Examining Local Needs in Disaster Recovery

This hearing will examine the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) program and its effectiveness in addressing unmet local recovery needs.

Hearing memo

Witnesses:

  • Joseph V. Jaroscak, Analyst in Economic Development Policy, Congressional Research Service
  • Pat Cave, Senior Vice President of Policy, Enterprise Community Partners
  • Heather Lagrone, Senior Deputy Director, Texas General Land Office
  • Stephanie McGarrah, Deputy Secretary, North Carolina Department of Commerce

The CDBG-DR program is the supplemental disaster recovery assistance grant program administered by HUD through its traditional Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) framework. Unlike the traditional program, the DR sub-program of CDBG is not permanently authorized and lacks statutory codification. Thus, funding for CDBG-DR only takes place when Congress enacts a specific appropriation for that purpose. The first use of CDBG-DR funding took place in FY1993 when Congress voted to appropriate $85 million to assist the victims recovering from Hurricanes Andrew, Iniki, and Typhoon Omar. Since then, Congress has voted more than 30 times to appropriate more than $111 billion in CDBG-DR funds, including roughly $65 billion since FY2016.2 Congress has intended this funding to be used by the communities that receive it to address long-term disaster needs that remain unmet after other sources of assistance such as grants from the Federal Emergency Management Agency or loans made available by the Small Business Administration. CDBG-DR funding recipients are typically areas subject to federal disaster declarations under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act and can include states, localities, U.S. territories, and federally recognized tribes.

House Financial Services Committee
   Housing and Insurance Subcommittee
2128 Rayburn

06/10/2026 at 10:00AM

Overview of the Department of Energy’s Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Request

The purpose of this hearing, is to examine the Department of Energy’s (DOE) fiscal year 2027 (FY27) budget request to Congress and examine the changing priorities this proposed budget would have on civilian research, DOE infrastructure, and the various other programs at the Department.

Hearing charter

Witness:

  • Christopher Wright, Secretary, U.S. Department of Energy

The Committee on Science, Space, and Technology has jurisdiction over DOE’s civilian research, development, demonstration, and commercial application programs. In total, the Committee oversees $12.53 billion of the Department’s annual budget. DOE activities and programs under the Committee’s jurisdiction include, but are not limited to: DOE’s National Laboratory system; basic science research; grid modernization and cybersecurity activities; fossil, nuclear, geothermal, and other advanced energy technologies; waste and environmental management research; international research projects; critical minerals research; pipeline research, development, and demonstration projects; and relevant oversight activities.

Of the $53.91 billion requested for DOE, $7.14 billion is proposed for Science, $8.18 billion for Environmental Management, $1.55 billion for Nuclear Energy, and $32.80 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration.

The President’s FY27 budget request for programs under the Under Secretary for Science totals $8.38 billion, an increase of $116 million from the $8.26 billion appropriated in FY26. Offices that fall under the Under Secretary for Science include the previously established Office of Science and Office of Technology Commercialization, formerly known as the Office of Technology Transitions (OTT). Three new offices were also established, including the Office of Fusion (OF), the Office of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum (AIQ), and the Office of Strategy and Technology Roadmaps (OSTR).

The President’s FY27 budget request for the Office of Science is $7.14 billion, a $1.11 billion decrease from the $8.25 billion appropriated in FY26. The request prioritizes Administration and Department activities focused on advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), quantum information sciences (QIS), fusion energy, high-performance computing, and high-energy physics. The FY27 House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides $8.53 billion, a $275 million increase from FY26 and $1.39 billion more than the President’s budget request. In the President’s budget request, $1.2 billion for SC was reallocated to the Office of AIQ. The House Energy and Water bill left the Office of AIQ unfunded.

Of the 17 National Labs, 10 fall solely within the Office of Science: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Ames National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility.

The Advanced Scientific Computing Research program maintains advanced computational infrastructure, accelerates U.S. computational and networking capabilities, and partners with programs within DOE to expedite innovation. The President’s FY27 budget request for ASCR is $1.10 billion. This is approximately an $11.88 million decrease from the FY26 appropriated level of $1.12 billion. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides $1.18 billion, an increase of $59 million from FY26 and $71 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Basic Energy Sciences program supports basic scientific research to lay the foundation for new energy technologies and advance DOE’s mission in energy, environment, and national security. BES research emphasizes the discovery, design, and understanding of new materials, chemicals, biochemicals, and geological processes. The President’s FY27 budget request for BES is $2.15 billion. This is a decrease of approximately $530 million from the FY26 appropriated level of $2.68 billion. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides BES with $2.78 billion, an increase of approximately $101 million from FY26 and $633 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Biological and Environmental Research program seeks to understand biological, earth, and environmental systems to advance the nation’s energy and infrastructure security.25 The program supported the Human Genome Project; pioneering initial research on atmospheric and ocean circulation; and biology underpinning the production of biofuels. The President’s FY27 budget request for BER is $395.97 million. This is a decrease of $458.03 million, compared to the FY26 appropriated level of $854 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides BER with $800 million, a decrease of $54 million from FY26 and $404 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Fusion Energy Science mission is to drive scientific and technological innovation for the creation of a fusion energy source and to support the development of the fusion industry. The President’s FY27 budget request for FES is $755.25 million. This represents a decrease of $50.41 million, compared to the FY26 appropriated level of $805.66 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides FES with $800 million, a decrease of $5.66 million from FY26 and $45 million more than the President’s budget request. The President’s budget requested $10 million for an Office of Fusion; however, the Energy and Water bill did not fund it and instead increased the FES budget.

High Energy Physics (HEP) seeks to understand the fundamental nature of matter, energy, space, and time at both the smallest and larges scales in the universe. The President’s FY27 budget request for HEP is $1.12 billion. This is a decrease of $114.77 million from the FY26 appropriated level of $1.24 billion. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides HEP with $1.26 billion, an increase of $25 million from FY26 and $140 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Nuclear Physics (NP) program studies all forms of nuclear matter to solve the mystery of the basic constituents of matter and how they interact to form the elements and properties we observe.43 The President’s FY27 budget request for NP is $791.43 million. This is a decrease of $74.71 million, compared to the FY26 appropriated level of $866.14 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides NP with $870 million, an increase of $4 million from FY26 and $79 million more than the President’s budget request.

DOE Isotope R&D and Production (DOE IP) has the sole federal government authority to produce isotopes for sale and distribution, often serving as either the sole source or one of the few sources of these isotopes worldwide. The President’s FY27 budget request for IRP is $168.57 million. This is a decrease of $1.43 million from the FY26 appropriated level of $170 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill maintain DOE IP funding at the FY26 level of $170 million.

The mission of the Office of Technology Commercialization (OTC) is to expand the commercial and national security impact of the DOE research investments. The President’s FY27 budget request for OTC is $26.56 million. This is an increase of $13.56 million, compared to the FY26 appropriated level of $13 million.

The Office of Strategy and Technology Roadmaps (OSTR) was established during the November 2025 DOE reorganization to coordinate all Department of Energy activities related to critical and emerging technologies and provide strategic guidance for DOE’s R&D through technology road mapping. The President’s FY27 budget request is $3 million.

The President’s FY27 budget request would provide roughly $5.10 billion for the Under Secretary of Energy’s portfolio in the Science, Space, and Technology Committee’s jurisdiction.

The Office of Electricity (OE)’s mission is to strengthen, optimize, and grow the electricity system to ensure the grid delivers affordable, reliable, and secure energy. The President’s FY27 budget request for OE is $203.48 million, a $56.27 million decrease from the $259.75 million appropriated in FY26. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill maintains OE current funding level at $235 million.

The Office of Nuclear Energy (NE)’s mission is to advance nuclear energy science and technology to meet U.S. energy, environmental, and economic needs. Under the President’s Budget Request, NE will be the largest component of the Under Secretary of Energy’s portfolio. The President’s FY27 budget request for NE is $1.53 billion, a $251 million decrease from the $1.79 billion appropriated in FY26. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provide NE with $1.80 billion $266 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office (HGEO)’s mission is to unleash the full potential of America’s hydrocarbon and geothermal resources to provide affordable, reliable, and secure energy using scientific and economically driven decisions. Formerly known as the Fossil Energy and Carbon Management Office (FECM), this office gained the geothermal office, and the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), while giving up most of the critical mineral R&D that FECM had previously conducted. The President’s budget request for FY27 is $676.04 million, a $110.96 million decrease from the $787 million appropriated in FY26. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provide $700 million in funding for HGEO, $24 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security, and Emergency Response (CESER) leads the Department’s efforts to strengthen the security and resilience of the U.S. energy infrastructure against all threats and hazards. It also serves as the DOE lead for the Sector Risk Management Agency for the energy sector. The President’s FY27 budget request for CESER is $160.17 million, a $29.82 million decrease from the $190 million appropriated in FY26. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill maintain CESER’s current funding level at $190 million.

The Office of Energy Dominance Financing (EDF) manages the Title 17 Innovative Technology Loan Guarantee Program, which provides access to debt capital for high-impact, large-scale infrastructure projects and commercial-scale deployments in the U.S. The President’s FY27 request proposes $59.27 million, an increase of $24.27 million from the FY26 appropriated level of $35 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill maintains the current funding level for EDF at $35 million.

Advanced Research Projects – Energy (ARPA-E) was established in 2009 by the America COMPETES Act and is modeled after the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). With this model, ARPA-E is tasked to target high-risk, high-reward energy technologies that are too early for private sector investment. These projects focus on transformational energy initiatives that can be significantly advanced with a modest amount of funding. The President’s FY27 request for ARPA-E is $200.29 million, a decrease of $149.71 million from the FY26 appropriated level of $350 million. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides $300 million, $50 million less than the FY26 appropriated level but $100 million more than the President’s budget request.

The Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI)’s mission is to advance the U.S. critical minerals supply chain and accelerate nextgeneration energy technologies to strengthen national security and power the future. Established in November 2025, it includes all program activity from EERE, MESC, OCED, SCEP, FEMP, as well as the Mineral Production and Processing Technologies program from the former Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management. The President’s FY27 budget request for CMEI is $1.12 billion, a $1.91 billion decrease from the $3.03 billion appropriated in FY26. The House Energy and Water Appropriations bill provides $1.85 billion, $730 million more than the President’s budget request.

House Science, Space, and Technology Committee
2318 Rayburn

06/10/2026 at 10:00AM

Markup of Local Communities & Bird Habitat Stewardship Act, Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation Land Exchange Act, and Bills for Carlsbad Fracking and Yuma Proving Ground Expansion

On Wednesday, June 10, 2026, at 10:00 a.m., in room 1324 Longworth House Office Building, the Committee on Natural Resources will meet to consider:

  • H.R. 3276 (Rep. Dingell), “Local Communities & Bird Habitat Stewardship Act of 2025”
  • H.R. 3925 (Rep. Obernolte), “Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation Land Exchange Act”
  • H.R. 7882 (Rep. Stauber), To provide for the leasing of certain deposits of minerals located within the City of Carlsbad, New Mexico and permit fracking under the city
  • H.R. 8686 (Rep. Gosar), To amend the Military Land Withdrawals Act of 2013 to withdraw and reserve certain public land in the vicinity of Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona.

The legislative hearing for H.R. 7882 was held on March 25.

House Natural Resources Committee
1324 Longworth

06/10/2026 at 10:00AM

Markup of 33 Forest, Wildfire, Mining, Public Lands, National Parks, Hydropower, Water Infrastructure, Holocaust Education, and Other Energy and Natural Resource Bills

The purpose of the business meeting is to consider the following legislation:

  • S. 140, to address the forest health crisis on the National Forest System and public lands, and for other purposes. (Mr. Barrasso).
  • S. 332, to require a study on Holocaust education efforts of States, local educational agencies, and public elementary and secondary schools, and for other purposes. (Ms. Rosen).
  • S. 365/H.R. 1729, to amend the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act to allow for additional entities to be eligible to complete the maintenance work on Bolts Ditch and the Bolts Ditch Headgate within the Holy Cross Wilderness, Colorado. (Mr. Bennet/Rep. Neguse).
  • S. 764, to provide for the designation of certain wilderness areas, recreation management areas, and conservation areas in the State of Colorado, and for other purposes. (Mr. Bennet).
  • S. 789, to require reports on critical mineral and rare earth element resources around the world and a strategy for the development of advanced mining, refining, separation, and processing technologies, and for other purposes. (Mr. Cornyn).
  • S. 791, to establish the Justice Thurgood Marshall National Historic Site in the State of Maryland as an affiliated area of the National Park System, and for other purposes. (Mr. Van Hollen).
  • S. 888, to designate certain land administered by the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service in the State of Oregon as wilderness and national recreation areas, to withdraw certain land located in Curry County and Josephine County, Oregon, from all forms of entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land laws, location, entry, and patent under the mining laws, and operation under the mineral leasing and geothermal leasing laws, and for other purposes. (Mr. Wyden).
  • S. 945, to amend the Smith River National Recreation Area Act to include certain additions to the Smith River National Recreation Area, to amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to designate certain wild rivers in the State of Oregon, and for other purposes. (Mr. Merkley).
  • S. 1088/H.R. 2290, to provide that the memorial to commemorate the sacrifice and service of the women who worked on the home front to support the efforts of the United States military during World War II may be located on the National Mall, and for other purposes. (Ms. Shaheen/Rep. Dingell).
  • S. 1288, to amend the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act to designate as a component of the National Heritage Area System the Finger Lakes National Heritage Area in the State of New York, and for other purposes. (Mrs. Gillibrand).
  • S. 1341, to amend the Colorado Wilderness Act of 1993 to add certain land to the Sarvis Creek Wilderness, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper).
  • S. 1349, to withdraw the National Forest System land in the Ruby Mountains subdistrict of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest and the National Wildlife Refuge System land in Ruby Lake National Wildlife Refuge, Elko and White Pine Counties, Nevada, from operation under the mineral leasing laws. (Ms. Cortez Masto).
  • S. 1413, to authorize additional funding for the San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement Act. (Mr. Padilla).
  • S. 1476, to amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to designate certain segments of the Gila River system in the State of New Mexico as components of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System, to provide for the transfer of administrative jurisdiction over certain Federal land in the State of New Mexico, and for other purposes. (Mr. Heinrich).
  • S. 1547, to amend title 54, United States Code, to reauthorize the National Parks and Public Land Legacy Restoration Fund, and for other purposes. (Mr. Daines).
  • S. 1737, to designate and expand wilderness areas in Olympic National Forest in the State of Washington, and to designate certain rivers in Olympic National Forest and Olympic National Park as wild and scenic rivers, and for other purposes. (Ms. Murray).
  • S. 1870, to adjust the boundary of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area to include the Rim of the Valley Corridor, and for other purposes. (Mr. Schiff).
  • S. 2437/H.R. 3857, to amend the Snow Water Supply Forecasting Program Authorization Act to reauthorize the Snow Water Supply Forecasting Program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper/Rep. Hurd).
  • S. 2753, to amend the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 to authorize certain extraordinary operation and maintenance work for urban canals of concern. (Mr. Risch).
  • S. 3500/H.R. 3657, to amend the Federal Power Act to require the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to annually submit to Congress a report on the status of ongoing hydropower relicensing applications. (Ms. Cortez Masto/Rep. Schrier) .
  • S. 3518, to amend the Federal Power Act to address certain alterations in, and the maintenance and repair of, project works, to provide for the licensing of micro hydrokinetic energy projects, and for other purposes. (Ms. Murkowski).
  • S. 3526, to provide for the protection of and investment in certain Federal land in the State of California, and for other purposes. (Mr. Padilla).
  • S. 3693, to extend the authorization for a large-scale water recycling and reuse grant program. (Ms. Cortez Masto).
  • S. 3723, to require the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of constructing a project to supply municipal, rural, and industrial water from the Missouri River to the Western Dakota Regional Water System, and for other purposes. (Mr. Thune).
  • S. 3732, to amend the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act to authorize assistance under the storage program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Gallego).
  • S. 3736, to require the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of constructing a project to supply municipal, rural, and industrial water to the Dakota Mainstem Regional Water System service area in the States of South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, and Minnesota, and for other purposes. (Mr. Rounds).
  • S. 3743, to direct the Secretary of the Interior to carry out a feasibility study on a selective water withdrawal system at Glen Canyon Dam, and for other purposes. (Mr. Lee).
  • S. 3792, to provide for the establishment of a Water Project Navigators Program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper).
  • S. 3878, to establish the Grand Village of the Natchez Indians and Jefferson College as affiliated areas of the National Park System, and for other purposes. (Mrs. Hyde-Smith).
  • S. 4040, to amend Public Law 89–108 to modify the authorization of appropriations for State and Tribal, municipal, rural, and industrial water supplies, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hoeven).
  • H.R. 249, to redesignate certain facilities at Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park in honor of Congressman Bill Pascrell, Jr. (Rep. Pallone).
  • H.R. 3872, to amend the Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands to make that Act applicable to hardrock minerals. (Rep. Fallon).
  • H.R. 3937, to provide for the conveyance of certain Federal land in Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, and for other purposes. (Rep. Tiffany).
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
366 Dirksen

06/10/2026 at 09:30AM

Building Powerful Campaigns against AI Data Centers: Leveraging Research to Follow the Money

The Data Center Working Group, Kairos Fellowship, and Fight Oligarchy team are offering a five-part training series to support organizing and campaign efforts to stop the expansion of data centers. Each session covers key skills and techniques to help groups build winning coalitions, strategies, and campaigns. Sessions have a progressive structure with each workshop building upon the previous one, as well as individual workshops can be taken as standalones. This series is part of the larger work of building a movement to advance an alternative vision of a society where our communities determine their own economies and futures.

In this session, gain tools to ask powerful research questions, uncover connections and lobbying relationships, and follow money trails that corporations hide to gain a strategic advantage over our communities.

RSVP

Data Center Working Group
06/09/2026 at 08:00PM

Full Committee Markup of FY27 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Bill and the Fiscal Year 2027 Homeland Security Bill

Full committee markup. Homeland Security markup will be completed on Wednesday.

House Appropriations Committee
2359 Rayburn

06/09/2026 at 11:00AM

Nuclear Permitting Reform

The hearing will review the following legislation:

  • H.R. 5549, Efficient Nuclear Licensing Hearings Act (Reps. Griffith and Schrier)
  • H.R. 3978, Nuclear REFUEL (Recycling Efficient Fuels Utilizing Expedited Licensing) Act (Reps. Latta and Peters)
  • H.R. 9084, Department of Energy Nuclear Transparency Act (Rep. Castor)
  • H.R. ____, Nuclear Advisory Committee Reform Act
  • H.R. ____, American Enrichment Deployment Act
  • H.R. ____, NRC Staff Pay Alignment Act

Hearing memo

Witnesses

On July 9, 2024, the Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy (ADVANCE) Act was signed into law. (The House version of this legislation was H.R. 6544, the Atomic Energy Advancement Act.) The ADVANCE Act establishes requirements for the NRC to license and regulate nuclear technology in an efficient, predictable, and timely manner while maintaining public safety. Additionally, it requires the NRC to align its mission statement with the foundational goals of the AEA and directs it to conduct efficient and predictable licensing processes while regularly updating metrics to measure timely licensing performance and efficiency. The law also updates NRC hiring authorities, reduces fees collected from applicants for advanced nuclear reactors licenses, directs NRC to identify measures to facilitate licensing of reactors at brownfield sites, and directs the NRC to implement measures to increase efficiency of environmental reviews, among other measures.

On May 13, 2024, the Prohibiting Russian Uranium Imports Act was signed into law.10 While the U.S. maintains the largest market globally for nuclear fuels, domestic fuel infrastructure has atrophied in recent years, to the point that Russia has been supplying up to a quarter of nuclear fuel used in the U.S. reactor fleet. The Prohibiting Russian Uranium Imports Act provides a date certain, after which no Russian-sourced enriched nuclear fuel will be available for U.S. nuclear reactors. This will create the market conditions for the long-term commercial contracts that domestic fuel producers need to invest in new U.S. supply capacity, including uranium conversion and enrichment capacity. The Nuclear Fuel Security Act of 2023 was signed into law on December 22, 2023, to provide funding and other support to assist the domestic development of advanced and conventional nuclear fuel supplies. Against this backdrop, the legislation under consideration makes additional reforms to Atomic Energy Act licensing requirements.

A. H.R. 5549, Efficient Nuclear Licensing Hearings Act

This legislation would amend the AEA to remove the need for the NRC to expend resources on unnecessary hearings. It would eliminate the requirement to hold uncontested hearings on applications to the NRC for granting a construction permit, an operating license, or a combined construction and operating license for nuclear facilities. The legislation would also clarify that the NRC may use informal adjudicatory procedures for any hearing the Commission determines appropriate. These provisions would in no way affect the right of persons whose interests are affected to request a hearing on specific matters. (Reps. Griffith and Schrier introduced this legislation on September 23, 2025.)

B. H.R. 3978, Nuclear REFUEL (Recycling Efficient Fuels Utilizing Expedited Licensing) Act

This legislation would amend the definition of a production facility in the AEA to exclude facilities that reprocess spent nuclear fuel in a manner that does not separate plutonium from other transuranic elements. In effect, amending the definition would clarify that certain reprocessing facilities may be licensed under the same regulatory process as other fuel cycle facilities rather than as a production facility. Licensing a fuel cycle facility involves a single process for a license to operate a facility instead of a two-step licensing process for a production facility, which must receive a construction permit and then complete a process for an operating license. (Reps. Latta and Peters introduced this legislation on June 12, 2025.)

C. H.R. 9084, Department of Energy Nuclear Transparency Act

This legislation would require DOE to announce and post information on decisions relating to the licensing and authorization of DOE nuclear facilities, as well as changes in directives and safety standards relating to such facilities on a publicly accessible website, within 24 hours of such decisions or actions. The legislation would also require the Secretary of Energy to provide a report annually to the Energy and Commerce Committee and to the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee that details all such activity by DOE to authorize nuclear facilities over the previous year. (Rep. Castor introduced this legislation on June 2, 2026.)

D. H.R. ____, Nuclear Advisory Committee Reform Act

This legislation would amend the AEA to update the role of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS). The legislation would establish that the ACRS would provide advice to the NRC on license applications, license amendments, regulatory activities, and any other matter only upon specific request by the Commission. The legislation would direct the ACRS to focus on issues that are directly related to reactor design, safety significant, and novel, and that have not previously been acted on by the Committee. The legislation would also update term requirements and require membership that represents a diverse background of technical expertise relevant to the NRC mission.

E. H.R. ____, American Enrichment Deployment Act

This legislation would amend the AEA to update the licensing of uranium enrichment facilities to align with the licensing requirements for all other fuel cycle facilities. It does so by removing enrichment-specific requirements for environmental review and for an adjudicatory hearing and by clarifying that construction of a facility may be allowed prior to licensing under the same terms and conditions applicable to other fuel cycle facilities. The uranium enrichment facility would remain subject to all applicable licensing requirements under sections 53 and 63 of the AEA, as well as NRC’s environmental review requirements. A rule of construction provides that the amendment does not affect NRC authority to regulate construction and does not affect the right of any person whose interest may be affected by a licensing proceeding to a hearing under the AEA. The legislation also directs the NRC to revise its regulations to conform with the bill.

F. H.R. ____, NRC Staff Pay Alignment Act

This legislation amends the AEA to provide that the Chairman of the NRC may fix the compensation for career, Senior Executive Service (SES) appointees at a rate that is 10 percent higher than the maximum annual rate of basic pay for SES positions within the Commission. The legislation would help align the pay authority applicable to these career employees with workforce development and pay authority amendments made to the AEA by the ADVANCE Act.

House Energy and Commerce Committee
   Energy Subcommittee
2123 Rayburn

06/09/2026 at 10:15AM

Technological Advances in the Transportation Industry

A subcommittee hearing entitled “How Technological Advances are Driving Transportation Innovation.”

Witnesses:

  • Ian Jefferies, President and Chief Executive Officer, Association of American Railroads
  • Chris Spear, President and Chief Executive Officer, American Trucking Associations
  • Laura Chace, President and Chief Executive Officer, ITS America
  • Cole Scandaglia, Deputy Director, International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee
   Surface Transportation, Freight, Pipelines, and Safety Subcommittee
253 Russell

06/09/2026 at 10:00AM