All Roll Calls
Yes: 366 • No: 57
Sponsored By: Representative Guthrie
Became Law
Reauthorizes and funds a broad federal response to substance use prevention, treatment, and recovery. It updates and extends programs from overdose surveillance to fetal alcohol spectrum disorder prevention and raises authorized funding for prevention, treatment, workforce, and recovery supports.
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13 provisions identified: 13 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
The law raises funding for first responder training to $57 million each year for 2026–2030. Training covers overdose and other drug‑related emergencies. This supports nationwide public safety and emergency response.
The law expands grants to track and prevent overdoses from any drug, not just opioids. It authorizes about $505.579 million each year for 2026–2030 for overdose detection and prevention. States and Tribes can help people access legal drug test strips. HHS must publish guidance within one year on safe at‑home drug disposal. A federal work group on fentanyl contamination gives yearly recommendations and ends September 30, 2030. Infection‑monitoring programs tied to drug use continue through 2030.
The National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative gets $98.887 million each year for 2026–2028 and $100 million for 2029–2030. The law also raises trauma monitoring to $9 million a year for 2026–2030. The trauma‑informed care task force adds the Administration for Community Living, includes disability providers, and runs through 2030.
Residential treatment for pregnant and postpartum women is authorized at $38.931 million each year for 2026–2030. Applicants must include a services plan and may describe outreach to affected women. Prenatal and postnatal health activities are authorized at $4.25 million each year for 2026–2030.
Loan repayment for the addiction treatment workforce is authorized at $40 million each year for 2026–2030. Mental and behavioral health training grants continue through 2030. Peer support technical assistance doubles to $2 million a year for 2026–2030, with a regional center that ends September 30, 2030 and an evaluation due within four years.
The 9‑8‑8 suicide and crisis line gets new cybersecurity protections. Funded network operators and crisis centers must report cyber incidents and vulnerabilities. The Government Accountability Office must study risks and report within 180 days.
Building Communities of Recovery grants rise to $17 million per year for 2026–2030. Comprehensive Opioid Recovery Centers must show they can provide services, including through referrals or contracts, and report how these arrangements work. That program is authorized through 2030.
Pharmacies can deliver certain Schedule III–V drugs to clinicians for injection or implantation in maintenance or detox care, or when a drug has special FDA safety rules. The law recognizes addiction medicine as a provider specialty. HHS must update grant rules within one year so any FDA‑approved or authorized overdose reversal drug can be used. HHS will review the schedule for buprenorphine‑naloxone products and may request changes.
CAREER Act grants are authorized at $12 million each year for 2026–2030. Programs can use up to 5% of grant funds for participant transportation to work, training, or treatment visits. Outcome reporting is aligned with workforce measures. Authorities to address opioid‑related workforce impacts continue through 2030.
Schools and consortia can apply to serve more youth, including youth at increased risk for substance misuse. Grants must include a plan to keep work going after funding ends. The law authorizes $10 million for 2026, $12 million for 2027, $13 million for 2028, $14 million for 2029, and $15 million for 2030.
The law creates a program to prevent and address Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders. It funds public and nonprofit groups to provide training, technical help, a resource hub, and services. It authorizes $12.5 million each year for 2026–2030.
States choose their own PDMP vendors as long as they follow open standards. A prior model SUD records training rule is removed. More professional groups and curricula now count toward prescriber training (effective as if December 29, 2022). FDA must post within one year a plan to assess approved opioid pain drugs. The health IT office will hold a public roundtable within 180 days on EHRs for mental health and substance use care and report 180 days later. HHS will review State spending on first‑episode psychosis care and update guidance.
HHS must hold a public meeting within one year to improve how SAMHSA funding opportunities are shared. HHS should improve Grants.gov and other outreach. A report on changes is due within one year after the meeting.
Guthrie
KY • R
Pettersen
CO • D
Sponsored 3/31/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 366 • No: 57
house vote • 6/4/2025
On Passage
Yes: 366 • No: 57
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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.
HR3151 — SHIPS for America Act of 2025
Rebuild U.S. commercial shipbuilding and a U.S.-flag strategic fleet by pairing new tax credits, grants, and operating payments with stronger cargo-preference rules and workforce and innovation programs to restore domestic capacity and sealift readiness. It centralizes maritime strategy in a White House advisor and a Maritime Security Board and funds a broad set of industrial, port, and training programs to favor U.S.-built, U.S.-crewed vessels.
HR2725 — Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2025
Rewrites and expands the Low‑Income Housing Tax Credit to boost construction and affordability for very low‑income renters. It would rename the program the Affordable Housing Credit and change how states get credits, who counts as low‑income, and how projects qualify and claim credits. - Families and residents: Would change tenant rules so most full‑time students under age 24 do not count as low‑income occupants, allow tenant‑based voucher payments to be excluded from rent calculations in certain projects, and add protections for survivors of domestic violence and for veterans. - Developers and owners: Would raise state allocations and set the minimum allocation at $4,876,000 in 2025, create a bigger credit when at least 20% of units serve extremely low‑income households, treat relocation costs as eligible rehab expenses, and tighten acquisition‑basis and foreclosure timing rules. - States, tribes, and rural areas: Would require housing agencies to apply community revitalization and cost‑reasonableness criteria, add Indian areas and rural areas to difficult development area rules with specific NAHASDA exceptions, and bar prioritizing local official approval or contributions in allocation plans.
HR6644 — 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act
Expands federal tools to build, preserve, and protect housing. This bill reorganizes HUD programs, creates new repair and disaster funds, sets rules to speed homebuilding, and limits large investor purchases to free more homes for individuals. - Low‑income families and public housing tenants get new supports and flexibility. The bill authorizes an Escrow Expansion Pilot for up to 5,000 families, expands a Moving‑to‑Work cohort for up to 25 PHAs, and broadens HOME eligibility to households up to 100% AMI. - Homebuyers and local markets face a new cap on big investors. Firms that control 350 or more single‑family homes are barred from new purchases, must sell many holdings within 7 years in some cases, and face civil penalties up to $1.0 million or 3× the purchase price that can fund HOME activities. - Homeowners, builders, and disaster‑affected communities gain repair and resilience programs plus construction modernization. The bill funds a Whole‑Home Repairs Pilot, tightens manufactured and modular housing rules and certifications, and creates a Disaster Recovery Fund with preliminary grants up to $5 million and a 70% low‑ and moderate‑income benefit floor.
HR801 — Charitable Act
Caps the non-itemizer charitable deduction. This bill would limit how much individuals who do not itemize can claim for charitable gifts and would remove certain accuracy-related penalties in the tax code. - Non-itemizing taxpayers: Their above-the-line charitable deduction would be capped at the portion that does not exceed one-third of their standard deduction for tax years 2026 and 2027. - Taxpayers facing penalties: The bill would eliminate a specific accuracy-related penalty for certain understatements tied to the charitable deduction and remove an associated increased penalty provision. - Tax administrators and preparers: It updates cross-references in the Internal Revenue Code so the penalty removals are reflected across related sections.
HR4312 — SCORE Act
Creates a national framework protecting student‑athletes' ability to sell their name, image, and likeness (NIL) and sets a cap on total institutional NIL payments through a revenue‑linked pool limit. It would also cap agent fees at 5% and require institutions and athletic associations to provide health, academic, and career supports while standardizing written contracts and privacy rules. - Student athletes: Student athletes would have the right to sign NIL deals, hire agents, and keep NIL agreement details private. Any deal over $600 must be in writing and includes a termination right beginning six months after the athlete is no longer enrolled. - Institutions and conferences: Institutions subject to the bill would need to provide medical care for participation injuries, mental health services, academic support, and career counseling and must maintain grant‑in‑aid during the grant period. These institutional duties apply when a coach's base salary exceeds $250,000 or annual athletic revenue reaches $20 million, and institutions must field at least 16 varsity teams. - Agents, associations, and third parties: Agents face a 5% fee cap plus new registration and disclosure rules enforceable by state attorneys general. Interstate intercollegiate athletic associations would set and monitor a pool limit equal to 22% of the average annual sports revenue of their top 70 member institutions and would have authority to adopt related competition and recruitment rules.