HR-1242-115
Became Public Law No: 115-102.
Sponsored by Robert Scott (D-VA)
What it does
This bill creates a temporary federal commission to plan and coordinate activities marking the 400th anniversary of the first arrival of Africans in English colonial America at Point Comfort, Virginia, in 1619. The commission would award grants to communities, nonprofits, and research organizations, and provide technical assistance to states and localities. It would terminate on July 1, 2020, and all spending would come solely from donated funds — no federal appropriations.
Who benefits
African-American communities and cultural organizations seeking formal national recognition of this historical milestone. Historians, scholars, and academic institutions researching African-American history. Nonprofits, local governments, and civic groups that would be eligible for grants and technical assistance. Museums, arts organizations, and educational institutions developing commemorative programming. The general public, which would gain access to coordinated historical education and events.
Who is hurt
Private donors who fund the commission bear the full financial cost, as no federal appropriations are authorized. Organizations or communities that apply for grants but are not selected would receive no benefit. Because the commission sunsets in 2020, any ongoing commemorative or educational work would lose federal coordination after that date. Taxpayers face no direct cost, but critics may argue the commission's scope or grant decisions could favor certain historical narratives or organizations over others.
Supporters argue
Supporters contend that the 1619 arrival of Africans is one of the most consequential and underacknowledged events in American history, and that a formal federal commission provides the institutional credibility needed to coordinate national commemoration at the appropriate scale. They argue the bill is fiscally responsible because it relies entirely on donated funds, placing no burden on taxpayers. Supporters also maintain that acknowledging the history of slavery and racial discrimination is essential to a full and honest understanding of American civic identity, and that grants to local communities and scholars would produce lasting educational resources accessible to all Americans.
Opponents argue
Opponents contend that establishing a federal commission to oversee historical commemoration raises questions about whether the government should be in the business of curating or elevating particular historical narratives, which could marginalize other groups with equally significant but less-recognized histories. They argue that even a donation-funded commission carries the weight of federal endorsement, potentially influencing how history is taught or interpreted in ways that reflect political priorities rather than scholarly consensus. Opponents may also question whether a time-limited commission with no guaranteed funding can deliver meaningful, lasting impact, or whether the same goals could be achieved more efficiently through existing institutions such as the Smithsonian or the National Endowment for the Humanities.