WeVote

Bill

Bill

HR 6584

Cyber Talent Development and Recruitment Act

119th Congress Introduced by Joe Neguse

Expands DoD cyber hiring tools: adds up to 500 hard-to-fill roles, raises pay up to 150% of Level I, and boosts transparency on recruitment and costs.

Introduced in House
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 6584

Summary of H.R. 6584 — Cyber Talent Development and Recruitment Act

Purpose and intent

  • To strengthen and enhance the Department of Defense (DoD) cyber workforce by expanding recruitment and retention tools for high-demand cyber positions and increasing transparency around the use of pay authorities to support cyber talent.
  • The bill seeks to ensure DoD can attract, place, and sustain highly skilled personnel in critical cyber roles, including those in combatant commands and central cyber-related defense activities, in coordination with domestic and international partners.

Key provisions

  • Amends 10 U.S.C. § 1599f (Cyber workforce recruitment and retention):
    • Adds new categories of cyber positions eligible for special consideration:
    • (iv) Positions in combatant commands, defense agencies, and field activities that support the United States Cyber Command.
    • (v) Up to 500 additional positions not otherwise described, determined by the Secretary as hard-to-fill, highly skilled, and critical to cyber-space planning and operations in defense of U.S. national interests (in collaboration with partners).
  • Pay authorities and compensation:
    • The Secretary is to set basic pay for these appointments in a manner consistent with comparable Federal positions, while maintaining existing statutory or regulatory pay limits.
    • The Secretary may set a pay rate for these appointments up to 150% of the maximum rate of basic pay for Level I of the Executive Schedule (5 U.S.C. § 5312).
  • Reporting and transparency (new subsection in 10 U.S.C. § 1599f):
    • After enactment, the period referenced in the relevant provision is shortened to three years (instead of five years) for certain actions or reviews.
    • Adds detailed reporting requirements (new items in the periodic reporting) that must include:
    • (vii) The total number of positions, title, duties, responsibilities, location, assigned department/agency/command, and the cost of establishing, appointing, and paying salaries for these positions.
    • (viii) Descriptions of:
      • (I) How the Department has used the pay authorities provided by this subsection.
      • (II) The effect of these authorities on recruitment and retention in the Cyber Excepted Service.

Who is affected

  • Primary: DoD cyber workforce, including personnel in Combatant Commands, defense agencies, and field activities supporting U.S. Cyber Command.
  • Those covered under Cyber Excepted Service or other DoD cyber staffing authorities who may benefit from enhanced pay flexibility and expanded hard-to-fill positions.
  • DoD components responsible for cyber operations and planning, as well as allies/partners involved in cyber defense collaboration (as relevant to program scope).

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Status: Introduced in the House (Intro date: December 10, 2025) and referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
  • Legislative effect:
    • If enacted, would amend title 10 U.S.C. and modify pay authorities and reporting timelines for cyber workforce management.
    • Shortens the reporting/review window from five years to three years for related provisions.
  • Sponsorship: Introduced by Mr. Neguse (primary sponsor).

Practical impact and considerations

  • The bill creates additional, clearly defined pathways to recruit and retain cyber talent within the DoD by expanding the pool of eligible positions and authorizing higher pay (up to 150% of Level I Executive Schedule for eligible appointments).
  • Enhanced transparency through mandatory, detailed reporting will help Congress and the public understand how pay authorities affect DoD cyber recruitment and retention.
  • The cap of up to 500 additional hard-to-fill positions signals a significant emphasis on cyber capacity and capability in national defense planning and operations.

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

Sign in to ask a question.