Today, President Joe Biden published an op-ed announcing new actions the Biden-Harris Administration is taking to implement the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) and maximize the benefits of the law, reducing gun violence and saving lives. The op-ed also honors the lives of those killed in Buffalo, New York, one year ago today, and Uvalde, Texas, less than two weeks later. Because of these tragedies and the courageous advocacy of the victims' families and survivors of these shootings and so many other acts of gun violence, President Biden worked with Congress to break a 30-year congressional logjam and enact BSCA.

President Joe Biden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


On March 14, 2023, President Biden signed an Executive Order directing key members of his Cabinet to each submit to him, within 60 days, a report summarizing their progress toward full implementation of BSCA. The President also directed his Cabinet to outline steps they are taking to maximize the benefits of this historic law.

These reports make clear that BSCA is saving lives. For example, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has denied more than 160 firearms transactions solely because of BSCA's enhanced background checks for individuals under age 21. In part due to BSCA's revised definition of when an individual is "engaged in the business" of dealing in firearms, DOJ's prosecutions for unlicensed dealing increased 52% from Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 to FY 2022. The Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Education (ED), combined, have already delivered more than $1.5 billion to states and communities to make our schools safer, improve access to mental health services, and help young people deal with the trauma and grief resulting from gun violence. With this funding, schools are projected to hire an additional 14,000 mental health professionals over the next five years.

Today, the President is detailing 13 actions his Cabinet has taken or will take to maximize the benefits of the legislation, including new steps to keep guns out of dangerous hands, ensure BSCA's mental health funding helps those dealing with the grief and trauma resulting from gun violence, make our schools safer, and expand community violence interventions.

Highlights of these reports are described below.

New Actions to Reduce Gun Violence by Maximizing the Benefits of BSCA

President Biden is announcing the following 13 actions his Administration has taken or will soon take to maximize the benefits of the law:

Keeping guns out of dangerous hands

  • The White House, in partnership with DOJ, will convene state and local law enforcement leaders to solicit their collaboration on BSCA implementation priorities, such as: 1) increasing state and local law enforcement agencies' response rates to enhanced background check inquiries when someone under age 21 tries to purchase a gun; and 2) ensuring that arrest and adjudication records include additional documentation of dating relationships to keep more guns out of the hands of domestic abusers.
  • The White House, in partnership with DOJ, will convene state legislators and governors' offices, urging them to enact laws allowing the federal background check system to access all records that could prohibit someone under age 21 from purchasing a firearm.
  • DOJ is working with state and territory governments and local law enforcement agencies to increase their response rates to the federal background check system inquiries when someone under age 21 tries to purchase a gun. DOJ has held 18 webinars to date, attended by more than 500 law enforcement agencies, and has nine more planned.
  • DOJ is training federal law enforcement and educating state and local law enforcement and prosecutors on the need for additional documentation of dating relationships in domestic abuse cases in order to implement BSCA's provision that narrowed the "boyfriend loophole," helping to keep guns out of the hands of domestic abusers.

Ensuring BSCA's mental health funding helps those dealing with the grief and trauma resulting from gun violence

  • The Secretaries of HHS and ED will urge governors to use BSCA and Medicaid's funding to help schools address the trauma and mental health challenges resulting from gun violence.
  • HHS will educate health and social service providers, community leaders, and other individuals on the effects that gun violence trauma can have on communities.
  • HHS will clarify how early childhood providers can use BSCA funding to address mental health and gun violence trauma.
  • HHS will highlight stories of how communities are effectively using BSCA's mental health funding to help those impacted by gun violence, in order to encourage other communities to adopt those strategies and effectively use BSCA's resources.
  • HHS will meet with trauma program grantees and select community members and providers to gather community-level data pertaining to the link between exposure to gun violence and trauma. Lessons learned will inform HHS' future program development, and a report HHS will make available to other communities.
  • As part of the school-based services Technical Assistance Center established under BSCA, HHS and ED will jointly develop resources for states and schools regarding how schools can use Medicaid to fund school-based health services to help students dealing with the physical and emotional impacts of gun violence.

Making schools safer

  • The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will launch a dedicated public campaign to bring greater awareness to SchoolSafety.gov and its available resources and evidence-based practices. The campaign will be geared towards K-12 leaders, school administrators, teachers, school personnel, and parents and legal guardians.
  • ED has taken several steps to help states and school districts make effective use of BSCA's $1 billion Stronger Connections Grant Program to improve school safety. For example, ED hosted a four-part webinar series that highlighted evidence-based practices for supporting student safety and well-being and published extensive Frequently Asked Questions to help states and school districts understand how they can effectively use this funding to ensure all schools are safe and welcoming to all students.

Expanding community violence interventions

  • To help communities maximize the benefits of BSCA's community violence intervention funding, DOJ hosted a five-part webinar series to help local leaders use evidence-informed strategies to reduce violence.

Highlights of Progress Made to Implement BSCA

Keeping guns out of dangerous hands

Improving school safety

  • DOJ awarded almost $60 million in BSCA grants to support school safety. This funding will help institute safety measures in and around schools, support school violence prevention efforts, provide training to school personnel and students, implement evidence-based threat assessments, and fund research and evaluation on the causes and consequences of school violence.
  • ED awarded states nearly $1 billion from BSCA's Stronger Connections grant program to support schools in providing students with safer and healthier learning environments and support students' social, emotional, physical, and mental well-being. Per BSCA, states are tasked with developing competitions for high-need school districts to apply for funding, which they may use for purposes such as expanding school-based mental health services, addressing the physical security of schools, providing safety and violence prevention programs, and creating and implementing emergency operating plans. States are in the process of awarding these grants now.
  • ED awarded BSCA's $50 million in funding for out-of-school time programs to use to increase attendance and engagement of students in the middle and high school grades.

Improving access to mental health care

  • HHS has already awarded nearly $400 million in BSCA funding to increase mental health services in the community, expand school-based mental health services, expand and strengthen the mental health workforce, and improve mental health crisis services. For example:
    • HHS awarded $60 million to help better equip primary care residents to provide behavioral health care. This funding is anticipated to support approximately 3,500 residents over five years.
    • HHS awarded $18 million to 49 states, jurisdictions, and Tribes to provide technical assistance and enhance the pediatric mental health care workforce's capacity to make early identification, diagnosis, treatment and referral of behavioral conditions a routine part of children's health care services; particularly in pediatric, emergency services and schools.
    • HHS awarded $59.4 million in supplemental Community Mental Health Block Grant funding to states, helping to expand access to prevention, treatment, and crisis services.
    • HHS awarded $57.7 million in Mental Health Awareness Training grants to prepare and train school personnel, emergency first responders, law enforcement, and others to recognize the signs and symptoms of mental health challenges and enable early intervention.
    • HHS awarded $19.5 million to National Child Traumatic Stress Network to improve treatment and services for children, adolescents, and families who have experienced traumatic events.
    • HHS awarded $73.6 million for Project Advancing Wellness and Resiliency in Education (Project AWARE) to help develop and support school-based mental health programs and services. This program will promote the healthy social and emotional development of school-aged youth and prevent youth violence in school settings.
    • HHS awarded $20 million in Resiliency in Communities after Stress and Trauma grants to promote resilience and equity and prevent violence in communities that have recently faced civil unrest, community violence, and/or collective trauma.
  • With the help of BSCA, ED has awarded more than $280 million in funding to bolster the pipeline of mental health professionals serving in schools and expand school-based mental health services and supports in schools. Grantees project that these funds will put more than 14,000 new mental health professionals in U.S. schools - including school psychologists, counselors, and social workers.

Expanding community violence interventions

  • DOJ awarded $50 million in BSCA funding - combined with $50 million in bipartisan omnibus appropriations - through the federal government's first-ever standalone community violence intervention grant program. Combined, this $100 million is helping 47 sites across 24 states and territories.