HR-6152-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Addison McDowell (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would direct the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to establish an interagency task force — including representatives from federal agencies and the private sector — to study unlawful robocalls originating outside the United States and submit a report to Congress with recommendations within roughly two years of enactment. It would also require the FCC to issue rules mandating that certain voice service providers post a bond of up to $100,000 before registering in the Robocall Mitigation Database, with exemptions for established, regulated carriers. Additionally, it would grant legal immunity to the registered industry traceback consortium for receiving, sharing, and publishing information about suspected unlawful robocalls, and would reduce the frequency of a required FCC notice from annually to once every three years.
Who benefits
U.S. consumers who receive unwanted or fraudulent robocalls — estimated in the billions annually. Elderly Americans, who are disproportionately targeted by phone scams. Established, regulated telecommunications carriers that would be exempt from the bond requirement. The traceback consortium (currently USTelecom's Industry Traceback Group), which would gain broad legal immunity for its investigative activities. Law enforcement agencies that rely on traceback data. Businesses that conduct legitimate telephone outreach and want clearer rules distinguishing lawful from unlawful calls. Victims of identity theft and financial fraud linked to robocall scams.
Who is hurt
Smaller or newer voice service providers — particularly gateway providers that route international calls — that cannot easily demonstrate "legitimate, ongoing operations" and would face up to $100,000 bond requirements. Foreign telecommunications intermediaries whose call traffic may be scrutinized or blocked. Entities whose call detail records or identifying information could be shared or published by the traceback consortium under the new immunity provision, potentially without recourse. Marketing businesses that use automated telephone outreach and may face increased compliance scrutiny. Taxpayers who fund FCC, FTC, and DOJ participation in the task force using existing appropriations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that foreign-originated robocalls represent a massive, ongoing harm — the FTC received over 1.9 million Do Not Call complaints in a single recent year, and phone scams cost Americans billions of dollars annually. They contend that existing tools like STIR/SHAKEN caller authentication were designed for domestic networks and leave a significant gap for calls entering the U.S. from abroad, and that the bond requirement would deter bad-faith providers from using the Robocall Mitigation Database as a shield. They further argue that granting immunity to the traceback consortium removes a legal chilling effect that currently discourages information-sharing critical to identifying and stopping foreign robocall operations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's bond requirement — up to $100,000 — could create a significant barrier to entry for small, legitimate international voice providers and may disproportionately burden carriers in developing countries that route calls into the U.S. They contend that the broad legal immunity granted to the traceback consortium, with no clear due process mechanism for providers wrongly identified as transmitting unlawful calls, could expose innocent carriers to reputational and financial harm without meaningful recourse. They further argue that the bill's core output is a study and a report, meaning it may delay concrete enforcement action rather than accelerate it, and that reducing the FCC notice requirement from annual to every three years weakens ongoing congressional oversight.