Flooding Prevention, Assessment, and Restoration Act
Sponsored By: Representative Rep. Davis, Donald G. [D-NC-1]
In Committee
Summary
Expands federal attention to watershed protection and flood risk. This bill would direct more federal support toward restoring and protecting watersheds on agricultural lands, and require a national look at how floods affect farms and what reduces that risk.
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- Farmers and rural producers: It would require a national agricultural flood vulnerability study within two years that analyzes crop and livestock losses under different flood recurrence scenarios and catalogs producer-level conservation practices with recommendations to reduce damage.
- State, local, and project sponsors: It raises the non-Federal cost-share for certain rehabilitation projects from 65% to 90%, increasing the funding share that states and local sponsors must provide.
- Federal agencies and watershed projects: It would authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to pursue restoration measures that go beyond immediate repairs when those measures are cost-effective and benefit long-term watershed health, and it broadens rehabilitation rules under the Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Higher local costs for watershed rehab
If enacted, non-Federal sponsors (like local governments, landowners, and farmers) would have to cover more of watershed rehabilitation costs. The non-Federal share would rise from 65% to 90% of the total project cost—an extra 25% of the project cost paid locally. Rehabilitation projects would also be exempt from a project-content requirement that applies to other watershed projects. These changes would take effect upon enactment.
Stronger flood protections after disasters
If enacted, the Secretary of Agriculture could approve stronger, longer-term flood-protection work under the Emergency Watershed Program. The Secretary could only do this when the added work is cost-effective, helps the watershed’s long-term health, and fits environmental risks. This could mean better protection for landowners, local sponsors, and communities after floods. This authority would take effect upon enactment.
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Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Rep. Davis, Donald G. [D-NC-1]
NC • D
Cosponsors
Feenstra
IA • R
Sponsored 3/5/2025
Rep. Tokuda, Jill N. [D-HI-2]
HI • D
Sponsored 3/5/2025
Rep. Nunn, Zachary [R-IA-3]
IA • R
Sponsored 3/5/2025
Rep. Rouzer, David [R-NC-7]
NC • R
Sponsored 3/5/2025
Rep. Fitzpatrick, Brian K. [R-PA-1]
PA • R
Sponsored 3/5/2025
Rep. Tonko, Paul [D-NY-20]
NY • D
Sponsored 3/18/2025
Rep. Budzinski, Nikki [D-IL-13]
IL • D
Sponsored 7/16/2025
Bresnahan
PA • R
Sponsored 12/18/2025
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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