HR-4003-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management.
Sponsored by Gabe Vasquez (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Commerce to develop a national strategy aimed at supporting economic opportunity in communities located within 15 miles of a land port of entry. The strategy would target four goals: increasing jobs, strengthening U.S. manufacturing competitiveness, reducing the costs of imports and exports, and expanding workforce development opportunities. The bill defines "border communities" as municipalities within 15 miles of a land port of entry.
Who benefits
Residents and workers in U.S. municipalities within 15 miles of land ports of entry along the U.S.-Mexico and U.S.-Canada borders. Local governments and economic development agencies in those communities. Manufacturers and exporters who operate near ports of entry and could benefit from reduced trade costs. Workforce training providers and community colleges near border crossings. Trucking and logistics companies that move goods through land ports of entry.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would fund the development and implementation of the strategy. Department of Commerce staff who would bear the administrative burden of developing the strategy. Communities just outside the 15-mile threshold that face similar economic challenges but would not qualify. Interior communities competing for federal economic development attention and resources that may be redirected toward border areas.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that land border communities are uniquely positioned as gateways for U.S. trade — the U.S.-Mexico border alone handles over $800 billion in annual goods trade — yet many of these municipalities rank among the poorest in the country, with persistently high unemployment and limited workforce infrastructure. They contend that a coordinated federal strategy would align existing agency programs, reduce duplication, and unlock the economic potential of communities that are critical to U.S. supply chains and manufacturing competitiveness.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring the Department of Commerce to produce a strategy document does not guarantee funding, implementation, or measurable outcomes, making the bill largely symbolic without accompanying appropriations. They contend that singling out a geography-based definition of 15 miles from a port of entry is arbitrary and may exclude economically distressed communities with equivalent needs, while adding bureaucratic planning requirements that divert agency resources without a clear mechanism for accountability or results.