Title 2The CongressRelease 119-73

§472 Office of Technology Assessment

Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 15— - OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT › § 472

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Creates an Office of Technology Assessment inside Congress. It has a Board that makes policy and a Director who runs the office. The Office must give early warnings about likely good and bad effects of technology and produce information to help Congress. It will spot impacts and causes, suggest alternative technologies or programs, compare their effects, report findings to lawmakers, point out where more research is needed, and do other tasks assigned by the Board or Congress. Assessments can start when a committee chair asks (or at the chair’s request from the ranking minority member or a majority of the committee), when the Board asks, or when the Director asks after consulting the Board. Reports go to the committee that asked and other relevant committees. They may be released to the public unless doing so would break security laws or the Board decides to withhold them under the rules in section 552(b) of title 5.

Full Legal Text

Title 2, §472

The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)In accordance with the findings and declaration of purpose in section 471 of this title, there is hereby created the Office of Technology Assessment (hereinafter referred to as the “Office”) which shall be within and responsible to the legislative branch of the Government.
(b)The Office shall consist of a Technology Assessment Board (hereinafter referred to as the “Board”) which shall formulate and promulgate the policies of the Office, and a Director who shall carry out such policies and administer the operations of the Office.
(c)The basic function of the Office shall be to provide early indications of the probable beneficial and adverse impacts of the applications of technology and to develop other coordinate information which may assist the Congress. In carrying out such function, the Office shall:
(1)identify existing or probable impacts of technology or technological programs;
(2)where possible, ascertain cause-and-effect relationships;
(3)identify alternative technological methods of implementing specific programs;
(4)identify alternative programs for achieving requisite goals;
(5)make estimates and comparisons of the impacts of alternative methods and programs;
(6)present findings of completed analyses to the appropriate legislative authorities;
(7)identify areas where additional research or data collection is required to provide adequate support for the assessments and estimates described in paragraph (1) through (5) of this subsection; and
(8)undertake such additional associated activities as the appropriate authorities specified under subsection (d) may direct.
(d)Assessment activities undertaken by the Office may be initiated upon the request of:
(1)the chairman of any standing, special, or select committee of either House of the Congress, or of any joint committee of the Congress, acting for himself or at the request of the ranking minority member or a majority of the committee members;
(2)the Board; or
(3)the Director, in consultation with the Board.
(e)Assessments made by the Office, including information, surveys, studies, reports, and findings related thereto, shall be made available to the initiating committee or other appropriate committees of the Congress. In addition, any such information, surveys, studies, reports, and findings produced by the Office may be made available to the public except where—
(1)to do so would violate security statutes; or
(2)the Board considers it necessary or advisable to withhold such information in accordance with one or more of the numbered paragraphs in section 552(b) of title 5.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

2 U.S.C. § 472

Title 2The Congress

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73