Bill

BILL β€’ US SENATE

SRES 727

A resolution supporting the designation of May 29, 2026, as "Mental Health Awareness in Agriculture Day" to raise awareness around mental health in the agricultural industry and workforce and to continue to reduce stigma associated with mental illness.

119th Congress
Introduced by Angela Alsobrooks, Michael Bennet, Chris Coons and 19 other co-sponsors

Designates May 29, 2026 as Mental Health Awareness in Agriculture Day to raise awareness, reduce stigma, and encourage access to mental health resources for agricultural workers.

Submitted in Senate
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Bill Summary Β· SRES 727

Overview

  • Type: Senate resolution
  • Official title: A resolution supporting the designation of May 29, 2026, as "Mental Health Awareness in Agriculture Day"
  • Purpose: To raise awareness of mental health issues within the agricultural industry and workforce and to continue reducing stigma surrounding mental illness
  • Session/Jurisdiction: United States Senate, Session 119
  • Action history: Referred to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary and submitted in the Senate on May 13, 2026
  • Principal sponsors: A broad bipartisan group of senators, with a long list of co-sponsors (including Catherine Cortez Masto, Jerry Moran, Michael Bennet, Amy Klobuchar, Deb Fischer, Thom Tillis, Mike Crapo, Dick Durbin, Adam Schiff, Tina Smith, and others)

Main Purpose and Intent

  • Recognize and support efforts to address mental health challenges faced by individuals working in agriculture, including farmers, ranchers, farmworkers, and other agricultural workers.
  • Designate a specific day (May 29, 2026) as a national observance to promote awareness, reduce stigma, and encourage resources and support for mental health in the agricultural sector.
  • Emphasize bipartisan support for improving access to mental health services and reducing barriers to seeking help within rural and farming communities.

Key Provisions and Changes

  • Formal designation: Establishes May 29, 2026 as "Mental Health Awareness in Agriculture Day" at the national level.
  • Awareness activities: Encourages educational and outreach events, partnerships with agricultural organizations, community organizations, and mental health advocates to highlight issues related to mental health in agriculture.
  • Stigma reduction: Promotes initiatives aimed at reducing stigma surrounding mental illness among agricultural workers, including sharing information on available resources and encouraging open dialogue.
  • Resource coordination: While the text of the resolution itself may not create new mandatory programs, it signals support for existing mental health resources and may facilitate collaboration among federal agencies, agricultural groups, and mental health service providers.
  • Non-binding nature: As a resolution, it expresses the sense of the Senate and does not impose new legal requirements or funding obligations on individuals, states, or agencies.

Who Is Affected

  • Primary audience: Agricultural workers and the broader agricultural community (farmers, ranchers, farmworkers, agribusiness employees) across the United States.
  • Secondary audience: Federal agencies, state agricultural departments, rural health providers, mental health professionals, agricultural organizations, and advocacy groups involved in farmer well-being and mental health awareness efforts.
  • The resolution itself does not mandate new programs but aims to catalyze awareness and collaboration.

Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Introduction and referral: Introduced in the Senate and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary (May 13, 2026).
  • Potential progression: As a non-binding resolution, passage would typically reflect Senate support and may encourage related initiatives, partnerships, or implementation at the agency or community level, though no new funding or mandatory duties are created by the resolution.
  • Observance date: The designated day is May 29, 2026, for this year’s observance, with possible future reiterations or annual acknowledgments if pursued by Congress.

Possible Impact

  • Increased visibility: Raises national awareness of mental health issues in agriculture and the importance of supporting farm communities.
  • Resource linkage: Encourages dissemination of information about mental health resources and services available to agricultural workers.
  • Stigma reduction: Supports cultural shifts within rural and farming communities toward seeking help for mental health concerns.
  • Policy and program implications: While not prescriptive or funding-authorizing, the resolution could influence conversations and potential collaborative efforts among federal, state, and local partners to address mental health in agriculture.

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