HR-4801-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 619.
Sponsored by J. Hill (R-AR)
What it does
This bill would require each major federal financial regulatory agency — including the Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, SEC, CFPB, NCUA, and FHFA — to establish an "AI Innovation Lab." Regulated financial entities could apply to run time-limited AI test projects under a waiver or modification of specific existing regulations, replacing standard compliance with an agency-approved "alternative compliance strategy." If an agency fails to approve or deny a complete application within 120 to 240 days, the application would be automatically deemed approved.
Who benefits
Banks, credit unions, broker-dealers, investment advisers, mortgage companies, and other federally regulated financial institutions that want to deploy AI tools with reduced regulatory friction. Large financial institutions with dedicated compliance and technology teams would be best positioned to navigate the application process. AI technology vendors and developers whose products would gain a pathway into regulated financial markets. Consumers and investors who may gain access to new or lower-cost AI-driven financial products if test projects succeed. Financial regulators themselves, who would gain structured data on AI performance in live settings.
Who is hurt
Consumers and investors who interact with AI test projects and may face reduced protections during the testing period, particularly those who are unaware they are subject to experimental AI systems. Smaller financial institutions with fewer compliance resources, who may be less able to prepare competitive applications and could be disadvantaged relative to larger peers. Non-participating competitors who must continue meeting full regulatory requirements while approved entities operate under relaxed rules. Employees whose roles may be displaced if AI test projects prove successful and are scaled. State financial regulators, whose authority is not addressed and who may face coordination gaps.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing financial regulations were written before modern AI existed and that rigid enforcement of outdated rules actively discourages beneficial innovation in fraud detection, credit access, and compliance efficiency. They contend that structured sandboxes with mandatory disclosures, termination dates, risk assessments, and agency oversight provide meaningful consumer protections while allowing regulators to gather real-world data needed to write better AI rules — a model that the UK's Financial Conduct Authority and other international regulators have used successfully for over a decade.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that waiving consumer protection regulations — even temporarily — exposes real customers to unproven AI systems, and that the automatic-approval provision if agencies miss deadlines could allow risky projects to proceed without genuine regulatory review, particularly given agencies' limited AI expertise and staffing. They contend that the bill effectively lets well-resourced financial institutions write their own compliance rules through "alternative compliance strategies," creating an uneven playing field and potentially undermining the statutory protections Congress enacted in laws like Dodd-Frank and the Securities Exchange Act.
Constitutional context
Congress's authority to regulate financial institutions rests firmly on the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), and this bill operates within well-established statutory frameworks. However, the bill directs agencies to promulgate implementing regulations within 180 days and grants them broad discretion to approve waivers of their own rules — raising potential major questions doctrine concerns under West Virginia v. EPA (2022) if agencies interpret their waiver authority expansively. Post-Loper Bright (2024), courts will independently assess whether the bill's language clearly authorizes any agency action of vast economic significance, rather than deferring to agency interpretation.
Checks and balances
Financial regulatory agencies gain new discretionary authority to waive their own rules for approved participants; checks include mandatory congressional reporting for nine years, public notice-and-comment rulemaking, agency denial authority, emergency injunctive relief, retained fraud and market manipulation enforcement, and automatic termination dates on all approved projects.
Historical precedent
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau launched a "Trial Disclosure Policy" sandbox program in 2019 allowing firms to test alternative disclosure formats under waiver, and the OCC issued "fintech charter" guidance in 2018 — both of which faced legal challenges over whether agencies had statutory authority to waive congressionally mandated requirements.