HR-5200-119
Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 375.
Sponsored by Doris Matsui (D-CA)
What it does
The bill is titled the "Emergency Reporting Act" and was introduced in the House on September 8, 2025. The full legislative text provided contains only the bill's title; no operative provisions, definitions, mandates, or mechanisms are included in the available text. As a result, the specific actions this bill would take — what entities must report, what constitutes an emergency, to whom reports must be made, and what penalties apply — cannot be determined from the text provided.
Who benefits
Cannot be determined from the available bill text. Depending on the bill's actual provisions, potential beneficiaries could include emergency responders, government agencies receiving reports, the general public, or specific industries depending on the reporting framework established.
Who is hurt
Cannot be determined from the available bill text. Depending on the bill's actual provisions, entities subject to new reporting requirements — such as technology companies, telecommunications providers, or other regulated industries — could face compliance costs.
Supporters argue
Supporters of emergency reporting legislation generally argue that timely, standardized reporting of emergencies enables faster government response and reduces harm to the public. They contend that without mandatory reporting frameworks, critical information may be delayed or withheld, leaving emergency management agencies unable to coordinate effective responses when lives are at risk.
Opponents argue
Opponents of emergency reporting mandates generally argue that broad or vaguely defined reporting requirements impose compliance burdens on regulated entities without clear evidence of improved outcomes. They contend that poorly scoped mandates may produce information overload for agencies, divert resources from actual emergency response, and raise due process concerns if the definition of a reportable "emergency" is not precisely drawn.