Eureka
I have found it
Fred Korematsu Congressional Gold Medal Act of 2025
The bill formally honors Korematsu and educates the public by placing his medal in the Smithsonian and authorizing replica sales while structuring those sales to be cost-recovering through the Mint—providing symbolic redress and clearer federal handling but offering no new legal remedies and imposing modest administrative, pricing, and oversight trade-offs.
PrEP Access and Coverage Act of 2026
The bill greatly expands and enforces access to no‑cost HIV prevention and outreach—especially for low‑income, uninsured, and other high‑risk groups—while shifting substantial program, administrative, and litigation costs onto insurers, governments, and potentially taxpayers, with privacy and implementation trade‑offs.
Commission on Equity and Reconciliation in the Uniformed Services Act
The bill creates a time‑limited, funded Commission to investigate and remedy historical discrimination against LGBTQ+ servicemembers and veterans—potentially delivering compensation, restored health care access, and policy reforms—while posing meaningful taxpayer costs, privacy and politicization risks, and administrative/legal burdens.
Unsubscribe Act of 2025
The bill substantially strengthens consumer protections against surprise and manipulative recurring charges (clear consent, cancellation, and notice rules) at the cost of higher compliance and enforcement burdens that may raise business costs, reduce some low-cost offers, and require more administrative resources from regulators and states.
BALL Act
The bill conserves federal funds during funding lapses by stopping nonessential White House construction, but at the cost of project delays and uncertainty that can increase future repair costs and disrupt federal staff and contractors.
White House NOT FOR SALE Act
The bill strengthens oversight and preserves the White House's noncommercial, historic character through public review, but centralizes approval with House leaders and adds limits and procedures that could politicize decisions, reduce donor recognition, and slow projects.
Fraud Reduction And Uncovering Deception (FRAUD) in VA Disability Exams Act
The bill strengthens detection and reporting of fraudulent DBQs—protecting VA funds and claim integrity and adding due-process limits on investigations—at the cost of greater oversight that may slow claims, raise privacy/stigma concerns, and increase administrative costs.
Veteran Service Recognition Act of 2025
The bill expands protections, expedited naturalization, and immigration relief for noncitizen service members, veterans, and their families while increasing government transparency and interagency coordination — but it imposes significant administrative costs, privacy risks, potential enforcement and backlog delays, and trade-offs around public safety and perceived fairness.
EVEST Act
This bill quickly expands and streamlines automatic VA health enrollment and notification for recently separated veterans—improving access and administrative verification—but raises privacy risks, implementation costs, and short-term confusion that oversight reports aim to monitor and address.