WeVote

Bill

Bill

HR 6855

White House Conference on Small Business Act of 2025

119th Congress Introduced by Don Davis and 3 co-sponsors

Creates a White House conference on small business to produce a national agenda with policy recommendations to boost access to capital, growth, and entrepreneurship.

Introduced in House
1
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 6855

Summary of HR 6855 (119th Congress) – White House Conference on Small Business Act of 2025

Purpose and intent

  • Establishes a formal framework to convene a White House Conference on Small Business, with the goal of assessing the state of small businesses nationwide and analyzing policies that support entrepreneurship, access to capital, innovation, and job creation.
  • The bill aims to produce a comprehensive national plan or set of recommendations to improve the environment for small businesses across sectors.

Key provisions and changes

  • Creation of a White House-convened conference specifically focused on small business issues, to be led or coordinated at the executive level.
  • Mandates the development of a national agenda or action plan derived from the conference, identifying policy priorities and recommended actions for federal agencies.
  • Potentially directs federal agencies to collaborate with state and local governments, chambers of commerce, industry associations, and small-business stakeholders in the preparation and implementation of the conference findings (exact collaboration language may specify stakeholder engagement requirements).
  • May authorize reporting requirements, such as a conference report or policy recommendations to Congress, along with timelines for delivering findings.
  • Could include provisions on disseminating best practices, creating targeted programs, or proposing legislative changes to support small-business growth, access to capital, regulatory relief, workforce development, and procurement opportunities.
  • The bill may specify funding mechanisms or authorization levels to support planning, logistics, and outreach for the conference and subsequent implementation activities.

Who would be affected

  • Small businesses and aspiring entrepreneurs seeking improved access to federal programs, capital, and resources.
  • Federal agencies involved in small-business policy (e.g., SBA, Treasury, labor, commerce) through required collaboration and implementation of conference recommendations.
  • State and local governments, economic development organizations, chambers of commerce, and private sector stakeholders engaged in the conference process.
  • Policymakers and legislators who would receive the conference findings and any proposed legislation or regulatory changes.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Action history shows introduction and referral:
    • Introduced in the House and referred to the House Committee on Small Business (both events dated 2025-12-18).
  • Sponsor information indicates multiple co-sponsors (Tony Wied, Don Davis, Michelle Fischbach, Brad Finstad), suggesting bipartisan collaboration at the sponsor level.
  • As of the provided record, no committee report or floor action is indicated; subsequent steps would typically include committee hearings, potential markup, and floor consideration.
  • Timelines for conference planning, reporting, and implementation would be set forth in the bill or through accompanying appropriations or authorization provisions (if present).

Potential impact and considerations

  • If enacted, the bill could formalize a structured, high-level policy review and set of recommendations aimed at boosting small-business resilience, competitiveness, and growth.
  • Implementation would depend on subsequent funding and the degree to which Congress accepts or requires federal agencies to adopt the conference’s recommendations.
  • The effectiveness would hinge on clear milestones, measurable outcomes, and accountability for translating conference findings into concrete policies or programs.

Note: The summary reflects the information available in the bill’s introductory and referral text. For a complete understanding, the full text would clarify definitive provisions, funding levels, reporting requirements, and the exact scope of agency responsibilities.

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

Sign in to ask a question.