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Smoke and Heat Ready Communities Act of 2025
This bill channels new federal funding, research, and centralized EPA authority to reduce smoke- and extreme-heat harms—especially for vulnerable communities—but creates new recurring federal costs, funding uncertainty, and risks that rural or under-resourced areas may not receive equitable or timely benefits.
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to impose a tax on specified settlement fund payments, and for other purposes.
Lowering Student Loans Act
The bill delivers substantial, predictable interest-rate relief for many student and parent borrowers but carries fiscal costs for taxpayers and operational/opt-out risks that could lead to unintended enrollment or implementation errors.
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to establish the individual tariff refund credit.
The bill provides per‑person compensation for unlawfully collected tariff revenue and clarifies tax treatment going forward, but limits relief for low‑income taxpayers, may raise taxes on some refund recipients, and increases administrative and compliance burdens.
Prevent Presidential Profiteering Act
The bill closes a tax exception by making civil damages to the President taxable—boosting revenue and tax parity for the public while increasing tax costs for recipients and creating a precedent that may affect future damage settlements.
American Affordability Act of 2025
The bill expands housing, family, education, health, and clean‑energy supports that increase affordability and access for many Americans, but does so through sizable new tax expenditures, detailed eligibility/monitoring rules, and program caps that raise deficit risks, administrative burdens, and distributional frictions.
Specialty Crop & Wine Producer Tariff Relief Act
The bill delivers targeted relief to specialty crop growers and more food for nutrition programs with greater transparency, but does so through open-ended federal spending that risks increasing the deficit and could distort markets or create distributional winners and losers.
Support and Defend Our Military Personnel and Their Families Act
The bill expands immigration protections and faster pathways to lawful status for noncitizen service members, veterans, and many military families—improving reunification and preserving readiness—while imposing added administrative costs and complexity that may slow other immigration processing and leave some eligible relatives (especially those abroad or with inadmissibility issues) unable to benefit.
American Energy Independence and Affordability Act
The bill extends and restores a broad set of clean‑energy, vehicle, and building tax incentives that encourage decarbonization and investment but does so at meaningful fiscal cost and with added compliance, complexity, and uneven distributional impacts that could disadvantage some taxpayers and coal communities.
Agricultural Emergency Relief Act of 2025
The bill makes disaster assistance for agricultural producers more concrete, faster, and administrable—providing direct payments and clearer eligibility—while increasing federal spending, imposing insurance-related conditions and eligibility limits, and leaving some producers and localized impacts potentially excluded or undercompensated.