HR-5428-117
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 227.
Sponsored by Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Education to publish an annual report on school crime and safety, with a specific focus on school shootings. It would direct the National Center for Education Statistics to collect and publish detailed data on each shooting, including casualties, shooter demographics and motivation, firearms used, law enforcement response times, and what security measures were or were not in place at the time of each incident.
Who benefits
K-12 students and their families, who would gain access to standardized national data on school safety. School administrators and local governments, who could use the data to benchmark their own security measures. Researchers, journalists, and policymakers seeking consistent, government-verified statistics on school shootings. Law enforcement agencies that could use response-time data to improve protocols. Victims' advocacy organizations that rely on comprehensive national data.
Who is hurt
Schools and districts that would bear administrative costs of collecting and reporting detailed incident data. Local law enforcement agencies that would need to provide response-time and incident information, potentially straining resources. Families of victims whose demographic information would be included in federal reports, raising privacy concerns. Schools in under-resourced districts may face a disproportionate reporting burden relative to their administrative capacity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government currently lacks a single, consistent, and comprehensive source of data on school shootings, making it difficult to understand the true scope of the problem or evaluate which safety measures actually work. They contend that this bill would fill that gap by establishing a standardized, annual, government-verified dataset — without mandating any specific policy response. By documenting what security measures were present or absent at the time of each shooting, the data would allow schools, districts, and lawmakers to make evidence-based decisions about where to direct resources. Supporters also argue that collecting information on shooter motivation and how each incident was stopped would provide actionable insights for prevention efforts, all without infringing on any existing rights or programs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new federal data-collection mandate that intrudes on an area — K-12 school safety — traditionally governed by states and localities under the Tenth Amendment. They contend that adding detailed federal reporting requirements places real administrative and financial burdens on schools, particularly smaller and under-resourced districts, without providing any accompanying funding. Critics also raise concerns that collecting and centralizing sensitive data — including victim demographics and shooter motivation — creates privacy risks and could be misused. Some opponents argue that the bill's data categories, such as firearm type and ammunition, reflect a predetermined policy agenda rather than a neutral fact-finding exercise, and that states already collect much of this information through existing mechanisms.