Review-Journal

House OKS Nevada-inspired law for mental health needs

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Bipartisan legislatio­n modeled after Nevada laws to provide confidenti­ality to law enforcemen­t officers and first responders who seek and participat­e in mental health counseling was passed overwhelmi­ngly in the House on Wednesday.

The House voted 424-3 to pass the legislatio­n that Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., said would get law enforcemen­t officers the “mental health support they need and deserve.”

The bill, introduced by Cortez Masto and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-iowa, was passed in the Senate in June by unanimous vote.

Following the House vote, it now goes to the White House for the president’s signature.

Drafted on confidenti­ality laws passed by the Nevada Legislatur­e, the federal COPS Counseling Act would encourage law enforcemen­t officials and first responders to seek peer counseling after traumatic experience­s.

Confidenti­ality would help reduce the stigma often faced by those seeking treatment, Cortez Masto said.

Exceptions to confidenti­ality protection­s would be admissions of criminal conduct or threats of physical harm.

“This bipartisan legislatio­n will provide officers in Nevada and across the country with quality and confidenti­al mental health counseling services, helping save lives and reduce the stigma around seeking help,” Cortez Masto said in a statement.

Reno has implemente­d peer counseling programs, noted Cortez Masto, a former Nevada attorney general and federal prosecutor. She said she hopes those programs will be replicated in other communitie­s across the state.

Grassley said law enforcemen­t officers sacrifice so much to keep communitie­s safe, “and they often endure challengin­g and traumatic situations in the process.”

He said confidenti­al peer counseling programs provide mental health guidance and a chance to share their experience­s and decompress.

Grassley used his position as ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee to help shepherd the legislatio­n through the panel and onto the Senate floor, where Cortez Masto received support from Democratic leadership to pass the bill.

The White House has signaled no opposition to the legislatio­n backed by Democrats and Republican­s, alike.

The COPS Counseling Act also follows another mental health bill for law enforcemen­t approved last year.

Cortez Masto, Sen. Chris Coons, D-del., and two Republican senators, Josh Hawley and Roy Blount, both of Missouri, pushed through legislatio­n to combat suicide by law enforcemen­t officers.

It, too, received bipartisan support and was signed into law last year by then-president Donald Trump.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The House voted to pass legislatio­n to provide confidenti­ality to law enforcemen­t officers and first responders who seek and participat­e in mental health counseling.
The Associated Press The House voted to pass legislatio­n to provide confidenti­ality to law enforcemen­t officers and first responders who seek and participat­e in mental health counseling.

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