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National Parent and Youth Helpline Act
The bill funds a national 24/7 helpline and weekly support to expand immediate family support and improve child safety, but requires ongoing federal spending and centralizes delivery in a single grantee model that raises cost, privacy, and provider‑diversity risks.
January 6th Truth and Transparency Act
The bill increases federal transparency and oversight of post-pardon criminal activity and use-of-force encounters, improving accountability, but raises privacy and reputational risks for named individuals, may conflict with state rules or investigations, and imposes ongoing administrative costs.
Violent Insurrection Recidivist Enhancement Act of 2026
The bill increases accountability and deterrence against attacks on federal institutions by expanding penalties and narrowing pardon protections, at the cost of higher incarceration and court costs, greater prosecutorial power, and risks of vague or uneven application that could sweep in peaceful actors and disproportionately affect marginalized defendants.
January 6th Oral History Project Act
The bill centralizes and preserves January 6 firsthand materials and enables program funding through donations and a small appropriations baseline, improving access and historical recordkeeping while raising privacy, legal-use, bias-perception, and taxpayer-funding and administration concerns.
Supporting Blue Envelope Programs Act
The bill creates modest, nationwide, voluntary supports and training to improve interactions between neurodivergent people and first responders—improving safety and access for many—but its limited funding, reliance on law-enforcement partnerships, and voluntary design may constrain reach, trust, and measurable impact.
Native American Seeds Act of 2025
The bill strengthens tribal control, cultural protections, and preservation of traditional seeds while creating clearer administrative authority — but it increases executive deference, may restrict transparency and research, and leaves program benefits contingent on future appropriations, trading cultural and administrative gains for reduced judicial checks and funding uncertainty.
911 SAVES Act
The bill improves federal recognition and data about 911 telecommunicators—helping long-term planning, training, and potential targeted programs—but it does not itself provide funding and risks rushed implementation and short-term data disruption.
Repairing Social Security After Trump and DOGE Act
The bill restores retroactive Social Security eligibility and protects recipients' access to need‑based programs for those who missed applying due to hardship, but it increases federal expenditures and administrative burdens and creates potential for disputes or litigation over who qualifies.
911 SAVES Act of 2025
The bill improves recognition and workforce data for public-safety telecommunicators—potentially boosting recruitment, support, and targeted policies—at the cost of administrative burdens, possible short-term data disruptions, and potential new expenses for governments and taxpayers, with uncertain immediate pay or program changes if OMB declines to act.
Wildfire Grid Resiliency Act
The bill directs modest federal funding to accelerate lab-partnered demonstrations and deployment of grid-wildfire resilience tools—improving long-term outage prevention and responder safety—while imposing a small taxpayer cost and risking limited near-term reach and participation by smaller utilities.