HR-6938-119
Became Public Law No: 119-74.
Sponsored by Tom Cole (R-OK)
What it does
This law provides fiscal year 2026 funding for three of the twelve annual federal appropriations bills, covering the Departments of Commerce, Justice, Energy, and the Interior, along with NASA, the National Science Foundation, the EPA, the Forest Service, the Indian Health Service, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. It sets specific spending levels for each agency and program, and establishes rules and restrictions on how those funds may be used. As enacted law, it directly controls federal spending for these agencies through the end of FY2026.
Who benefits
Federal agencies and their employees whose programs receive funding. Recipients of federal grants and contracts administered by the funded agencies (researchers, universities, state and local governments, tribes). Communities that benefit from Army Corps of Engineers civil works projects (flood control, navigation, water infrastructure). Native Americans served by the Indian Health Service. National park visitors, public lands users, and conservation groups benefiting from Interior and Forest Service funding. Law enforcement agencies receiving DOJ grants. Scientists and researchers funded through NASA and the National Science Foundation.
Who is hurt
Programs or agencies that receive less funding than requested or less than prior years may face reduced services or staffing. Taxpayers who bear the cost of all federal spending. Competing discretionary spending priorities not included in these three bills. Contractors and grantees whose programs are subject to new spending restrictions. States and localities that rely on federal matching funds or pass-through grants from covered agencies may face uncertainty if funding levels change.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that consolidating three appropriations bills into a single package is a practical necessity to keep the federal government funded and avoid a partial shutdown, which would disrupt services for millions of Americans. They contend that funding agencies like the Indian Health Service, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the National Science Foundation sustains critical infrastructure, public health, and scientific research that the private sector would not otherwise provide.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that bundling multiple appropriations bills into one large package reduces congressional transparency and limits members' ability to scrutinize individual agency budgets or object to specific provisions. They contend that the bill's spending levels — set without a full, regular order appropriations process — may reflect political compromises that underfund or overfund particular programs relative to demonstrated need or prior-year baselines.