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Bill

Bill

HR 1515

GOOD Act

119th Congress Introduced by James Comer and 2 co-sponsors

The bill’s specific policy goals and substantive impact cannot be determined from the provided materials without the full text.

Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 1515

Summary — H.R. 1515: “GOOD Act”

Note: The bill text or descriptive language for H.R. 1515 (the “GOOD Act”) was not included in the materials provided. The summary below therefore focuses on the bill’s sponsors, procedural history, current status, and what information is needed to assess its substantive impact. Where possible, procedural dates from the legislative record are reported; some dates in the record are inconsistent, and readers should consult the official congressional record or Congress.gov for the authoritative timeline and the bill text.

Purpose and intent

  • No bill text or explanatory statement was provided, so the specific purpose and policy goals of the “GOOD Act” cannot be determined from the supplied documents.
  • To understand the bill’s intent you should review the bill’s full text, the sponsor’s press release or summary, and any committee report (if issued).

Sponsors

  • Primary sponsor: Rep. James Comer
  • Cosponsors: Rep. Ro Khanna; Rep. Kevin Kiley

Key procedural history (selected)

  • Introduced in the House: 2025-02-24 (record shows “Introduced in House”)
  • Considered under suspension of the rules and debated for 40 minutes: 2025-03-03
  • Passed the House under suspension of the rules by voice vote: 2025-03-03 (motion to reconsider laid on the table)
  • Received in the Senate and read twice; referred to Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 2025-03-04
  • Additional records show filings and actions dated 2025-05-31 and 2025-06-01 (e.g., “Filed,” “Laid before the House,” “Adopted,” “Reported enrolled,” and “Record vote”), but the sequence and relation to earlier March actions appear inconsistent in the supplied log. Verify current status on the congressional record.

Current status

  • As of the supplied record: Received in the Senate and referred to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Further Senate action (hearings, floor consideration, or passage) is not reflected in the supplied materials.

Who would be affected

  • Not determinable from the provided documents. Once the bill text is reviewed, identify affected parties (federal agencies, state/local governments, private sector, individuals) by reading the definitions and operative sections.

Next steps and how to get full information

  • To evaluate substance, impacts, and costs:
    • Read the full text of H.R. 1515 on Congress.gov or in the Congressional Record.
    • Review any committee reports, cost estimates from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), and statements of administration policy.
    • Check sponsor press releases or committee hearing materials for intent and implementation details.
  • Typical legislative path: committee consideration (markup/hearing) → Senate floor consideration (possible amendments) → reconciliation between House and Senate versions (if amended) → presidential action.

If you can provide the bill text or a public link to H.R. 1515, I will produce a detailed summary of its substantive provisions, projected impacts, and implementation timeline.

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

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