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Bill

S 973

An Act reforming incentives for landlords

194th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by Kelly Dooner

LIBERATE Act aims to pinpoint and cut inefficient bureaucratic edicts to reform regulation, ease burdens on businesses, and speed economic reforms.

Accompanied a study order, see S2765
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Bill Summary · S 973

Summary of S. 973 — LIBERATE Act (Locating the Inefficiencies of Bureaucratic Edicts to Reform And Transform the Economy Act)

Basic bill information

  • Bill number: S. 973
  • Title: LIBERATE Act (Locating the Inefficiencies of Bureaucratic Edicts to Reform And Transform the Economy Act)
  • Status: Introduced in Senate
  • Introduced: March 12, 2025
  • Primary sponsor: Mike Lee

Legislative history to date

  • March 12, 2025 — Read twice and referred to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
  • March 12, 2025 — Introduced in the Senate.

Purpose and intent (based on available text)

  • The short title and official name indicate the bill seeks to identify and address inefficiencies associated with “bureaucratic edicts” in order to reform and transform the economy. The acronym LIBERATE emphasizes reducing or reforming administrative or regulatory edicts that the sponsors consider unnecessarily burdensome.
  • At this time, the full text of the bill’s provisions is not provided in the available materials, so the exact mechanisms, standards, and programs proposed are not described here.

Key provisions (note on current availability)

  • The only published content provided for S. 973 is the official short title clause naming the act. No substantive provisions, definitions, or fiscal provisions are included in the material you shared.
  • As introduced, the bill’s concrete requirements, regulatory changes, funding authorizations, or agency obligations are not specified publicly in the supplied summary.

Potential impact and affected parties (based on the title and typical legislative effect)

  • If enacted, the bill could target federal regulatory or bureaucratic edicts perceived as inefficient, with potential aims such as:
    • Improving regulatory processes and reducing unnecessary administrative burdens on businesses and individuals.
    • Encouraging transparency or reform within federal agencies related to rulemaking or edict issuance.
    • Potential effects on compliance costs, regulatory timing, and the speed of implementing federal directives.
  • Likely affected entities may include federal agencies, regulatory bodies, businesses subject to federal edicts, and organizations focused on public administration efficiency.

Procedural timeline and next steps

  • Following referral to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, the bill may proceed to committee hearings, potential amendments, and a committee vote. If reported, the bill would move to the full Senate for consideration. If advanced, it could also interact with House considerations if a companion bill exists.

Where to find more information

  • For the most current and detailed text, status updates, and fiscal notes, check:
    • Congress.gov (S. 973, LIBERATE Act)
    • Senate.gov committee page for the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee
    • Official bill text and amendments as published by the Senate
  • These sources will provide the complete provisions, definitions, and any sponsor or co-sponsor amendments as they become available.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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