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Bill

Bill

HR 7974

To amend the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 to ensure real-time public access to Federal award information.

119th Congress Introduced by Sheri Biggs and 15 co-sponsors

The bill requires federal award information to be posted within 3 days of an award, speeding public access from 30 days.

Introduced in House
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 7974

Summary of HR 7974 (118th? 119th Congress) – Real-time Public Access to Federal Award Information

Note: Based on the bill text provided, this summary outlines the bill’s stated purpose, key provisions, affected entities, and procedural details. The bill presented is brief and primarily amends a single deadline provision of the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 (FFATA).

1) Purpose and Intent

  • Goal: Amend the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 (FFATA) to ensure real-time public access to information about federal awards.
  • Core change: Shorten the posting deadline for federal award information from a 30-day window after the award to a 3-day window, with the aim of providing the public with more immediate visibility into federal awards.

2) Key Provisions and Changes

  • Amendment to FFATA (Public Law 109-282): Section 2(c)(4) previously required that certain federal award information be posted within 30 days after the award.
  • Changed Deadline: The bill replaces the “not later than 30 days after the award” requirement with a strict requirement that posting must occur within 3 days after the award.
  • Effect of Change: This creates a faster, real-time-like public access standard for posting federal award information, increasing government transparency and timeliness of data available to the public.

3) Who and What Is Affected

  • Primary Impact: Federal agencies that issue awards and the federal transparency/information systems that publish award data (as required by FFATA).
  • Public Access: The general public, researchers, watchdog organizations, journalists, and other stakeholders who rely on timely disclosure of federal spending and award information.
  • Covered Information: Information related to federal awards that FFATA requires to be posted publicly, now to be posted within 3 days of award.

4) Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Introduction Date: March 18, 2026.
  • Referral: Referred to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in the House.
  • Status: Introduced; co-sponsors listed (including notable members from both parties), but no further legislative actions (as of the provided text) shown.
  • Effective Date: The bill text provided does not specify an effective date; typical implementation would follow enactment and guidance from relevant agencies to adjust posting timelines to 3 days.

5) Additional Observations

  • The bill is narrowly targeted, changing only the posting deadline (from 30 days to 3 days) for public posting of federal award information under FFATA.
  • It emphasizes “real-time” public access, though the term “real-time” is operationally represented by a 3-day posting requirement rather than instantaneous publication.
  • The bill’s support appears bipartisan in the listed sponsors, indicating broader interest in transparency and timely disclosure of federal funding.

If you’d like, I can tailor this summary for a specific audience (e.g., agency officials, policy researchers, or journalists) or add a brief comparison to FFATA’s current posting rules and related transparency requirements.

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

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