Federal lawmakers including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Monday urged Senate leadership to quickly pass the bill permanently funding the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund — now that the House of Representatives has approved the measure.

“We have made our voices clear. This must pass now. Not half of it, not three-quarters of it. All of it. All of it now,” Schumer said during a press conference at Ground Zero.

Schumer — who was joined by 9/11 first responders and US Reps. Jerrold Nadler and Carolyn Maloney — demanded Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell immediately take up the Never Forget the Heroes Act before the chamber goes on a scheduled five-week break beginning in August.

“If McConnell put the bill on the floor this week, it will go to the president’s desk this week, be signed into law, and all these folks who have worked so hard for so long can go home and tend to their … brothers and sisters who need help instead of having to come to Washington to lobby over and over and over again, and ask people what they should have done all along, the right thing.”

The legislation, which is expected to cost $10.2 billion over the next decade, would permanently reauthorize the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund and supply it with money through fiscal year 2090. The current fund runs out in 2020.

“When we get a bill passed, people are still gonna die,” said first responder John Feal, who heads the FealGood Foundation and has been advocating for the bill. “Cops, firefighters, construction workers, Red Cross volunteers. But we can offer their families comfort and relief. We can offer them the financial assistance when they’re burdened from losing their loved ones.”

The issue came to the fore last month after former NYPD Detective Luis Alvarez, who has since died of 9/11-related cancer, and former “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart gave impassioned testimony in support of the bill.

McConnell said in June he would bring the bill to the Senate floor in August. The body is expected to meet Aug. 1-2 before taking a break until Sept. 9.