Older Workers’ Bureau Act
Sponsored By: Representative Beyer
Introduced
Summary
Creates an Older Workers' Bureau at the Department of Labor that would coordinate research, policy, and grants to improve employment, pay, and financial security for older workers.
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- Would fund research and programs on benefits access, workplace flexibility, job training, retirement readiness, age discrimination, wages, and job security. Research explicitly covers access to safety-net supports for people earning up to 200 percent of the federal poverty guidelines.
- Would run competitive grant programs that let employers, labor groups, nonprofits, and other covered institutions expand training, fight structural ageism, and build more inclusive workplaces, with priority for areas that lack targeted training for disadvantaged older workers.
- Would catalog federal programs, coordinate research and data across agencies including the Social Security Administration, Health and Human Services, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Treasury, Veterans Affairs, and HUD, and issue annual reports with recommendations to improve program coordination and older worker outcomes.
*Authorizes $10 million per year after fiscal year 2027 for the bureau's grant programs and activities, increasing federal spending by that amount.*
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Older Workers Bureau at Labor
If enacted, the Department of Labor would create an Older Workers Bureau. The President would name a Director within one year and the Bureau would be operational within one year. Staff pay would follow federal pay laws, and the Secretary would provide offices, furniture, and equipment. The Bureau would research benefits, FMLA access, workplace flexibility, training, savings and retirement access, age discrimination, wages, job security, retirement readiness, and equity for older workers, with attention to workers earning up to 200 percent of the federal poverty guidelines. Within 180 days after opening, the Bureau would run two competitive grant programs: one for research on employment barriers and one to combat structural ageism and improve employment, with priority to groups in areas lacking targeted training for disadvantaged older workers. Eligible grantees would include employers, employer associations, labor organizations, nonprofits with older-worker expertise, and worker organizations. Congress would be authorized to appropriate $10 million each year after fiscal year 2027 for those grants. The Director would send an annual report to the Secretary cataloging programs, issues, and recommendations, and could consult agencies like SSA, HHS, EEOC, VA, Treasury, and HUD.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Beyer
VA • D
Cosponsors
Bonamici
OR • D
Sponsored 2/12/2026
Garcia (TX)
TX • D
Sponsored 2/12/2026
Lieu
CA • D
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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