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Lawmakers, union and DHS fight suicide jump in customs agency

correction

Because of inaccurate information from agency officials, a previous version of this article contained two errors. It incorrectly said the number of support officials and chaplains that Customs and Border Protection has is over 300; it is actually about 1,500. And the article incorrectly said there were only two suicidologists in the federal government. There are two federal agencies with suicidologists. The article has been corrected.

Amid much talk about telework, compensation and agency funding at this week’s National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) legislative conference there was only an indirect mention of a deadly federal workplace issue.

Suicide.

There were 15 suicides among Customs and Border Protection employees in 2022, the most since at least 2007, when the agency began tracking the deaths. That’s almost twice the number in 2020 and three times as many in 2014.

Rep. Bennie G. Thompson (Miss.), the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, spoke at NTEU’s opening session Tuesday and said he will introduce legislation to facilitate mental health services, especially for CBP, a Department of Homeland Security component. Despite its name, NTEU covers employees in 34 agencies, including DHS, most of which have nothing to do with Treasury.

“We want to make sure that it’s not a badge of dishonor for you to get some help,” Thompson told union members, without saying “suicide.”

But in an interview after his speech and later by email, he made it plain.

“It is beyond tragic that CBP has seen a record number of officers and agents lost to suicide in recent years,” Thompson said. “We need a program at DHS that cannot only provide mental health support, development, and resources, but ensure that the workforce can access those resources without risking their careers.”

Federal employees already have mental health coverage through their workplace health insurance program, but “because of the stress of the work,” Thompson said “many of the agents at the ports of entry need an enhanced program.” Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, is leading a companion bill in his chamber.

Workplace stress for Internal Revenue Service employees also was on NTEU’s agenda, at least implicitly, because of remarks by House Republicans who recently said that IRS agents would “terrorize” Americans.

Thompson’s legislation would establish a Law Enforcement Mental Health and Wellness Program that requires the department to evaluate mental health services now available and recommend improvements. Importantly, DHS would be instructed to promote a culture that reduces the stigma too often associated with those services and prevent adverse employment actions against staffers seeking help, including automatic fitness for duty examinations.

NTEU President Tony Reardon praised Congress for providing $23 million in the fiscal year for 2023 to address “the mental health crisis among the CBP workforce,” including through a peer-to-peer support program. “Our research has shown that one of the main reasons CBP employees don’t seek help is the fear that they will have to surrender their badge,” he said by email. “Instead, we are advocating for a culture change that encourages, rather than disincentivizes, employees coming forward and that seeking treatment is itself a step toward recovery.”

CBP knows it has a culture problem related to mental health assistance and says it is working to change it.

“We’re trying to do a lot of work to change our culture” so there is no negative stigma attached to mental health assistance, Benjamine “Carry” Huffman, CBP’s acting deputy commissioner, said in a joint interview with Kent Corso, a clinical psychologist who is also the agency’s suicidologist and a special adviser to the commissioner. CBP now has 35 clinicians stationed around the country, with plans to increase that to 50 by year’s end, plus about 1,500 peer support officials and chaplains.

DHS is one of only two federal agencies with suicidologists. The reasons for the increase in CBP suicides is not clear. “This is a highly complex human phenomenon that we are still trying to figure out,” he said. The triggers in CBP suicides are the same as in the general population, Corso explained, citing personal relationships, substance abuse, workplace difficulties and financial problems. “Most importantly, it’s typically a combination of factors that drive someone to the hopeless state, which leads them to ending their lives.”

Conference participants also saw a video of Democrats and Republicans speaking on issues important to NTEU members. Forty-five percent of those represented by the union are IRS staffers. Among the Republican comments were those from Reps. Michael Lawler (N.Y.) and Pat Fallon (Tex.) who demonized tax employees while criticizing a provision in the last year’s Inflation Reduction Act that provides for the hiring of 87,000 agency staffers.

Lawler said they “are going to terrorize” hard working taxpayers. Fallon claimed the IRS workers will “harass, stalk and otherwise terrorize law abiding Americans.” Rep. Michelle Steel (R-Calif.) predicted employees of the “weaponized IRS” would “harass and spy on middle class and low-income families.”

Responding later by email, Doreen Greenwald, NTEU’s executive vice president, called those claims “a dangerous lie that puts IRS employees around the country on edge because we know too well how disinformation about the government can provoke violence in this country. IRS employees should not have to fear being attacked just for doing their job, yet that thought unfortunately crosses their mind every time they have to meet with a taxpayer.”

Fear of attacks on IRS employees is no idle concern. In 2010, a man who left a suicide note with grievances against the agency crashed a small plane into an Austin IRS office, killing himself and an employee. That December, The Washington Post, citing an agency watchdog, reported there were more than 1,200 cases of assaults and threats against IRS employees in the previous nine years, with over 200 convictions.

That was before Republicans’ current language suggesting IRS agents would “terrorize” the nation.

“As a former revenue officer myself,” Greenwald said, “I know personally that this rhetoric is alarming to regular, hard-working federal employees who are sick and tired of being unfairly maligned by politicians who would rather lie about their service than respect it.”

This post appeared first on The Washington Post