All Roll Calls
Yes: 546 • No: 513
Sponsored By: Representative Cole
Became Law
Funds the federal government for all of FY2025 at FY2024 levels with targeted changes. This law provides continuing appropriations for the rest of FY2025 and extends many expiring programs and authorities across health, housing, homeland security, immigration, and defense. It mostly preserves FY2024 baselines while inserting specific funding substitutions, extensions, transfers, rescissions, and reporting requirements.
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35 provisions identified: 25 benefits, 7 costs, 3 mixed.
The VA gets extra funds now: $30.242 billion for Compensation and Pensions, $4.865 billion for Readjustment Benefits, and $6 billion for toxic exposure claims, all until spent. Starting October 1, 2025, VA medical care and benefit accounts receive large advance funding for FY2026, including $75.039 billion for Medical Services and $34 billion for Community Care.
The law boosts rental help for low-income renters. It provides $32.041 billion for tenant-based vouchers and $16.49 billion for project-based rental aid in 2025. It adds $34 million to USDA rural rental assistance. HUD can shift Homeless Assistance Grant funds to add to the Continuum of Care program. It also funds housing for seniors ($931.4 million) and people with disabilities ($256.7 million).
The law lets USDA allow producers to keep up to 90% of their revenue losses. This applies when only a de minimis share of the loss is from uninsured crops. The Secretary decides eligibility and how losses are measured.
DoD can use up to $8 billion through September 30, 2025 for operations, force protection, and deterrence under Central and European Commands. DoD must send Congress an execution plan and wait 30 days before spending, and give 15‑day notices before transfers. DoD also must submit a detailed FY2025 spending plan that matches programs in the cited bills and reports.
FAA operations get $13.483 billion, including at least $1.832 billion for aviation safety and $10.106 billion for air traffic services. FAA facilities and equipment get $3.176 billion. Airports get $50 million and regional air carriers get $450 million. This supports safe, reliable air travel nationwide.
The law sets the Social Security Administration’s administrative limit at $14.127978 billion. It raises a key sub-amount to $1.903 billion and lifts a recurring $150 million figure to $170 million. It also adds $1.63 billion in new budget authority to support service and operations.
The law transfers $115 million into FEMA Federal Assistance to support disaster help. It also adds $360 million to Interior’s wildfire reserve fund and $2.39 billion to the Forest Service wildfire reserve. Repurposed amounts keep their emergency designation where noted.
Rural telemedicine and distance learning grants get $40 million. A rural broadband pilot continues with $90 million. Rural water and waste projects get $478.487 million. These funds expand internet, telehealth, and water services in rural areas.
The law delays planned Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital payment cuts and extends the schedule through 2028. This helps safety‑net hospitals keep services for Medicaid patients. The change takes effect now.
The Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control Account is set at $941 million. Of this, $630 million is new enforcement funding. This strengthens efforts to stop improper payments in Medicare and Medicaid.
Federal public‑health emergency and security authorities now run through September 30, 2025. HHS must move FY2025 public‑health funds within 30 days to the accounts named in prior law. This keeps emergency response tools in place and aligns funding to planned uses.
The law makes $2.390024 billion available through September 30, 2025 to cover prior-year shipbuilding cost increases. It applies to listed programs like CVN carriers, DDG-51 destroyers, Virginia-class subs, the frigate, and fleet oilers. The money must be used only for the specified cost increases.
The law provides $89.049 million to run a pilot that subsidizes loans and guarantees for defense industrial base investments. Up to $7.9 million can cover admin and transaction costs. Total loans and guarantees may not exceed $4 billion, and funds remain available until spent.
The law aligns obligation and liquidation limits with Highway Trust Fund contract authority set in prior laws for FY2025. This keeps highway and airport programs funded at those levels and supports ongoing roads and airport projects nationwide.
The law rescinds $133 million of unobligated money from DHS’s Nonrecurring Expenses Fund. This reduces DHS’s available one‑time funds.
HRSA‑wide activities drop to $219.588 million and eliminate $890.788 million previously referenced. Higher Education funding falls to $3.080952 billion and eliminates $202.344 million previously referenced. These cuts reduce funds for health program support and college accounts.
The law permanently rescinds multiple prior defense appropriations. Examples include $80 million from the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund and $125.373 million from Aircraft Procurement, Air Force. These funds are removed upon enactment.
The law reduces the NIH Innovation Account from $407 million to $127 million. This lowers funding for research supported by that account.
The law adds $79.83 million for Type 1 diabetes programs and $79.83 million for diabetes programs for Indians for April–September 2025. It also sets Indian Health Service first appropriations at $38.709 million and facilities at $3.92 million now, with the same amounts available again starting October 1, 2025. The added IHS amounts run through September 30, 2027 (facilities until spent).
Medicare’s ambulance add‑on payments continue through October 1, 2025. The Medicare‑Dependent Hospital program is extended to October 1, 2025. Extra inpatient payments for certain low‑volume hospitals continue into 2025. These changes help keep access to care in rural and smaller communities.
Medicare telehealth flexibilities now run through September 30, 2025. This keeps audio‑only visits, expanded sites, and broader clinician types. Hospital‑at‑home waivers continue through September 30, 2025. Medicare Part D keeps covering authorized oral antivirals through September 30, 2025.
The Medicare Improvement Fund rises by $553 million, to $1.804 billion. Funding for quality measure work increases to $14.03 million through September 30, 2025. These funds support system improvements and better quality measures.
From April 1 to September 30, 2025, Community Health Centers get $2.136 billion. The National Health Service Corps gets $172.97 million. Teaching Health Centers’ GME programs get $87.74 million. This keeps clinics open and supports clinicians in shortage areas.
The law adds $7.597 billion for WIC. It also gives $516.07 million for commodity food help, including $425 million for seniors in CSFP. This means more funding for healthy food and nutrition services for low‑income women, infants, children, and seniors. Funds are available now.
The law sets $3.928084 billion for unemployment administration. It adjusts key sub-amounts and designates $271 million in new budget authority for reemployment services and eligibility assessments. This supports job search help for people on unemployment.
The temporary federal scheduling of fentanyl‑related substances is extended to September 30, 2025. This keeps law enforcement and public health tools in place against new fentanyl analogues.
A procurement paragraph now names CH‑53K helicopters, T408 engines, and Virginia‑class submarines. Also, certain prior military construction provisos do not apply to funds in this Act. This shifts which equipment is emphasized and changes which past restrictions apply to 2025 construction funds.
$30 million goes to State Health Insurance Assistance Programs and $30 million to Area Agencies on Aging. Aging and Disability Resource Centers get $10 million, plus $30 million for outreach to older Americans, through September 30, 2025. Family‑to‑Family Health Information Centers get $6 million in FY2025. This funds local help to understand and use benefits.
The law updates two National Flood Insurance Program dates to the date set in section 1106. This change applies on enactment. If the law is enacted after March 14, 2025, it applies as if effective on March 14, 2025.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission whistleblower program deadline is extended to September 30, 2025. This keeps award and claims processes in place for that period.
Funding for the National Service Trust drops from $243 million to $235 million. This lowers total money available for AmeriCorps education awards and participant benefits.
The law cancels $29.575 million in unobligated DHS balances under a 2024 authority. The cuts include amounts from TSA and USCIS accounts. The rescissions take effect on enactment.
The law permanently rescinds $75 million from Labor’s Training and Employment Services for FY2025. This reduces money for workforce training programs this year.
Two Medicare sequestration timing periods change: one increases from 8 months to 10 months, and another falls from 4 months to 2 months. This adjusts when Medicare payment cuts apply during the year, not who is covered.
HHS can charge Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network members a fee for each candidate they list. Fees go to HRSA’s Health Systems account to support OPTN operations and stay available until used. This may add costs for member centers but supports network operations.
Cole
OK • R
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 546 • No: 513
senate vote • 3/14/2025
On Passage of the Bill H.R. 1968
Yes: 54 • No: 46
senate vote • 3/14/2025
On the Cloture Motion H.R. 1968
Yes: 62 • No: 38
house vote • 3/11/2025
On Passage
Yes: 217 • No: 213
house vote • 3/11/2025
On Motion to Recommit
Yes: 213 • No: 216
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HR6938 — Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act, 2026
This law sets FY2026 federal funding and detailed spending rules across major departments and programs. It funds Commerce, Justice, Science, Energy, Interior, and Environment accounts while tightening limits on transfers, reprogramming, and agency reporting. - Families and communities get big infrastructure and environmental support, including Clean Water State Revolving Fund funding of about $1.6 billion and Drinking Water SRF funding of about $1.1 billion, plus directed land and park project allocations. - Tribes and Native communities receive major program support with roughly $4.8 billion for Indian Health Service furnished services and about $1.1 billion for Bureau of Indian Education operations and school construction. - Research, technology, and science sectors gain multi-billion dollar investments with NASA science at $7.3 billion and the National Science Foundation at $7.2 billion, alongside funding for NIST, USPTO fee management, and CHIPS implementation guidance. This law also creates strict reprogramming notices, quarterly balance reporting, audit and transparency rules, and many program‑specific prohibitions and matching requirements.
HR7006 — Financial Services and General Government and National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2026
This bill is a FY2026 funding package that sets spending levels and policy rules across Treasury, the IRS, the State Department, and foreign assistance. It combines detailed dollar totals, program floors, country conditions, and new reporting and transfer rules for many agencies.
HR5371 — Continuing Appropriations, Agriculture, Legislative Branch, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Extensions Act, 2026
Keeps many federal programs funded at FY2025 levels into FY2026. This law ended the October 2025 government shutdown by continuing funding for most federal agencies at FY2025 rates through January 30, 2026 (or until full-year FY2026 appropriations are enacted). It also provides full-year FY2026 funding for Agriculture/FDA, Military Construction & Veterans Affairs, and the Legislative Branch, and extends several expiring health and veterans authorities. - Families & children: Funds core nutrition programs, including SNAP ($107.48B), WIC ($8.2B), and Child Nutrition Programs ($37.84B) for school meals and related grants. - Veterans: Provides VA funding and adds guardrails for the Veterans Electronic Health Record program—$3.4B with quarterly reporting and a partial funding holdback tied to required plans/certifications. It also extends Supportive Services for Very Low-Income Veteran Families funding to $660M for FY2026. - Rural communities & farmers: Supports rural housing and lending, including up to $25B in Section 502 unsubsidized guaranteed loans, and invests in rural connectivity through Distance Learning/Telemedicine/Broadband grants ($40.77M) and a broadband loan & grant pilot ($50.75M).
HR4669 — FEMA Act of 2025
FEMA becomes an independent, cabinet-level agency with a clarified all-hazards mission and consolidated federal leadership for preparedness, response, recovery, mitigation, and interoperable communications. The bill also rewrites large parts of the Stafford Act to speed repairs, expand assistance, strengthen mitigation, and publish new public dashboards for disaster spending and individual aid metrics. - Families and disaster survivors: Expands housing help with a FEMA Emergency Home Repair program, authorizes direct repair assistance, and extends some temporary assistance periods from 18 to 24 months. Noncongregate sheltering can be provided without a fixed address and states cannot require a credit card for hoteling. - State, Tribal, and local governments and utilities: Creates expedited Section 409 grants for repairing public and qualifying nonprofit facilities with a Federal share floor of 75% and incentives up to 85% for resilience. Offers small-disaster block grants equal to 80% of the estimated Federal public assistance share and sets a Tribal hazard-mitigation minimum of $75.0 million per year. - Private nonprofits and houses of worship: Treats private nonprofits and houses of worship as eligible for assistance without regard to religious character and expands nonprofit closeout and eligibility parity with governments.
HR7744 — Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026
Provides FY2026 funding for the Department of Homeland Security and enforces stronger oversight and spending controls. The bill pairs billions in agency-level appropriations with tighter reporting, reprogramming limits, and policy conditions across DHS components.
HR7147 — Further Additional Continuing Appropriations Act, 2026
This bill would provide FY2026 appropriations for the Department of Homeland Security while tightening spending controls and reporting rules to pair large agency funding with stricter procurement and oversight. It also layers targeted policy limits like banning new land port crossing fees and protections for pregnant detainees in custody. - Families and travelers: The bill allows importation of prescription drugs from Canada for personal use up to a 90-day supply and bans new land-border crossing fees for pedestrians, cyclists, drivers, and private-vehicle passengers. - Law enforcement and maritime personnel: Border, aviation, and maritime units get major funding and equipment rules including a $20.0 million allocation for body-worn cameras and a $98.0 million increase for MQ-9 aircraft procurement that may not include kinetic capabilities. - States and grant recipients: FEMA grants face a 5 percent cap on administrative costs and strict application and award deadlines with penalties up to $100,000 per day for missed timelines, and FEMA must post a public reimbursement dashboard.