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Bill

HR 2932

CLEAR Skies Act

119th Congress Introduced by Robert Garcia and 1 co-sponsor

CLEAR Skies Act aims to cut lead exposure and provide aviation relief, but no policy details are yet released.

Introduced in House
0
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Bill Summary · HR 2932

Summary of HR 2932 — CLEAR Skies Act (Introduced)

Overview

  • Bill number: HR 2932
  • Title: CLEAR Skies Act (Citing: Cutting Lead Exposure and Aviation Relief Skies Act)
  • Status: Introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives
  • Introduced: April 17, 2025
  • Referral: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means (same date as introduction)
  • Primary sponsor: Rep. Robert Garcia
  • Cosponsor: Rep. Jay Obernolte

Purpose and intent

  • The act is introduced with the designation CLEAR Skies Act, explicitly stating it may be cited as the Cutting Lead Exposure and Aviation Relief Skies Act.
  • Based solely on the title and citation, the intended focus appears to be twofold: (1) addressing lead exposure, and (2) providing some form of relief related to aviation. No detailed policy language or objectives are provided in the information available.

Key provisions

  • No text detailing specific provisions, programs, funding authorizations, regulatory changes, or other policy measures is included in the provided material.
  • As a result, there is no available breakdown of what the bill would change, implement, or fund, nor any timelines for implementation within the supplied content.

Who/what would be affected (as far as can be inferred)

  • Given the title’s reference to lead exposure and aviation, affected groups could potentially include communities impacted by lead exposure and stakeholders in the aviation sector. However, the exact scope—who is regulated, funded, or otherwise affected—cannot be determined from the provided summary.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Introduction: April 17, 2025
  • Initial action: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means on April 17, 2025
  • Next steps (not specified in the provided text): The bill would typically proceed to committee hearings, potential amendments, floor consideration, and votes. Additional actions such as fiscal notes, scoring, or markup would depend on committee processes and subsequent legislative steps.

Sponsors

  • Primary: Rep. Robert Garcia
  • Cosponsor: Rep. Jay Obernolte

Notes

  • The available information does not include the full bill text or specific provisions. If you provide the full text or a summary of the enacted sections, I can deliver a detailed provision-by-provision analysis, including fiscal impact, regulatory changes, and implementation timelines.

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

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