Eureka
I have found it
Crime Survivor Support and Stability Act of 2026
The bill directs predictable federal funding and new protections to expand community-based financial, housing, legal, and trauma-recovery supports for survivors — improving immediate stability and long-term recovery — while increasing government and private-sector costs, adding administrative burdens, and raising privacy and implementation trade-offs around accountability and eligibility.
Same-Day Paratransit Innovation Act
The bill would substantially expand and modernize same‑day paratransit—improving mobility, accessibility, and efficiency for people with disabilities and seniors—while requiring significant federal funding and imposing implementation, compliance, and equity challenges for smaller providers and local agencies.
Connecting Communities Through Transit Planning Act of 2026
The bill provides new, targeted federal funding and clearer program priorities to accelerate accessible, equitable transit-oriented development, while increasing federal spending and risking unequal benefits, local exclusions, and displacement unless mitigations are adopted.
RIDER Safety Act
The bill aims to improve everyday transit safety and free up police by creating non‑armed transit support specialists, but it shifts costs to local budgets and risks safety and role‑confusion unless training, oversight, and clear authority are well‑implemented.
Disability and Age in Jury Service Nondiscrimination Act
The bill expands access to federal jury service for people with disabilities and clarifies how courts should evaluate accommodation requests, at the expense of some added costs and administrative burdens for courts and jurisdictions.
The Small Business Representation in Contracting Rulemaking Act
The bill gives small businesses a stronger, faster channel into federal procurement rulemaking and a near-term assessment of SBA needs, at the cost of modest taxpayer-funded staffing increases and added administrative burden that could delay or limit benefits if legal changes are required.
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that small business owners seeking financing have fundamental rights, including transparent pricing and terms, competitive products, responsible underwriting, fair treatment from financing providers, brokers, and lead generators, inclusive credit access, and fair collection practices.