Bill
HR 2989
Time to Choose Act of 2025
The bill’s specific objectives and provisions are not provided in the summary.
Bill
HR 2989
The bill’s specific objectives and provisions are not provided in the summary.
At a glance
- Bill number: HR 2989
- Title: Time to Choose Act of 2025
- Introduced: April 24, 2025
- Status: Introduced in the House; referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
- Companion/sponsor: S 731 (companion bill in the Senate)
What is known from the provided information
- Introduced in the House on April 24, 2025.
- The bill has been referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
- A companion bill exists in the Senate, S 731, indicating potential parallel consideration in the Senate.
- No text, summary, or specific provisions are provided in the information you shared.
What is not known (provisions and impact)
- The exact purpose, goals, and substantive provisions of HR 2989 are not provided. Without the bill’s text or an official summary, we cannot identify:
- The bill’s main objectives or policy area
- Any new requirements, prohibitions, or authorities it would grant
- Financial implications (costs, savings, or appropriations)
- The particular groups or entities affected (federal agencies, employees, contractors, beneficiaries, states, etc.)
- Compliance timelines, implementation steps, or deadlines
- Penalties, enforcement mechanisms, or oversight provisions
Procedural notes
- Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: typical next steps include committee hearings, potential amendments, and a committee report before moving to the House floor for consideration.
- The existence of a Senate companion (S 731) can influence amendments or parallel tracks in the other chamber.
How to find more information
- Congress.gov: Look up HR 2989 (Time to Choose Act of 2025) for the official text, a draft summary, sponsor information, amendments, and legislative actions.
- House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: check for hearing notices, stakeholder testimonies, and markup schedules if they release them.
- Senate counterpart: Review S 731 for the companion text and status in the Senate.
- Additional sources: GovTrack, OpenSecrets, or CRS reports (when available) for analysis and fiscal implications.
Note: With only introductory and committee-referral information, a precise, comprehensive summary of the bill’s substantive provisions cannot be provided. If you can share the bill’s text or an official summary, I can produce a detailed, provision-by-provision analysis and impact assessment.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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