All Roll Calls
Yes: 412 • No: 1
Sponsored By: Representative Begich, Nicholas J. [R-AK-At Large]
Became Law
Restructures Alaska Native village land conveyance obligations. It replaces a firm duty to transfer village corporation land for municipal formation with a clear framework that lets village corporations convey land to municipal corporations or the State in trust under defined conditions.
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1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
The law now sets a new framework for village land transfers. A Village Corporation can transfer up to 1,280 acres to a municipal government or to the State of Alaska to hold in trust. Interior can provide technical help and decide how to fund that help. The law defines what counts as a sale and how to figure net revenues. It also lists cases when no transfer is required and keeps valid rights and easements in place.
Begich, Nicholas J. [R-AK-At Large]
AK • R
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 412 • No: 1
house vote • 2/4/2025
On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass
Yes: 412 • No: 1
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.
HR3633 — Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025
Would create a comprehensive federal framework to regulate digital assets, stablecoins, exchanges, and custody across the SEC and CFTC. It would set rules for issuer disclosures and a maturity test for blockchains, register digital-commodity exchanges and brokers, require qualified custodians, protect individual self-custody, and prohibit a retail Federal Reserve CBDC.
HR471 — Fix Our Forests Act
Speeds hazardous fuels reduction and wildfire resilience by creating designated fireshed areas, a joint Fireshed Center, and new authorities that would streamline planning, data sharing, and on-the-ground restoration across federal, Tribal, state, local, private, and nonprofit lands. - Communities and households: At-risk communities would get coordinated mapping, smoke forecasting, and a unified grant application to make funding for home hardening and local projects easier to access. - Tribal governments and state/local partners: Tribes or Governors could trigger shared‑stewardship agreements within 90 days to join cross‑boundary planning and fireshed assessments that prioritize tribal water supplies and community risk. - Forest managers, utilities, and responders: Agencies would gain faster project authorities including NEPA exemptions for designated firesheds, higher Healthy Forests Restoration Act project thresholds (10,000 acres), a 150‑foot hazard‑tree clearance for power lines, expanded contracting tools, and intra‑agency strike teams to speed environmental reviews and implementation. Note: The sources set many deadlines, reporting rules, pilot programs, and several seven‑year sunsets but do not provide a specific federal cost estimate.
HR7613 — ALERT Act
Modernize collision‑avoidance technology across civilian and military fleets and strengthen air traffic control procedures and reporting around high‑density airspace like Reagan National. The text would require new onboard alerting standards, deadlines for equipment retrofits, and expanded training and data‑sharing to reduce near‑midair risks. - Airlines, pilots, and passengers: Would push FAA rulemaking to require ACAS Xa for selected fixed‑wing aircraft and ACAS Xr for rotorcraft and powered‑lift aircraft, set retrofit and new‑production equipage deadlines including Dec. 31, 2031 and a possible Dec. 31, 2033 extension, and update alerting performance and display standards. - Air traffic controllers and FAA operations: Would require instructor‑led Threat and Error Management training within 9 months, deploy a safety‑risk assessment tool at Reagan National within 1 year, upgrade conflict‑alert systems, add visual separation training, and create event notification and deidentified data sharing with ASIAS. - Department of Defense and military rotary‑wing operations: Would force a Transportation‑Defense memorandum of agreement by Sept. 30, 2026, phased DoD equipage with integrated collision‑prevention tech by Dec. 31, 2031, and new DoD rotary‑wing safety‑management and flight‑data standards.
HR4075 — Fire Weather Development Act of 2025
Strengthen NOAA's wildfire forecasting and observation capabilities. This bill would create a NOAA program to improve fire weather and fire environment forecasts, early detection, smoke forecasting, and delivery of forecasts and warnings to emergency managers and land managers. - Families, communities, and local emergency responders would get clearer forecasts and smoke dispersion guidance aimed at reducing deaths, injuries, and property loss. - Land managers, the U.S. Forest Service, and State and Tribal partners would gain new tools, higher-resolution observations, grid-based fuel moisture and danger assessments, and modeling that links climate forecasts to local decisions and prescribed burn impacts. - Researchers, the weather industry, and technology providers would be eligible for competitive grants, contracts, and private-sector data purchases. The bill would fund unmanned aircraft system pilot programs and testing and authorizes $5.0 million for fiscal year 2026 for UAS activities while generally barring procurement of UAS from foreign countries of concern with a waiver process. Includes a $5.0 million authorization for fiscal year 2026 for unmanned aircraft system activities under the program.
HR4206 — CONNECT for Health Act of 2025
Expands Medicare telehealth access by removing geographic limits and ending an in-person requirement for telemental health. It would also change payment rules for clinics and require more oversight, training, and data reporting. - Medicare beneficiaries would be able to receive telehealth across geographies beginning October 1, 2025. Telemental health would no longer require a six-month in-person visit and tribal and Native Hawaiian facilities would be exempt from originating-site rules starting January 1, 2026. - Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics would be paid for telehealth under outpatient or prospective payment methods and telehealth costs as distant-site care would count as allowable PPS costs. The HHS Secretary could waive limits on which practitioner types may furnish telehealth starting October 1, 2025 with annual public comment and a three-year reassessment requirement. - The bill would strengthen program integrity funding for telehealth, require CMS to post quarterly telehealth data, and add telehealth to quality-measure reviews within 180 days. It also mandates a beneficiary engagement study and a Government Accountability Office report on hospice recertification within three years.
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