HR-2294-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
What it does
This bill would reauthorize the Integrated Ocean Observation System (IOOS) — a national network of buoys, radar, underwater gliders, vessels, and forecasting models that monitors conditions along U.S. coasts and in marine waters — through fiscal year 2030. It would also direct the Interagency Ocean Observation Committee to develop requirements and processes for regional offices and federally funded agency projects to share data with regional coastal observing systems.
Who benefits
Commercial and recreational fishermen who rely on ocean condition data for safety and catch planning. Coastal communities and emergency managers who use storm surge, wave, and weather forecasts. The U.S. Navy and Coast Guard, which depend on marine environmental data for operations. Researchers and universities studying ocean and climate conditions. Shipping and maritime industries that use coastal navigation data. State and local governments managing coastal infrastructure. Tourism and recreation industries in coastal regions.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies and regional observing offices that may face new administrative and coordination burdens from the data-sharing requirements. Taxpayers who fund the program's continued operation. Private-sector data providers who may face increased competition from expanded federally funded data sharing. There are no clearly identifiable groups who face direct harm from this reauthorization.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the IOOS provides critical, real-time data that protects lives and property along the nation's 95,000 miles of coastline, supporting weather forecasting, hurricane preparedness, and search-and-rescue operations. They contend that the expanded data-sharing requirements would reduce duplication across federal agencies and regional systems, improving the quality and accessibility of ocean data for both public safety and economic purposes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing the program without a thorough review of its cost-effectiveness or performance metrics continues federal spending on a program whose outputs may overlap with private-sector and state-level monitoring capabilities. They contend that the new interagency data-sharing mandates add bureaucratic coordination requirements without clear accountability measures, potentially creating unfunded obligations for regional observing offices operating on limited budgets.