Honoring Congressman Pascrell’s Brain Injury Legacy

The House Committee on Energy and Commerce voted 43-0, to advance H.R. 1493 on May 21, 2026. Introduced by Representative Frank Pallone (NJ), alongside a bipartisan list of original co-sponsors Rob Menendez (NJ), Don Bacon (NE), and Dan Crenshaw (TX)*, the bill would both reauthorize and expand important federal programs related to traumatic brain injury and retitle the CDC’s national TBI surveillance and registry program; as proposed, the program would be known as The Bill Pascrell, Jr., national program for traumatic brain injury surveillance and registries.

The naming is fitting. The late New Jersey Congressman Bill Pascrell was a fierce advocate for the brain injury community. Over 20 years, he urged Congress and federal agencies to confront issues related to brain injury, which he frequently described as America’s “silent epidemic”. In 2001, he co-founded the Congressional Brain Injury Task Force.

The unanimous bipartisan vote proves that both parties recognize Pascrell’s irreplaceable contributions to millions of Americans living with brain injuries.

* The bill has since gained an additional 3 bipartisan co-sponsors: Christopher Deluzio (PA), John H. Rutherford (FL), Eugene Simon Vindman (VA).

Brain Injury Bill Returns After 2024 Setback

On September 24, 2025, S.2898 – Dennis John Benigno Traumatic Brain Injury Program Reauthorization Act of 2025 was introduced to the Senate. Sponsored by Senator Markwayne Mullin (OK), the legislation seeks to reauthorize federal grant programs providing care and resources for individuals with traumatic brain injuries through 2030, including funding for state partnership grants, protection systems, and CDC research.

Sen. Andy Kim (NJ), one of the bills bipartisan co-sponsors, says that he considers it a privilege to advance legislation that supports a cause that was so important to late Congressman Bill Pascrell (NJ), his friend and a staunch champion of TBI issues. (Kim’s extensive work with veterans, some of whom suffer traumatic brain injuries, also deepens his understanding of the issue’s severity.)

The current bill, named for a Clifton, NJ resident who was struck by a car as a pedestrian, essentially reintroduces the 2024 legislation. That bill passed Senate committee overwhelmingly but was unexpectedly removed from a December continuing resolution. This new bill, S. 2898, preserves much of the 2024 bill while extending authorization through 2030 and reducing state matching requirements, making federal funding more accessible. The last action taken on the bill was on October 8, 2025, when a star print was ordered on the bill. According to congressional diction, “star prints are corrected re-prints of congressional publications.”