HR-160-117
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 450.
Sponsored by Darren Soto (D-FL)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize and expand the federal Coral Reef Conservation Program through FY2024. It would direct NOAA to provide block grants to states for coral reef management and restoration, establish standards for government-community partnerships, and give the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force a formal legal mandate to coordinate federal reef protection efforts. It would also authorize the Department of the Interior to fund emergency coral reef plans and create a National Coral Reef Management Fellowship Program.
Who benefits
Coastal communities in Hawaii, Florida, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands that depend on reefs for shoreline protection and tourism. Commercial and recreational fishing industries that rely on reef ecosystems. Marine scientists and researchers who would gain access to new federal funding and fellowship opportunities. State and territorial coral reef management agencies that would receive block grants. Scuba diving and ecotourism businesses operating near reef systems.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would fund the expanded grant programs, fellowship program, and increased NOAA and Interior Department activities. Industries whose operations near reef zones — such as coastal development, certain commercial fishing practices, and maritime shipping — could face additional regulatory standards or restrictions tied to new partnership and stewardship requirements. States or territories that disagree with federally established partnership standards could face reduced flexibility in how they manage local reef resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that coral reefs are among the most economically and ecologically significant ecosystems in U.S. waters, generating billions of dollars annually through fisheries, tourism, and coastal protection, yet they face accelerating threats from climate change, pollution, and disease. They contend that the existing Coral Reef Conservation Program lacks the funding, coordination, and legal authority needed to respond effectively, and that formalizing the Task Force's role and providing block grants to states would allow faster, locally tailored action. Supporters also argue that a fellowship program would build the next generation of reef management professionals at a time when that expertise is critically needed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill expands federal spending and bureaucratic infrastructure — including a new fellowship program and expanded grant mechanisms — without sufficient evidence that these additions would produce measurable improvements in reef health beyond what existing programs already accomplish. They contend that block grants with federally mandated partnership standards could reduce state and territorial flexibility, effectively imposing Washington-designed management models on communities with unique local conditions. Opponents may also argue that the root causes of reef decline, such as global climate change and ocean warming, are not meaningfully addressed by domestic conservation grants, making the spending an inefficient use of federal resources.