Bill
Sponsor avatar

BILL • US HOUSE

HR 7796

Economic Recovery for Nuclear-Affected Communities Act

119th Congress
Introduced by Mike Lawler,

Provides targeted fiscal tools (grants, tax credits, and a prize) to help nuclear-affected communities diversify economy and offset losses from stranded waste and plant decommissio

Referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management.
0
0
Bill Summary · HR 7796

Overview

  • Bill: HR 7796
  • Session: 119th Congress
  • Title: Economic Recovery for Nuclear-Affected Communities Act
  • Purpose: To assist communities affected by stranded nuclear waste, and for other purposes.

Main purpose and intent

  • Provide targeted economic relief and development tools for communities hosting stranded nuclear waste or decommissioned/soon-to-be decommissioned civilian nuclear power plants.
  • Create a framework of incentives, grants, and a prize competition to stimulate alternative economic development and address fiscal and social impacts from stranded waste and plant decommissioning.
  • Expand and adapt existing federal support mechanisms (notably drawing on concepts from the Nuclear Waste Policy Act) to a broader set of affected communities.

Key provisions and changes

  1. Definitions and findings

    • Defines “nuclear affected community,” “stranded nuclear waste,” and “eligible civilian nuclear power plant.”
    • Identifies a broad list of states with impacted communities (e.g., CA, CT, FL, IL, KS, ME, MD, MA, MI, NY, OH, OR, VT, WI).
    • Reiterates that stranded waste acts as an obstacle to economic development and redevelopment of sites.
  2. Tax incentives for affected communities (Sec. 4)

    • Creates a new first-time homebuyer tax credit specifically for nuclear affected communities (office of the credit is renamed to reflect this purpose).
    • Modifies the existing first-time homebuyer credit provisions to apply within nuclear affected communities.
    • Effective date: Applies to purchases of principal residences after enactment.
  3. Innovative solutions prize competition (Sec. 5)

    • Establishes a prize competition within 180 days of enactment to reward proposals for alternatives to nuclear facilities, generating sites, and waste sites.
    • Creates an advisory prize board (at least 9 members) with expertise in nuclear waste, workforce, technology, and economic development; may include National Labs, nonprofits, and higher education institutions.
    • Award amount per winning proposal: $500,000.
    • Pilot program: Administrator to develop a pilot project based on the winning proposal; up to $500,000 from available funds may be used for this purpose.
    • After-award reporting: Administrator must provide a Congressional report detailing the winning proposal within 60 days of prize award.
  4. Economic impact grants for affected communities (Sec. 6)

    • Establishes a noncompetitive grant program within 120 days to provide grants to nuclear-affected communities.
    • Grants may be used to offset economic and social impacts of stranded waste and to support communities decommissioning plants with reduced tax revenue or assessed valuation.
    • Grant amounts: For each eligible plant, grants equal to $15 per kilogram of spent nuclear fuel stored at the site (consistent with impact assistance scaling under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act).
    • Frequency and limits: One grant per eligible unit of local government per fiscal year.
    • Alternative threshold-based grants: Provides additional grants based on lost tax revenue compared to the previous 5-year average, for a period of 8 years. Eligible communities must show a significant revenue decline:
      • Loss thresholds: minimum 20% decline in overall tax revenue; and at least 20% decline in nuclear-plant-related tax revenue relative to the 5-year average.
    • Grant amounts under this section: Capped at $10 million per year and scaled over an 8-year period (80% of losses in year 1 down to 10% in year 8, following a tiered schedule).
    • Documentation and eligibility: Requires appropriate applications and evidence of revenue loss.
  5. Authorization of appropriations (Sec. 7)

    • Overall funding: $110 million per year for fiscal years 2026–2031; $120 million per year for fiscal years 2032–2036.
    • No offsets; funds cannot be used to offset other federal programs.
    • Grant caps and limitations: No community may receive more than one grant per calendar year, and cannot receive grants under Secs. 6(b) and 6(c) in the same year.

Who would be affected

  • Nuclear affected communities: counties, cities, towns, school districts, and other local government units hosting stranded nuclear waste or decommissioned/decommissioning plants.
  • Eligible civilian nuclear power plants: sites with stranded waste or decommissioning activity.
  • Stakeholders benefiting from program funding: local governments, school districts, and related agencies within affected communities.
  • Broader policy and industry actors: potential participants in the prize competition and recipients of economic impact grants.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Referred to multiple committees: Transportation and Infrastructure; Financial Services; Ways and Means (for provisions within their jurisdiction).
  • Prize competition established within 180 days after enactment.
  • Economic impact grants program established within 120 days after enactment.
  • Pilot project funding available from the prize competition up to $500,000.
  • Annual appropriations authorized through 2036; no offsets permitted.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Provides a structured set of fiscal tools to mitigate economic harm from stranded nuclear waste and plant decommissioning.
  • Aims to incentivize economic diversification and redevelopment of sites currently limited by waste storage concerns.
  • Creates a formal mechanism to quantify and compensate revenue losses, potentially stabilizing local budgets and tax bases.
  • The effectiveness depends on appropriation levels, timely administration, and the design of the prize competition and grant criteria.

Hi! I'm your AI assistant for HR 7796. I can help you understand its provisions, impacts, and answer any questions.

Key Provisions Impacts Timeline
Sign in to chat

Start the Conversation

Be the first to share your thoughts on this petition. Your voice matters!

Share your opinion above