• WBST 92.1 FMMuncie
  • WBSB 89.5 FMAnderson
  • WBSW 90.9 FMMarion
  • WBSH 91.1 FMHagerstown / New Castle
Indiana Public Radio, a listener-supported service of Ball State University
Listen Live Online. Tap to open audio stream.

Legislative Committee Recommends Bill To Insure Killed Officers’ Families

By Drew Daudelin, IPB News | Published on in Government, Health, Politics, Statewide News
Republican State Senator Michael Crider is a former conservation officer and introduced the bill to a study committee.
Republican State Senator Michael Crider is a former conservation officer and introduced the bill to a study committee.

A summer study committee in the Indiana General Assembly unanimously recommended a proposal to lawmakers next session that would give health insurance to families of police officers killed in the line of duty.  Indiana Public Broadcasting’s Drew Daudelin reports.

Proponents say recent events in the country, like terrorist attacks, prompted them to proposed the legislation.

Certain kinds of officers already have funding dedicated to their families if they are killed while working. But others, like conservation and DNR officers, have nothing. The proposed bill would provide health insurance to those families.

Some who support the proposal want to make it retroactive. Indianapolis Republican Sen. Michael Crider is a former conservation officer and introduced the bill to a study committee. He says he’s open to the idea.

“Those discussions kind of complicate the issue, so I’m willing to consider those but I’m not willing to kill the bill, or kill the idea,” Crider says.

Some lawmakers have voiced concern about the fiscal impact of the bill. But its supporters say with an average of one death per year, and an average family insurance cost of $17,000, the benefit far exceeds the cost.